CD Review: Dar Williams - My Better Self

First posted on Mark Is Cranky:

    Every time you laugh just a little Take One step closer, solving a riddle It echoes...all over the world

Some people say that music and politics don't mix. That songwriters should stay out of it. That they're abusing their celebrity in order to push a message. That they should just shut up.

    Every time you open to kindness
    Make one connection, used to divide us
    It echoes...all over the world

Like most polarizing issues, there's us and there's them. We...don't like their songs. They don't like ours. I like Lee Greenwood's "God Bless The USA", but those Dixie Chicks should just move to Canada. You love the Stones' "Sweet Neo Con" while...well, you get the idea.

    Every time you choose one more morning
    Goodness or meanness, life has one warning
    It echoes...all over the world

Sadly, any middle ground viewpoints or alternative paradigms are lost in the dust.

Dar Williams, while her heart may not exactly be in that middle ground, has taken a less confrontational approach. You've been reading the lyrics to "Echoes". It's the heart and soul of her latest record My Better Self. The song (written for Dar by Jules Shear, Rob Hyman and Stewart Lerman) takes a sort of Tibetan prayer flag/all-things-interconnected look at how we might approach the problems of the world. It doesn't point an accusing finger, it just says, "What if?" Dar was so moved by this song that she actually started Echoes Initiative, which supports community-based charities along the road of her upcoming tour.

My Better Self is a political album only in that it occasionally takes time out to look at the world from all sides. "Empire" worries about what the U.S. has become. "Beautiful Enemy" muses on what causes opposition (between people and nations) and the nature of 'fault' (hint: nobody's innocent).

When world concerns are pushed aside, My Better Self winds itself around love (romantic and not) and life (the beginning and the end). The opening "Teen For God" (a long-lost companion to "The Christians & The Pagans") is a story of an adolescent running headlong into religious paradox. "So Close To My Heart", written for and about Dar's child, chronicles the ebb and flow of her creative urges during her pregnancy. "Miss You Till I Meet You" (which, by the way, can make a person tear up just a little) makes you ache for a relationship that has yet to begin. "Comfortably Numb", covered as a duet with Ani DiFranco, gives off a strong vibe of mortality considered. "Two Sides Of The River", on which Dar sings the blues accompanied by Soulive, uses the moving river as a metaphor for how we handle what life has to offer.

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Article Author: Mark Saleski

Mark Saleski is a writer and music obsessive based out of the Monadnock region of New Hampshire. He is an editor and writer for Jazz.com. He also writes reviews for Blogcritics.org and produces the weekly feature The Friday Morning Listen. …

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  • My Better Self My Better Self

    As the folk singer-songwriter continues to incorporate more pop elements, Dar Williams conjures a whole coming-of-age era in an album that suggests a 1970s soundtrack suffused with 1960s idealism. ...

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