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<album>
  <review>More angelic than devilish, Halos &amp; Horns, the third in a series of back-to-the-roots styled acoustic albums the legendary country singer recorded for Sugar Hill label, again boasts superior musicianship and a loose but not necessarily low-key style. A mix of new songs, rerecorded obscurities Parton felt deserved another chance ("What a Heartache" got lost on the soundtrack to Rhinestone, "Shattered Image" is a little-known gem from 1976's All I Can Do album, and an unrecorded oldie "John Daniel" goes back nearly 35 years), and high-profile covers of Bread's "If" and Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven" find the singer/songwriter is in excellent voice and exuberant spirits. Some of the new compositions, such as the ballad "If Only" (written for a movie about Mae West Parton was making when recording this album, but deemed too sad for the soundtrack) and the stirring "Raven Dove," with a full gospel backing, are nearly the equal of the singer's best work. The jaunty tempo but sorrowful lyrics of "Dagger Through the Heart" is classic bluegrass complete with banjo and fiddle and an example of Parton at her finest. Not everything works; "These Old Bones," a winding story-song marred by Parton taking the voice of an old woman on the chorus, is sappy if well intentioned, and her version of "If" remains a bit smarmy, even torn down to its acoustic roots. But her take on an album-closing "Stairway to Heaven" (given the thumbs up from no lesser experts than Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, who had to approve Parton's slightly altered lyrics) smartly and successfully refashions the song's dense themes into a contemporary gospel ode which retains the mystery of the original even as it is rearranged for this project's folk/bluegrass direction. Stirring, unpretentious yet powerful, Halos &amp; Horns effectively continues Parton's glorifying of her mountain roots. She subsequently launched her first tour in a decade after this disc's 2002 release.</review>
  <outline>More angelic than devilish, Halos &amp; Horns, the third in a series of back-to-the-roots styled acoustic albums the legendary country singer recorded for Sugar Hill label, again boasts superior musicianship and a loose but not necessarily low-key style. A mix of new songs, rerecorded obscurities Parton felt deserved another chance ("What a Heartache" got lost on the soundtrack to Rhinestone, "Shattered Image" is a little-known gem from 1976's All I Can Do album, and an unrecorded oldie "John Daniel" goes back nearly 35 years), and high-profile covers of Bread's "If" and Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven" find the singer/songwriter is in excellent voice and exuberant spirits. Some of the new compositions, such as the ballad "If Only" (written for a movie about Mae West Parton was making when recording this album, but deemed too sad for the soundtrack) and the stirring "Raven Dove," with a full gospel backing, are nearly the equal of the singer's best work. The jaunty tempo but sorrowful lyrics of "Dagger Through the Heart" is classic bluegrass complete with banjo and fiddle and an example of Parton at her finest. Not everything works; "These Old Bones," a winding story-song marred by Parton taking the voice of an old woman on the chorus, is sappy if well intentioned, and her version of "If" remains a bit smarmy, even torn down to its acoustic roots. But her take on an album-closing "Stairway to Heaven" (given the thumbs up from no lesser experts than Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, who had to approve Parton's slightly altered lyrics) smartly and successfully refashions the song's dense themes into a contemporary gospel ode which retains the mystery of the original even as it is rearranged for this project's folk/bluegrass direction. Stirring, unpretentious yet powerful, Halos &amp; Horns effectively continues Parton's glorifying of her mountain roots. She subsequently launched her first tour in a decade after this disc's 2002 release.</outline>
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  <dateadded>2024-02-27 19:01:28</dateadded>
  <title>Halos &amp; Horns</title>
  <rating>9</rating>
  <year>2020</year>
  <premiered>2020-04-10</premiered>
  <releasedate>2020-04-10</releasedate>
  <runtime>58</runtime>
  <genre>Country</genre>
  <genre>Folk</genre>
  <audiodbartistid>111302</audiodbartistid>
  <audiodbalbumid>2248484</audiodbalbumid>
  <musicbrainzalbumid>7532330c-536e-4b71-873a-f937e9ec94f1</musicbrainzalbumid>
  <musicbrainzalbumartistid>1d543e07-d0d2-4834-a8db-d65c50c2a856</musicbrainzalbumartistid>
  <musicbrainzreleasegroupid>0450e830-b6a2-3590-adfb-6c7b7c4c13dd</musicbrainzreleasegroupid>
  <art>
    <poster>/media/data/media5/Music/Dolly Parton/Halos &amp; Horns (2002)/folder.jpg</poster>
  </art>
  <actor>
    <name>Dolly Parton</name>
    <type>AlbumArtist</type>
    <thumb>/config/metadata/People/D/Dolly Parton/folder.jpg</thumb>
  </actor>
  <actor>
    <name>Dolly Parton</name>
