Pros:Excellent vocals and melodies.
Cons:Could use a remaster. Sound quality isn't that great.
The Bottom Line: A great album, beautifully interwoven together with the common theme of broken relationships and moving on with life.
Linda Ronstadt's 1974 breakthrough hit Heart Like A Wheel represents her greatest musical accomplishment and one of country pop's definitive moments. Never again would Ronstadt be able to capture the chillingly fragile heartbreak of the title track, the guilty love of Dark End of the Street or the frustration of When Will I Be Loved? Ronstadts voice is in fine form, and she has great musical and lyrical accompaniment.
Ronstadt's vocals is well suited for the melodic banjo lines, rolling piano notes and horns of country pop, but she also uses her higher register to good effect. When she sings the line and my love for you is like a sinking ship, her wavering voice nearly cracks with heartbreak--a sharp contrast to Dark End of the Street, when she deeply intones please don't cry / tonight we'll meet / at the dark end of the street.
Elsewhere on the album, Ronstadt's voice blends perfectly with the musical arrangements. Her cover of Buddy Holly's It Doesn't Matter Anymore rolls along with an insistent drum-line that echoes the song's theme of reluctantly but assuredly moving on after a tedious break-up, while the blaringly loud chorus of Willing is as hopeful and the lyrics are determined: I've been warped by the wind, driven by the snow...But I'm still willin'.
Heart Like A Wheel is not a celebration of love but rather, an exploration of the anguish and power of heartbreak. Relationships here are unhealthy or hopeless (Dark End of the Street, Faithless Love), breakups are overwhelmingly sad (Heart Like A Wheel, I Can't Help It If I'm Still In Love With You) and prospects for the future are tenuous, at best (When Will I Be Loved, Keep Me From Blowing Away). And yet, Heart Like A Wheel suggests that a failed unhealthy relationship is better than a successful but harmful one (It Doesn't Matter Anymore, You're No Good). The album concludes with a promise of a bright new day (You Can Close Your Eyes), suggesting that even when you think everything is lost, time proves to be a great healer of a broken heart.
Recommended: Yes
Great Music to Play While: Listening
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