The London Evening Standard has nominated Travelogue as CD of the week and
given it a good review.

Les (London and getting ready to munch on his words when his copy gets here
sometime....next week, perhaps)

Joni Mitchell
Travelogue
London Evening Standard - John Aizlewood - 21.11.2002

For all her critical kudos and her perennially dropable name, Joni
Mitchell's sales have never eclipsed her influence. The 2CD Travelogue is an
attempt to present Mitchell's back catalogue in a new light. Alongside a 70
piece orchestra and backing band including jazz stalwarts Herbie Hancock and
Wayne Shorter, she has re-recorded a 22 song selection of her back
catalogue, from 1968's The Dawntreader to a trio culled from 1992's
Turbulent Indigo album.

If Mitchell is hoping to introduce her work to a new audience, she will
probably disappointed, for it remains too intricate, even by the standards
of her acolytes Beth Orton and Fiona Apple. More crucially when Chinese Cafe
seques into Unchained Melody, the difference in accessibility is startling.
However, these songs, with their myriad musical and lyrical subtexts, are
ideal for this format and, 70 pieces or not, thisis one restrained
orchestra. Her voice glides over Slouching Towards Bethlehem and the acerbic
Sex Kills, whilst an ominous funereal trudge through Woodstock gives her
best known song a whole new death rattle-dimension.

Of course, the exercise might be seen as merely a way of wringing a few more
sales from songs which have never reached the wider world, but the
introductory swell to Judgement of the Moon and Stars (Ludwig's Song)
suggests in fact that Joni Mitchell has found her natural home, albeit a
holiday one.

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