Depot.com
 Location:  Home» Music » Alt-Country & Americana » All I Intended to Be  


Categories
Books
Electronics
Toys
DVD
Video Games
Music
Software
Computers
Cameras
Pets
Apparel
Baby
Beauty
Automotive
Health
Home & Garden
Jewelry
Kitchen
Magazines
Office Products
Outdoor Living
Sporting Goods
Tools & Hardware
Cell Phones
Gourmet Food
Grocery
Musical Instruments
VHS
MP3
Movie Downloads
US Flag
Related Categories
• Alt-Country & Americana
Country
Styles
Music
• General
Country
Styles
Music
• Outlaw Country
Country
Styles
Music
• Today's Country
Country
Styles
Music
• General
Pop
Styles
Music
• Country Rock
Rock
Styles
Music
• Country - Contemporary Country - General
General
Archives
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Alt-Country & Americana
Country
Indie Music
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• CD Album
CD
Format (binding)
Refinements
Music
• Main Album
Edition (format)
Refinements
Music

All I Intended to Be

All I Intended to Be


Other Views:
Artist: Emmylou Harris
Label: Nonesuch

List Price: $18.98
Buy New: $9.65
You Save: $9.33 (49%)



New (61) Used (10) from $9.49

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 73 reviews
Sales Rank: 13

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.7 x 0.2

MPN: 480444
UPC: 075597992854
EAN: 0075597992854
ASIN: B0017I1FNK

Release Date: June 10, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW, FACTORY SEALED,MINT CONDITION, FIRST CLASS & FAST SHIPPING!!

Tracks:

  • Shores of White Sand
  • Hold On
  • Moon Song
  • Broken Man's Lament
  • Gold
  • How She Could Sing the Wildwood
  • All That You Have is Your Soul
  • Take That Ride
  • Old Five and Dimers Like Me
  • Kern River
  • Not Enough
  • Sailing Round the Room
  • Beyond the Great Divide

Similar Items:

  • Same Old Man
  • Keep It Simple
  • Two Men With The Blues
  • Mudcrutch
  • Harps & Angels

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk
Emmylou Harris has always had a way with woe. On All I Intended To Be, she seems more maudlin than ever as she sings her way through songs about loss, heartbreak, even the odd funeral. Of course, this is the kind of material Harris has always been comfortable with, but as her career and years advance gracefully, so her gliding soprano seems to breathe ever more refinement and soul into her material. All I Intended To Be has been produced by Brian Ahern, her former husband and the man behind her first 11 albums--another reason the album sounds so comfortable and accomplished. Joined by a virtuoso set of players including keyboardist Glen Hardin and multi-instrumentalist Stuart Duncan, plus vocalists Vince Gill, Buddy Miller, and Dolly Parton, Harris blends a handpicked selection of cover versions with her own material. Tracy Chapman's "All That You Have Is Your Soul" gets a honeyed reworking, as does Merle Haggard's "Kern River" and Mark Germino's "Broken Man's Lament". Billy Joe Shaver's "Old Five" and "Dimers Like Me" both get respectfully and sublimely covered too. But her own songs--in particular "Sailing Round the Room" and "Gold"--stand up well to these evergreens. An eclectic and profound set, All I Intended To Be is also one of Harris' best in recent years.--Danny McKenna

