YOU CAN'T NOT GET NO SATISFACTION

Lucinda Williams

Essence

  • AMG Review of Essence

    Amg
    Mark Deming
    All Music Guide

    Between her well-documented determination to retail full control of her music and the plain-spoken willfulness of her best-known songs, Lucinda Williams is practically the working definition of a strong woman you do not want to mess with, but she reveals a very different side of her musical personality on her sixth album, Essence. Subtle and often stark, Essence is an unusually quiet and frequently downbeat set that depicts a fragile emotional vulnerability which rarely makes its presence felt in Williams' music; there's an unadorned longing in songs like "Blue" and "Lonely Girls" that's new and deeply affecting, and the leaf-in-the-breeze quaver of Williams' voice on "I Envy the Wind" is as heart-rending as anything she's ever committed to tape. But while a blue mood dominates Essence, this isn't an album about the blue funk of heartbreak, but a chronicle of the search for transcendence over sorrow in our lives, as her characters look for a path out of isolation ("Out of Touch"), try to find answers through faith ("Get Right With God"), or reconcile love with the desires of the flesh ("Essence"). As a songwriter, Williams has long shown a knack for charting the human heart and mind with intelligence and economy, and Essence finds her at the peak of her form; the delicacy of this music does not speak of weakness, but of the passion and bravery it takes to bare one's soul. And while Williams has gained a certain infamy for her obsessive perfectionism in the studio, the quality of her work speaks for the wisdom of her decision-making process, and Essence proves how well she understands the art of recording; producing in collaboration with Charlie Sexton (Tom Tucker and Bo Ramsey also contributed), Essence sounds full and rich even in its quietest moments, and her sweet-and-sour voice blends with the arrangements with subtle perfection. Those hoping for another dose of the bluesy oots rock of Car Wheels on a Gravel Road may be disappointed, but if you want to take a deep and compelling look into the heart and soul of a major artist, then you owe it to yourself to hear Essence.

my heart screams out for you
over 2 years ago

i long for you in the middle of the night.i too ran you awaywith my selfishness and destructive behavioryou caress my veinsyour eyes pierced my soulyour friendship i held deari so looked forward to and hung on your every wordand i destroyed it all on my knees and in my dreamsit will never be the same....

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Reason To Cry
over 2 years ago

Just to sit and talkThe way we used to doIt just breaks my heartThat I can't get close to youIf our eyes should meetSomewhere down the roadWill you stop and be sweetOr will you just walk onI thought things would stay the sameI thought things were right onIn our sunny daysHow could we go wrongNow these days have found usRight here where we standWe thought we were so toughBut nothing worked out l...

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When Nothing Makes Any Sense
over 2 years ago

I wish, I dream, I hope. How? Why? When?"She had faith in words, believing in their ability to carry inexpressible messages, trusting that what cannot be said can somehow be borne aloft by what can be said. She was right."-Frank Conroy, foreword to Autobiography of a Schizophrenic Girl

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