Shadows and Light

RELEASE
LABEL
Asylum
GENRES
Pop/Rock, Singer/Songwriter, Psychedelic, Folk-Rock

Album Review

Shadows and Light is Joni Mitchell's second live album, and it serves as a good retrospective of her jazzy period from 1975-1979. As expected, she assembles a group of all-star musicians including Pat Metheny (guitar), Jaco Pastorius (bass), Lyle Mays (keyboards), and Michael Brecker (saxophone) who give these compositions more energy than on the studio recordings. The musicians are given room to jam, and they sound terrific on uptempo songs such as "Coyote" and "In France They Kiss on Main Street." If there is a general theme of these songs, it's about growing older and maturing after the failed idealism of the late '60s (the album opens with audio clips from the movie Rebel Without a Cause). Although this album is pleasing, the live arrangements are not different enough from the studio versions to warrant higher marks. In fact, Mitchell has always been an album artist who recorded studio albums that had a sound and feel all their own. While Shadows and Light provides a nice summary of her experimental period for casual fans, interested listeners should start with Hejira or The Hissing of Summer Lawns.
Vik Iyengar, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Introduction
  2. In France They Kiss on Main Street
  3. Edith and the Kingpin
  4. Coyote
  5. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
  6. The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines
  7. Amelia
  8. Pat's Solo
  9. Hejira
  10. Black Crow
  11. Don's Solo
  12. Dreamland
  13. Free Man in Paris
  14. Band Introduction
  15. Furry Sings the Blues
  16. Why Do Fools Fall in Love?
  17. Shadows and Light
  18. God Must Be a Boogie Man
  19. Woodstock