Album Description
On her second Nonesuch disc, Emmylou Harris assembles an extraordinary cast of veteran musicians and fellow singers, all of them longtime friends, for a set that indeed showcases this Nashville icon, and 2008 CMA Hall of Fame inductee, as all she has intended to be - a singularly expressive vocalist, a brilliant interpreter of other people's songs, a graceful and confident songwriter. In particular, the album displays Harris's ability to bring new life to songs that may have been overlooked, forgotten or lost along the way. Some of the most affecting material here may be the least well-known - though not for long: John Wesley Routh's celtic/country "Shores Of White Sands" and trucker-poet Mark Germino's heartrending story-song, "Broken Man's Lament." Harris has chosen these songs with conceptual care. Like much of the gently uplifting All I Intended To Be, the stories may be bittersweet, the characters may be downtrodden, but somehow a sense of redemption always vanquishes regret. The shared history of all the artists involved deepens the feeling of hard-won wisdom that informs All I Intended To Be. Producer Brian Ahern was behind the boards for such early Harris classics as Elite Hotel, Pieces of the Sky and Blue Kentucky Girl. The players and guest stars are not only a veritable who's-who from the worlds of country, bluegrass and folk, but they have each intersected with Harris throughout her four-decade career as a recording artist. They include Dolly Parton, singers Pam Rose and Maryann Kennedy, dobro player (and longtime Seldom Scene member) Mike Auldredge, keyboardists Glenn D. Hardin (of Harris's Hot Band and Elvis Presley's legendary TCB combo) and Bill Payne (of Little Feat). Two songs - the June Carter tribute, "How She Could Sing The Wildwood Flower" and the breathtakingly beautiful "Sailing Round the Room" - were co-written by and performed with Kate and Anna McGarrigle. Singer-songwriter Karen Brooks, whose own eighties-era version of "Shores of White Sands" was the inspiration and thematic jumping-off point for this entire album, contributes backing vocals throughout; Randy Sharp, Brooks' singing partner, did the vocal arranging. (Harris won a 2005 Best Country Vocal Performance Grammy for her rendition of Sharp's "The Connection.") Harris's own songs, like the heartache ballad "Gold" and the elegiac "Not Enough," blend seamlessly with work by Patty Griffin ("Moon Song"), Merle Haggard ("Kern River") and Billy Joe Shaver ("Old Five and Dimers," from which the album title is taken). Harris revives what is arguably Tracy Chapman's most eloquent song, "Fast Car" notwithstanding - "All That You Have Is Your Soul," a cautionary tale with a simple but profound prayer of a chorus. Displaying the maturity, elegance and ease that distinguished All The Road Running, her best-selling 2006 collaboration with Mark Knopfler. Harris has created a riveting emotional and spiritual journey. All That I Intended To Be is everything a listener and fan could hope for.


Customer Reviews:   Read 68 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars She may be uncommonly modest, but this is her "My Way"   June 10, 2008
Jesse Kornbluth (New York)
124 out of 135 found this review helpful

Until very recently, no one expected something "new" from an artist. He/she did what he/she did, and, over time, with work and talent and increasing mastery, the art got better and better. But it didn't get "different" and there was no expectation of novelty --- no one wrote about "Bleak House" that Dickens had failed to make a stylistic leap over "David Copperfield".

Emmylou Harris is an Old School musician in many ways, but especially in this --- she's plowed the same field for almost all her career. There have been modest detours, but nothing requiring her to change her hair or buy a drum machine. She just sings American Roots music, straight ahead and unadorned.

American Roots music isn't country, pop or rock, though it's not ashamed to borrow from those styles. It's not bluegrass, gospel, folk or Cajun, though there are elements. To its practitioners, it's the authentic heart of the heartland, songs that could only come from here, sounds that remind us who we are. Soul music, if you will.

Emmylou Harris is the high priestess of this music, and on her 21st release she does it as well as anyone ever will. To those who do not worship at her shrine or listen only casually to her music, it may sound like just another Emmylou Harris record: that exquisite voice, evocative lyrics, flawless instrumentation and angelic harmonies. Yes, it is, and "Great Expectations" is just another Dickens novel.

In today's lost and destructive music business, it takes ferocious courage and massive self-assurance to put out a record of quiet beauty and then to put a title like "All I Intended to Be" on it. That's a statement, a stake in the ground --- Emmylou Harris may seem uncommonly modest and self-effacing, but this is her "My Way".

These songs were recorded over four years. The producer was Brian Ahern, her former husband and collaborator on her first 11 albums. The musicians may be well-known to music fans --- the singers include Dolly Parton, Vince Gill, Buddy Miller and the McGarrigle Sisters --- but there are an equal number of lesser-known singers and musicians who appear simply because they're dear to Emmylou. And the songs? "I've always seen myself as a relentless song-finder, a singer of other people's work whom I admire greatly, and an occasional songwriter," she says, putting herself last and least, as is her custom.

The songwriters are at once venerable and esoteric: Billy Joe Shaver, Merle Haggard, Patty Griffin, Mark Germino, Jack Wesley Routh. The song you probably know is by Tracy Chapman: "All That You Have Is Your Soul." That could easily have been the title of this CD. It is certainly the theme.



