Product Details
World Without Tears

World Without Tears
Lucinda Williams

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Track Listing

  1. Fruits Of My Labour
  2. Righteously
  3. Ventura
  4. Bleeding Fingers
  5. Over Time
  6. Those Three Days
  7. Atonement
  8. Sweet Side
  9. Minneapolis
  10. People Talkin'
  11. American Dream
  12. World Without Tears
  13. Words Fell

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4978 in Music
  • Released on: 2003-04-07
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .19 pounds
  • Running time: 60 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Most artists who appeal to adult listeners tend to settle into a comfortable niche, but Lucinda Williams refuses to play it safe on World Without Tears. Instead her music stings like an open wound as she continues to strip away the protective layers from her art's emotional core. Though Williams has long been prized for the naked honesty of her music, this album is even more raw than its predecessors. From the down-and-dirty bar-band blues of "Atonement" to the Rolling Stones styled swagger of "Bleeding Fingers" to the tricky balance of debasement and transcendence in "Ventura", Williams leaves the nerve endings of her music exposed.

With the band opting for first-take immediacy rather than polish, some of the most powerful material is also the neediest, as the singer addresses lovers who have disrespected her ("Righteously") or abandoned her ("Those Three Days", "Minneapolis"). Although her attempts at rap on "Sweet Side" and "American Dream" might cause diehard fans to wince, her willingness to take creative chances reaffirms her position at the vanguard of a rootsy progressivism that transcends musical category. Simply put, there's more Patti Smith in her than there is Patsy Cline. --Don McLeese

CD Description
After breakthrough albums 'Car Wheels On A Gravel Road' and'Essence', 'World Without Tears' is a partial return to therawer sound of her early albums. There is much more of a live band feel to this album from the Stonesy 'Bleeding Fingers' and the roots country of 'People Talkin'.


Customer Reviews

Lucinda's 'World' achingly beautiful4
Lucinda Williams is a woman of constant sorrow. At least, it seems that way on her misleadingly titled seventh album World Without Tears.

Laced with heartache and sorrow, steeped in loneliness and disillusionment, these 13 achingly beautiful songs capture the notoriously uncompromising singer-songwriter adrift in a stark, candlelit landscape of woozy country waltzes and raw-bones, deliberately paced roots-rockers.

Opening cut Fruits of my Labour sets the tone with its languid tempo and vibrato-soaked guitar swirls, which are echoed in longing ballads like Ventura, the old-timey Over Time, the torchy Worlds Fell and the chilly Minneapolis.

The hour-long set is by no means a one-dimensional affair, though. First single Righteously is a sexy, funky little pout powered by searing, Coltrane-inspired guitar solos and one of Lucinda's steamier vocals -- she just turned 50 this year, but the way her bittersweet pipes purr lines like, "When you run your hand all up and run it back down my leg / Get me all worked up like that" will practically melt the wax in you ears. It righteously breaks the hypnotic spell cast by those ballads, while the gnarled blooz-stomp of Atonement, the ragged Stonesy jive of Bleeding Fingers and the plain-spoken folktronic monologue of American Dream also go a long way from keeping Lucinda from getting stuck in a Cowboy Junkies-style rut.

Stylistic variety aside, though, it's the refrain of American Dream -- "Everything is wrong" -- that more succinctly reflects Lucinda's perspective on World Without Tears. Or as she puts it on the title cut: "If we lived in a world without tears / How would bruises find a face to lie upon? / How would scars find skin to etch themselves into?" And how, we could ask, would Lucinda Williams find anything to write songs about?

If we're lucky, we'll never know.

'America's greatest living songwriter' does it again5
Country music is difficult for me. Too many hats, too much misogyny disguised as down-home family values. And my Dad loved it.
There are exceptions, those outstanding songwriters who hover in the aisles of that musical church, writing songs that reflect your life in its mirror and breaks it into tiny glorious pieces. Hank Williams Sr, Gram Parsons at his best and sometimes EmmyLou Harris, Steve Earle, occasionally Ryan Adams, and Lucinda Williams.
These songs sound so urgent, so heartfelt, so racked with need that it takes a while to appreciate how perfectly formed, well played and well produced they are.
These are songs for adults, who've been around the block a few times, aren't without scars, and are fiercely passionate despite all that. You'll dance, you'll cry, you'll recommend it to people you care about.

Slow and hot4
It may have plenty of twang, but you don't have to like country music to enjoy this highly-acclaimed release from Lucinda Williams. Songs of broken love and disillusion are nothing new but Williams has a way of writing and delivering that touches the nerves. She also has a good ear for a melody and a fine band. Highlights for me are the beautiful 'Ventura', the poignant 'Those Three Days' and the tingling 'Minneapolis'.

Not everything works, but opinions are bound to vary. Rap is a non-starter for me, yet I find 'American Dream', with its empty 'everything is wrong' refrain, compelling. 'Sweet Side', by contrast, I find irritating, while the dark and dirty 'Atonement' is simply unappealing. The one small general quibble I have is that the songs are mostly slow, if individually effective. I get the feeling though that she's striving for that one killer slowburner so hard that, by the time you get to the title track, you feel as if you've heard it before.

Even so, this is pretty intense stuff, delivered with class.