    <type>Artist</type>
    <thumb>/config/metadata/People/D/Dolly Parton/folder.jpg</thumb>
  </actor>
  <artist>Dolly Parton</artist>
  <albumartist>Dolly Parton</albumartist>
  <track>
    <position>1</position>
    <title>Halos and Horns</title>
    <duration>03:35</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>2</position>
    <title>Sugar Hill</title>
    <duration>02:52</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>3</position>
    <title>Not for Me</title>
    <duration>03:21</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>4</position>
    <title>Hello God</title>
    <duration>03:02</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>5</position>
    <title>If</title>
    <duration>03:20</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>6</position>
    <title>Shattered Image</title>
    <duration>03:30</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>7</position>
    <title>These Old Bones</title>
    <duration>05:39</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>8</position>
    <title>What a Heartache</title>
    <duration>04:18</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>9</position>
    <title>I’m Gone</title>
    <duration>05:10</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>10</position>
    <title>Raven Dove</title>
    <duration>03:37</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>11</position>
    <title>Dagger Through the Heart</title>
    <duration>03:54</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>12</position>
    <title>If Only</title>
    <duration>03:40</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>13</position>
    <title>John Daniel</title>
    <duration>05:03</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>14</position>
    <title>Stairway to Heaven</title>
    <duration>06:31</duration>
  </track>
  <artistdesc>Dolly Rebecca Parton (born January 19, 1946) is an American singer-songwriter and actress. She is known for her decades-long career in country music. After achieving success as a songwriter for others, Parton made her album debut in 1967 with Hello, I'm Dolly, which led to success during the remainder of the 1960s (both as a solo artist and with a series of duet albums with Porter Wagoner), before her sales and chart peak came during the 1970s and continued into the 1980s. Some of Parton's albums in the 1990s did not sell as well, but she achieved commercial success again in the new millennium and has released albums on various independent labels since 2000, including her own label, Dolly Records.
With a career spanning over fifty years, Parton has been described as a "country music legend" and has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, making her one of the best-selling artists of all time. Parton's music includes Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)-certified gold, platinum and multi-platinum awards. She has had 25 singles reach no. 1 on the Billboard country music charts, a record for a female artist (tied with Reba McEntire). She has 44 career Top 10 country albums, a record for any artist, and she has 110 career-charted singles over the past 40 years. She has composed over 3,000 songs, including "I Will Always Love You" (a two-time U.S. country chart-topper, and an international hit for Whitney Houston), "Jolene", "Coat of Many Colors", and "9 to 5". As an actress, she has starred in films including 9 to 5 (1980) and The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982), for which she earned Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress, and Rhinestone (1984), Steel Magnolias (1989), Straight Talk (1992) and Joyful Noise (2012).
She has received 11 Grammy Awards out of 50 nominations, including the Lifetime Achievement Award; ten Country Music Association Awards, including Entertainer of the Year and is one of only seven female artists to win the Country Music Association's Entertainer of the Year Award; five Academy of Country Music Awards, also including Entertainer of the Year; four People's Choice Awards; and three American Music Awards. She is also in a select group to have received at least one nomination from the Academy Awards, Grammy Awards, Tony Awards, and Emmy Awards. In 1999, Parton was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. In 2005, she received the National Medal of Arts and in 2022, she was nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, a nomination she had initially declined but ultimately accepted, and was subsequently inducted.
Outside of her work in the music industry, she also co-owns The Dollywood Company, which manages a number of entertainment venues including the Dollywood theme park, the Splash Country water park, and a number of dinner theatre venues such as The Dolly Parton Stampede and Pirates Voyage. She has founded a number of charitable and philanthropic organizations, chief among them is the Dollywood Foundation, which manages a number of projects to bring education and poverty relief to East Tennessee where she grew up.

</artistdesc>
  <label>Dolly Records</label>
</album>