5 out of 5 stars Confonting aging with honesty and beauty   June 11, 2008
Jeremy Gloff (Tampa, Fl United States)
49 out of 57 found this review helpful

Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R1GVSXE9PDGPIN My name is Jeremy Gloff. I am a musician (check me out on Amazon!) and retro music enthusiast. If you enjoyed this review make sure to check out my Amazon user profile to check out my other reviews. I am always up for making new friends and discussing the music I love!!!


3 out of 5 stars Nice, but lacking a little something   June 10, 2008
William Merrill (San Antonio, TX United States)
18 out of 30 found this review helpful

As I listened to songs on the new ELH disc, adjectives like "dreamy" and "delicate" came to mind. The tempos are nearly all so slow, it's a bit hard to remember that this is the same lady who once sang "Two More Bottles of Wine" and "Ain't Livin' Long Like This!" The recording quality is excellent, the performances are also topnotch, but the CD is just missing a certain amount of umph. I have nothing against Emmylou singing slow - "Too Far Gone" is one of the most beautiful songs ever - but her albums start sounding sleepy and even a little dreary without the occasional burst of energy. Follow "Old Five and Dimers..." with "Kern River" and you have a recipe for excessive mildness. (Then the very next tune, "Not Enough" is even slower!) I guess if I could think of this as an album of funeral music, I might be giving it 4 or even 5 stars - it'd be great for background music as the body is lowered into the ground... One other thing: I've always liked the way Ms. Harris sings, but she does have a problem with slurring the lyrics, and her voice often drops off in the middle of a phrase. I was grateful for the CD booklet, without which I would not have been able to understand what she was singing about on several of the songs.


5 out of 5 stars Harris gives us heart and soul   June 17, 2008
klavierspiel (TX, USA)
14 out of 16 found this review helpful

Though it may be unchivalrous to say so, "All I Intended to Be," Emmylou Harris' latest album, has all of the earmarks of a late-period work. Surely only an artist with as long and varied a career as Harris has had can adopt such a reflective stance on the experience of life. The thirteen songs mostly describe dark stages of their singers' lives: broken hearts, suicidal thoughts, failed relationships, and abandonment. Harris strives mightily, through the communicative power of her voice and the quality of the music and lyrics, not to make this album a downer.

I'm not sure she totally succeeds, but there's certainly a lot here that sticks in the heart and mind, especially as far as the songwriting is concerned. After the more eclectic sound explorations of her last few solo albums, Harris in "All I Intended to Be" comes full circle back to her roots, especially with work by "old five and dimers" such as Billy Joe Shaver and Merle Haggard included. "Broken Man's Lament," the tale of a man who pays the price for thwarting his wife's ambitions, has the inevitability of a classic folk ballad. "How She Could Sing the Wildwood Flower," co-authored by Harris and the McGarrigles, similarly evokes the classic Carter Family tune and lyrics in describing another husband deserted by his neglected wife. Patty Griffin ("Moon Song"), Jude Johnstone ("Hold On"), Tracy Chapman and Jack Wesley Routh ("Shores of White Sand") contribute memorable tracks. "Don't be tempted by the shiny apple/Don't you eat of the bitter fruit...'Cause all that you have is your soul," admonishes Chapman in her song, and it seems Emmylou Harris has taken that advice to heart. Wherever she's gone with her music, it's been with her heart and soul.



5 out of 5 stars Unashamed unadulterated roots music   August 4, 2008
R. Kyle (USA)
11 out of 11 found this review helpful

Emmylou Harris may be so good, she is at her penultimate for most of her career. I admit, I enjoy her soulful voice and spare orchestrations so much that I really cannot claim to have a favorite CD from her releases.

This 2008 release was produced by her former husband, Bruce Ahern. You'll hear old friends on this CD, including Dolly Parton (backup on "Gold") and Buddy Miller. The 'songfinder' has snagged some great music, too, from the likes of Tracy Chapman and Kate McGarrigle.

"Broken Man's Lament" talks about not messing with someone else's dreams. When the subject married a bar singer, he asked her not to sing.

"Gold" talks about the human failings in all of us:

"no matter how bright I glitter, baby, I can never be gold"

Probably my favorite song of this collection is "All that you have is your soul" by Tracy Chapman. This song contains some of the best life advice you can get.

In this case, I think a lot of this CD was gold as soon as it was released.

Rebecca Kyle, August 2008



We'll be adding even more exciting features to assist you in the coming year.
Thank you for shopping at the Depot.com online shopping depot.

©2008 Depot.com