Finally Travelogue reaches NZ!  This review was actually published on
December 26th (but I was lounging on the beach at the time....)

Joni Mitchell: Travelogue 

26.12.2002 By GRAHAM REID 
(Herald rating: * * * ) 

Mitchell, 59, recently suggested she may retire, which may account for this
somewhat self-aggrandising double album in which she revisits her back
catalogue with a 70-piece orchestra, 20-voice choir and guest pianist Herbie
Hancock, saxophonist Wayne Shorter and flugelhorn player Kenny Wheeler.
While there are some excellent revisions here (Be Cool, Hejira, God Must Be
a Boogie Man) there's also an over-ripe, sentiment-tugging, emotion-milking
quality about some (Love, Slouching Towards Bethlehem) and it's notable on a
lavishly presented album with Bush/bin Laden paintings she has picked some
songs which resonate post-September 11 (Otis and Marlena with the line
"while Muslims stick up Washington" is the opener). The formerly light and
spry Woodstock is here sunk by the weight of its self-important delivery and
dark strings. Mitchell never lacked ambition, but judicious pruning might
have made for a more consistent collection. 

Label: Nonesuch 

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