Album Details
Title: Live and Well Artist: Dolly Parton Release Date: 9/14/2004 Label: Sugar Hill Records Album Type(s): live UPC: 015891399829 Genre: Country Styles: Traditional Country, Contemporary Country, Country Comedy, Bluegrass, Honky Tonk, Contemporary Bluegrass Moods: Brassy, Confident, Lively, Amiable/Good-Natured, Bittersweet, Cheerful, Earnest, Reflective, Sentimental, Earthy, Energetic, Organic, Playful, Poignant, Searching, Sweet, Gentle, Plaintive, Calm/Peaceful, Delicate, Intimate, Theatrical, Wistful Total Copies: 0 Members Wishing: 0 Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 2 |
Track Listings Disc 1
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Orange Blossom Special
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Train, Train
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The Grass Is Blue
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Mountain Angel
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Shine
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Little Sparrow
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Rocky Top
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My Tennessee Mountain Home
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Coat of Many Colors
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Smokey Mountain Memories
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Applejack
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Marry Me
Track Listings Disc 2
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Halos and Horns
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I'm Gone
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Dagger Through the Heart
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If
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After the Gold Rush
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9 to 5
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Jolene
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A Cappella Medley: Islands in the Stream/Here You Come Again/Why'd ...
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We Irish
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Stairway to Heaven
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I Will Always Love You
Additional Releases
| Year | Type | Label | Catalog # | | 2004 | CD | Sugar Hill Records | 3998 |
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Other Editions
- No other editions were found for this album.
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Album Review
Released simultaneously on CD and DVD (both feature the same program), Dolly Parton's 2002 tour, her first in a decade, is captured for posterity for the majority of her fans who couldn't make it to one of the only 13 shows she did. Riding high from a well-received trilogy of late-'90s/early-'00 albums that found the singer/songwriter reinvigorated both artistically and commercially by a return to her hillbilly origins, the show is an especially exuberant performance. Backed by a predominantly acoustic group only identified as Gary Davis and the Blueniques (individual members are anonymous), Parton runs through two hours of faithfully reproduced but agreeably stripped down, bluegrassy versions of hits such as "Jolene," "Coat of Many Colors" and "9 to 5" with a healthy dose of more recent rootsy fare. Dolly is in fine fettle throughout, chatting with the rapturous audience, making jokes and generally hamming it up with her good-natured but obviously rehearsed between-song patter. While some of this is fine and captures the joyous mood, more judicious pruning would make this a better listening experience, especially after the first time around when the jokes and asides are no longer fresh. Having to endure hearing the audience stumble through a "9 to 5" singalong is no fun and should have been cut from the running time. Ditto for a quick run-through of songs that didn't make it, which was probably amusing at the time but not something you'd want to relive. A sprightly a cappella medley of once-slick hits, a terrific version of Collective Soul's "Shine," and an ebullient set closing cover of Zepp's "Stairway to Heaven" -- all of which tap into Parton's spiritual and gospel roots -- best show her and the band's talents. Although this effectively documents the gig and the star's irrepressible personality, better editing could have reduced the album to a stunning single disc instead of a bloated and occasionally inconsistent double. ~ Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide
Credits
| Name | Credits | | Blueniques | Producer | | Brent Truitt | Mandolin | | Danny Joe Brown Band | Mixing | | Dennis Carney | Photography | | Dolly Parton | Producer, Vocals, Audio Production | | Gary Davis | Guitar (Acoustic), Banjo, Producer, Audio Production | | Jimmy Mattingly | Fiddle | | Kent Wells | Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic), Vocals | | Randy Kohrs | Vocals, Dobro | | Richard Dennison | Guitar (Acoustic), Vocals, Keyboards | | Seva | Mastering | | Steve Turner | Drums | | Sue Meyer | Design |
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