The Day

A review of Joan Baez’s new CD

- By PABLO GORONDI Associated Press

Joan Baez WHISTLE DOWN THE WIND Bobolink/Razor & Tie

Nearly 10 years on from her last studio album, Joan Baez delivers another pearl, 10 deeply felt interpreta­tions about the human condition and the state of the world.

Baez's voice is in fine form and if her range now is, unsurprisi­ngly, more earth angel than angelic, it serves to enhance her expressive­ness, the depth of the lyrics and the strength of the melodies.

Some of the songwriter­s, like Tom Waits, Kathleen Brennan and Eliza Gilkyson, also contribute­d to "Day After Tomorrow," the 2008 album produced by Steve Earle that's like a soul mate of this one, shepherded by Joe Henry.

The Waits/Brennan title track and their "Last Leaf" are typically full of captivatin­g images and a few lines, like one about Dwight Eisenhower, provide some moments of comic relief. Baez can be mischievou­sly funny in interviews, but not here.

"Another World," from Anohni, is one of the most disconsola­te tracks — "I need another world/This one's nearly gone" — while "The President Sang Amazing Grace," Zoe Mulford's reflection on the 2015 Charleston church shooting, is one of the most moving.

Henry's own "Civil War" seems both personal and universal while Mary Chapin Carpenter's "The Things That We Are Made Of" is deeply poetic with a glimmer of hope.

"Silver Blade," one of Josh Ritter's two contributi­ons, is a self-defense murder ballad where, unlike the motherly protection provided in "Silver Dagger" from Baez's 1960 debut, the protagonis­t can take care of herself.

Baez will be presenting "Whistle Down the Wind" on what's meant to be her last extended tour. It's a strong album for a farewell, as representa­tive of her talents as of the times.

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