Stronger

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (83 ratings)
Stronger album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 42:40

eMusic Review 0

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Andrew Mueller

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
If it doesn't kill you, it makes you...
2008 | Label: Yep Roc Records / Redeye

It seems fair to assume that the title of Carlene Carter's first album of original material since 1995 is a recognition of the creative and perhaps redemptive possibilities of anguish.

In 2003 alone, Carter lost her boyfriend (Heartbreakers 'bassplayer Howie Epstein), mother (June Carter), stepfather (Johnny Cash) and sister (Rosey Nix Adams). However, Stronger is not — or at least not exclusively — an expression of grief: Carter has credited the album's existence substantially to her 2006 marriage to the actor Joseph Breen.

Breen is rewarded with a backing vocalist credit on "It Takes One to Know Me," which the fifty-something Carter originally wrote as a teenager, as a birthday gift for Johnny Cash (Cash's version finally appeared on 2005's The Legend box set). It's an enduringly gorgeous, heartfelt ballad, but it's in fine company on Stronger. Carter's writing is as crystal clear as her voice, and with the sole exception of the somewhat gratingly Shania-ish "On to You," Stronger is an exceptional collection of songs. "Break My Little Heart in Two" is a terrific, Loretta Lynnish rumination on the attraction of bad men, "Spider Lace" a spectral, pedal-steel-lashed waltz of startling beauty, "Judgment Day" a keening lament for… read more »

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A strong return to form

FervorCoulee

After a lost decade, CC is back, and Stronger is as powerful album as longtime fans could hope for. Not as commercial or line-dance friendly as her NashVegas albums of the early to mid-90s (thankfully), Stronger has more than a little of the spirit of her Carter family ancestors woven within the tracks. It's a gooder, ProTools or not.

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Welcome Back!

phillipwhite91

As one of the many guys I knew who loved watching Carlene's videos on CMT in the '90s, I was always watching for new music from her. After such a long time, it's been nice to sit down and enjoy some new tracks with her signature voice and style. I'm glad to see that her music is fresh, but still retains her "cool cat" attitude and sound. I've always been a bigger fan of her rockin' songs, but I have to say that although "Stronger" and "It Takes One to Know Me" are slower tempo numbers, I enjoyed them as well. My favorites are "The Bitter End," "Why Be Blue," and "On To You." A hearty welcome back to one of my favorite artists!

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At Last

JW

As a long time fan of CC I do prefer her stuff when she was based in the UK. This new album is about half and half. Some sounds like the UK CC and some like the US CC. There are some excellent and clearly autobiographical lyrics chronicling her "troubles". Not sure about the re-recording of the old live favourite "I'm So Cool" but if you don't already have her early albums it would be a welcome addition as it's not that far from the original. I hope she backs the album with a tour. It must be 15 years since she performed in the UK.

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Great Comeback for Carlene

funoka

I bought an early release of Carlene's "Stonger" CD from her fan site last year, but this new Yep Roc version has a beefed up sound and a different track order. Carlene was alt-country before anyone knew what it was -- before Jason & the Scorchers, before Rank & File -- she was putting an edge on twang. Check out her classic "Musical Shapes" where she's backed by then-hubby Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds, and what became Rockpile. The tracks on "Stronger" are not as edgy, but they are progressive. I especially enjoy "Why Be Blue" and the title track. I am so glad to see this on eMusic. Carlene is a national treasure, and from all accounts, she's got her act together again. See her live if you have a chance, too. She's a whole lot of fun

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They Say All Music Guide

The last time most folks heard about Carlene Carter, the news wasn’t good — in 2001, she and then-boyfriend Howie Epstein, who had produced her best-selling album I Fell in Love during downtime from his gig as bassist with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, spent the night in jail in New Mexico after they were pulled over in a stolen truck with nearly three grams of heroin. Since Carter hadn’t released an album since 1995 and had a reputation for drinking and rowdy behavior, it was easy for many fans to imagine the worst, and while Carter began pulling herself back to health, she returned to the stage in 2003 in a musical set in Nashville about the Carter Family (in which she played her own mother, June Carter), that would prove to be a devastating year for her, as her mother, her step-father Johnny Cash, her sister Rosey Carter, and her former beau Epstein all died within the space of a few months. After all this, the mere fact that Carlene Carter is healthy, happily married, and making music again seems surprising enough, so it’s doubly impressive that 2008′s Stronger is one of her best and most personal albums to date. Carter’s voice is deeper and a shade less flexible on Stronger than on her previous recordings, but she sounds soulful and impassioned and can still bring her songs to vivid, compelling life in the studio, and with the help of John McFee, who produced the sessions and plays most of the instruments, she’s made a disc that’s as lively as her music of the ’80s and ’90s without sidestepping the emotional gravity that informs her new material. With the exception of the opening cut “The Bitter End,” Carter wrote all the songs on Stronger by herself, and while not every tune refers to the drama that’s come into her life since her last album, “Judgment Day,” “It Takes One to Know Me,” and the title cut are clearly informed by the good and the bad that’s come her way in the past dozen years, and even upbeat songs like “Why Be Blue” and “Break My Little Heart in Two” are tougher and edgier that you’d expect (and the remake of “I’m So Cool” from Musical Shapes adds some depth missing from the original). If Carlene Carter’s dark days have aged her, it’s done her music good — Stronger shows she still has spunk and fire to spare, while also revealing a hard-won maturity and strength that richly, truly earns her the over-used appellation of “survivor.” – Mark Deming

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