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Play Me Backwards
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1992
Recorded Nashville, 1992
Genre Folk-pop, country pop
Length36:19
Label Virgin [1]
Producer Wally Wilson, Kenny Greenberg
Joan Baez chronology
Speaking of Dreams
(1989)
Play Me Backwards
(1992)
Rare, Live & Classic
(1993)

Play Me Backwards is an album by the American musician Joan Baez, released in 1992. [2] The album was nominated for a Grammy for Best Contemporary Folk Recording. [3] Baez supported it with an international tour. [4]

In 2011, Play Me Backwards was reissued on CD with a bonus disc of 10 previously unreleased tracks, including " The Trouble With the Truth", "Medicine Wheel" and a cover of Bob Dylan's " Seven Curses". [5]

Production

Recorded in Nashville, the album was produced by Wally Wilson and Kenny Greenberg. [6] [7] Baez sought out material after being dismayed with the songs pitched to her; she spent 14 months trying to find the right songs. [8] [9] The album's first single, "Stones in the Road", for which Baez shot a video, was written by Mary Chapin Carpenter. [10] [11] [12] "Through Your Hands" was written by John Hiatt. [13] "I'm with You" is about Baez's son, Gabriel. [14]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [15]
The Indianapolis Star [16]
Rolling Stone [17]

The Boston Globe called Play Me Backwards "mostly an album of mature, surprisingly percussive folk-pop love songs that marks her finest work since her Diamonds and Rust album of 1975." [18] The Sun-Sentinel wrote that "Baez's erstwhile hyper-quivering soprano thankfully does not flutter so much, and has deepened marvelously with age." [7]

The Chicago Tribune deemed the album "a surprisingly relaxed, rhythmic and modern set that sounds like it could have been recorded by any one of a number of today's folk-and country-flavored pop female singer-songwriters." [19] The Indianapolis Star noted that "Baez's voice sounds as pure as ever." [16]

Track listing

All tracks composed by Joan Baez, Wally Wilson and Kenny Greenberg, except where indicated.

  1. "Play Me Backwards"
  2. "Amsterdam" ( Janis Ian, Buddy Mondlock)
  3. "Isaac and Abraham"
  4. "Stones in the Road" ( Mary Chapin Carpenter)
  5. "Steal Across the Border" (Ron Davies)
  6. "I'm with You" (Baez)
  7. "I'm with You" (Reprise) (Baez)
  8. "Strange Rivers" ( John Stewart)
  9. "Through Your Hands" ( John Hiatt)
  10. "The Dream Song"
  11. "The Edge of Glory"

Personnel

Musicians

Others

  • James A. Ball - engineer
  • Peter Coleman - engineer
  • Tom Dolan - design
  • Roy Gamble - engineer, second engineer
  • Aaron D. Jacoves - A&R/executive producer
  • Eric Gorodetzky - engineer, second engineer
  • Kenny Greenberg - producer
  • Mick Haggerty - art direction
  • Bob Ludwig - mastering
  • Melanie Nissen - photography
  • Greg Parker - engineer, second engineer
  • Ed Simonton - engineer, second engineer
  • Kevin Smith - mixing
  • Taylor York - engineer

References

  1. ^ Brozan, Nadine (14 Oct 1992). "Chronicle". The New York Times. p. B8.
  2. ^ Galvin, Peter (Nov 1992). "Play Me Backwards by Joan Baez". Interview. 22 (11): 44.
  3. ^ "Joan Baez". Recording Academy. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  4. ^ "Joan Baez Getting Active in Music Business Again". Orlando Sentinel. Reuters. 6 Nov 1992. p. A2.
  5. ^ "Joan Baez: Play Me Backwards - Proper Music". Proper Music. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
  6. ^ Holden, Stephen (24 Oct 1992). "Joan Baez Goes Back To Her Folk-Club Roots". The New York Times. p. 1:17.
  7. ^ a b Lannert, John (19 Nov 1992). "Baez Is Back". Sun-Sentinel. p. 3E.
  8. ^ Catlin, Roger (20 Nov 1992). "With new album out, Joan Baez has plenty to play in Springfield". Hartford Courant. p. B4.
  9. ^ Plotnikoff, David (17 Jan 1993). "Joan Baez: a folk singer not a fossil". Toronto Star. p. D6.
  10. ^ Flick, Larry (27 Nov 1992). "New Baez album melds folk with rock". St. Petersburg Times. p. 11B.
  11. ^ Barnes, Harper (21 Mar 1993). "Protest Still Hooks Baez". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 3F.
  12. ^ Willman, Chris (22 Oct 1992). "Joan Baez Blends Old, New". Los Angeles Times. p. F7.
  13. ^ Joyce, Mike (15 Nov 1992). "Joan Baez: 'Play Me Backwards'". The Washington Post. p. G9.
  14. ^ Hentoff, Nat (13 Jan 1993). "On Disc: Baez is back". The Wall Street Journal. p. A2.
  15. ^ "Play Me Backwards Review by Kelly McCartney". AllMusic. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  16. ^ a b Schoch, Eric B. (27 Nov 1992). "Joan Baez: 'Play Me Backwards'". The Indianapolis Star. p. B9.
  17. ^ "Joan Baez Play Me Backwards". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  18. ^ Morse, Steve (6 Nov 1992). "Joan Baez and Judy Collins are back on the move in the '90s". Arts & Film. The Boston Globe. p. 43.
  19. ^ Heim, Chris (27 Nov 1992). "Joan Baez and James McMurtry". Friday. Chicago Tribune. p. M.