Couldn't get much worse than this. I don't agree with her take on the music but I can 
understand that, for most critics and the public, the voice is now too far gone. This 
is sad.

Betty Clarke
Friday November 22, 2002
The Guardian 

 
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If the health warning isn't enough to put you off cigarettes, the nicotine-ravaged 
vocals of the once angelic, now gasping Joni Mitchell should. 
Mitchell's voice is a husky shadow of its former feather-light glory, mirroring how 
her joyful, playful attitude has dwindled to bitter dissatisfaction. Having announced 
that this is her final album, Mitchell has reappraised her work with a huge orchestral 
makeover. 

She has already explored such classical territory on 2000's Both Sides Now, and here 
she slides easily among the brass and crashing cymbals of the 70-piece orchestra. 
Songs from her jazz-fusion era adapt well: the venomous For the Roses is now more 
scathing and the brooding drama of Just Like This Train has become an attack.

Sex Kills, from 1994's Turbulent Indigo, proves her skills as social commentator 
remain sharp amid the screeching strings. But the blustering instrumentation kills her 
fragile poetry and the earth-bound vocals negate any magic, rendering this double 
album a leaden memorial to a shining talent. 

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