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Hopeful Woman (Vinyl)
Natalie Jane Hillās new record, Hopeful Woman, is composed of slender songs, life-sized, in which humans endeavor to reconcile themselves to wildernesses and cities; rearrange their rooms and open windows to be
closer to the world outside and its choruses of frogs and crickets; attempt and fail to reach one another across a kitchen table; weather natural disaster. If something we might deign to call self-discovery emerges over the course of these narratives, it owes in no small part to the scale of their scenes, to the modesty of their ambitions, in which tumult and adaptation and growth are metabolized through a bodyās gentle actions and reactions, its moments of quietude and observation and reflection. āInto the current of life I will fly,ā Hill sings on Oranges, a song that would serve her well as a mission statement. āChanging and loving and growing and trying.ā
Hopeful Woman was recorded live in two parts: first in Lockhart, Texas āsheās a native of the stateāand then in Western North Carolina, where she now makes her home. She enlisted a small ensemble of collaborators whose spacious but focused arrangements hum with the nuance and delicacy that has attended the recordings of another
thoughtful Texas songwriter, the great Edith Frost. Hillās crackerjack multi-instrumentalist partner Mat Davidson in particular appears throughout with preternatural grace: attend to his aching pedal steel on āNever Left Me,ā or demurely pastoral-psychedelic flute that weaves through āLucky to Be,ā or the stacked fiddles on āBlue is the Color of My Sun.ā All is in deft service to Hillās magnificent voice, redolent of Hope Sandoval or Karen Dalton but more humane, more sturdy, closer to the earth.
Itās only close to the earth where hope takes root and, we can only hope, growsānot in reckless, wild fecundity but in measured steps, one at a time, while the storm gathers, rips through, passes. āAnd I know through time weāll give and weāll let go,ā Hill sings. āAnd I know this time Iāll give and Iāll let go.ā Hers is a wise and humane hopefulness, built exquisitely to human scale. The same can be said of this record.
closer to the world outside and its choruses of frogs and crickets; attempt and fail to reach one another across a kitchen table; weather natural disaster. If something we might deign to call self-discovery emerges over the course of these narratives, it owes in no small part to the scale of their scenes, to the modesty of their ambitions, in which tumult and adaptation and growth are metabolized through a bodyās gentle actions and reactions, its moments of quietude and observation and reflection. āInto the current of life I will fly,ā Hill sings on Oranges, a song that would serve her well as a mission statement. āChanging and loving and growing and trying.ā
Hopeful Woman was recorded live in two parts: first in Lockhart, Texas āsheās a native of the stateāand then in Western North Carolina, where she now makes her home. She enlisted a small ensemble of collaborators whose spacious but focused arrangements hum with the nuance and delicacy that has attended the recordings of another
thoughtful Texas songwriter, the great Edith Frost. Hillās crackerjack multi-instrumentalist partner Mat Davidson in particular appears throughout with preternatural grace: attend to his aching pedal steel on āNever Left Me,ā or demurely pastoral-psychedelic flute that weaves through āLucky to Be,ā or the stacked fiddles on āBlue is the Color of My Sun.ā All is in deft service to Hillās magnificent voice, redolent of Hope Sandoval or Karen Dalton but more humane, more sturdy, closer to the earth.
Itās only close to the earth where hope takes root and, we can only hope, growsānot in reckless, wild fecundity but in measured steps, one at a time, while the storm gathers, rips through, passes. āAnd I know through time weāll give and weāll let go,ā Hill sings. āAnd I know this time Iāll give and Iāll let go.ā Hers is a wise and humane hopefulness, built exquisitely to human scale. The same can be said of this record.
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Description
Natalie Jane Hillās new record, Hopeful Woman, is composed of slender songs, life-sized, in which humans endeavor to reconcile themselves to wildernesses and cities; rearrange their rooms and open windows to be
closer to the world outside and its choruses of frogs and crickets; attempt and fail to reach one another across a kitchen table; weather natural disaster. If something we might deign to call self-discovery emerges over the course of these narratives, it owes in no small part to the scale of their scenes, to the modesty of their ambitions, in which tumult and adaptation and growth are metabolized through a bodyās gentle actions and reactions, its moments of quietude and observation and reflection. āInto the current of life I will fly,ā Hill sings on Oranges, a song that would serve her well as a mission statement. āChanging and loving and growing and trying.ā
Hopeful Woman was recorded live in two parts: first in Lockhart, Texas āsheās a native of the stateāand then in Western North Carolina, where she now makes her home. She enlisted a small ensemble of collaborators whose spacious but focused arrangements hum with the nuance and delicacy that has attended the recordings of another
thoughtful Texas songwriter, the great Edith Frost. Hillās crackerjack multi-instrumentalist partner Mat Davidson in particular appears throughout with preternatural grace: attend to his aching pedal steel on āNever Left Me,ā or demurely pastoral-psychedelic flute that weaves through āLucky to Be,ā or the stacked fiddles on āBlue is the Color of My Sun.ā All is in deft service to Hillās magnificent voice, redolent of Hope Sandoval or Karen Dalton but more humane, more sturdy, closer to the earth.
Itās only close to the earth where hope takes root and, we can only hope, growsānot in reckless, wild fecundity but in measured steps, one at a time, while the storm gathers, rips through, passes. āAnd I know through time weāll give and weāll let go,ā Hill sings. āAnd I know this time Iāll give and Iāll let go.ā Hers is a wise and humane hopefulness, built exquisitely to human scale. The same can be said of this record.
closer to the world outside and its choruses of frogs and crickets; attempt and fail to reach one another across a kitchen table; weather natural disaster. If something we might deign to call self-discovery emerges over the course of these narratives, it owes in no small part to the scale of their scenes, to the modesty of their ambitions, in which tumult and adaptation and growth are metabolized through a bodyās gentle actions and reactions, its moments of quietude and observation and reflection. āInto the current of life I will fly,ā Hill sings on Oranges, a song that would serve her well as a mission statement. āChanging and loving and growing and trying.ā
Hopeful Woman was recorded live in two parts: first in Lockhart, Texas āsheās a native of the stateāand then in Western North Carolina, where she now makes her home. She enlisted a small ensemble of collaborators whose spacious but focused arrangements hum with the nuance and delicacy that has attended the recordings of another
thoughtful Texas songwriter, the great Edith Frost. Hillās crackerjack multi-instrumentalist partner Mat Davidson in particular appears throughout with preternatural grace: attend to his aching pedal steel on āNever Left Me,ā or demurely pastoral-psychedelic flute that weaves through āLucky to Be,ā or the stacked fiddles on āBlue is the Color of My Sun.ā All is in deft service to Hillās magnificent voice, redolent of Hope Sandoval or Karen Dalton but more humane, more sturdy, closer to the earth.
Itās only close to the earth where hope takes root and, we can only hope, growsānot in reckless, wild fecundity but in measured steps, one at a time, while the storm gathers, rips through, passes. āAnd I know through time weāll give and weāll let go,ā Hill sings. āAnd I know this time Iāll give and Iāll let go.ā Hers is a wise and humane hopefulness, built exquisitely to human scale. The same can be said of this record.

















