Linda Ronstadt - Heart Like A Wheel
(Numbered 180g Vinyl LP)
Track List
Linda Ronstadt's 1974 Breakthrough Remains a Paragon of Extraordinary Performance, Arranging, and Songwriting:Heart Like a WheelFeatures an All-Star Instrumental Cast and Singer at Her Best
Audiophile Clarity, Profound Depth, Lifelike Naturalism, and Transfixing Warmth: Numbered-Edition Mobile Fidelity 180g LP Meticulously Mastered for Supreme Sound
How to put theageless appeal, artistic splendor, and imaginative instrumental varietyofLinda Ronstadt'sHeart Like a Wheelin proper perspective more than four decades after its original release? For starters, the 1974 landmark earned three major Grammy nominations and won for Best Country Vocal Performance – Female. But that feat pales in comparison to what the record did forRonstadt, who became the decade's most in-demand, multifaceted, and cherished female singer soon after it captured the public's attention. Or the fact that it remainsa paragon of songwriting, arrangement, and performance – a trifecta that still holds sway in this era or any. Mobile Fidelity's reissue puts it over the top to stay.
Mastered on Mobile Fidelity's world-renowned mastering system and pressed on dead-quiet 180g vinyl at RTI, this LP reissue presentsHeart Like a Wheelwith astounding clarity, depth, and naturalism. Still the most difficult instrument to accurately capture, the female voice is here conveyed with transfixing realism, warmth, and feeling. The inner beauty ofRonstadt's flawless phrasing and passionate inflections bears out with obvious candor, her tonality and emotiveness pouring through every lyric and wordless expression.
Yet the advantages of this numbered-edition audiophile version extend far beyond the intimacy affordedRonstadt's singing. Specifically,the majesty of Peter Asher's crafty arrangements now come to life like never before. Free of the fatiguing high frequencies and flat, dull responsiveness inherent on previous remasters and the original Capitol issue, respectively, this 180g LP sets the sonic standard and lets theextraordinary instrumental blends blossom with openness, airiness, and organic textures.
WhileRonstadt's interpretive skills and stunning vocals remain front and center, the all-star cast of California-based musicians that helped transformHeart Like a Wheelinto a 1970s mainstream pop-rock staple – and a lasting example of the period's laid-back West Coast sound – cannot be forgotten.Glenn Frey, Don Henley, Emmylou Harris, Maria Muldaur, Herb Pedersen, David Lindley, J.D. Souther, andAndrew Goldare just a few of the luminaries that ensure the Billboard chart-topping set rests on an unassailable foundation.Asherputs everything in the right place and, in concert with the headliner, chooses a repertoire of standards that both shakes up traditions and pays homage to them.
The other secrets to the record's distinctiveness lie withRonstadt'sversatility and passion, her uncanny ability to inhabit every lyric with conviction and believability, and her graceful technique. AsStephen Holdenstated in his rave review of the album forRolling Stonein early 1975, "No other pop singer so perfectly embodies the Western mythical girl/woman, heartbroken yet resilient and entirely feminine in the traditional sense. There is a throbbing edge to Ronstadt's honey-colored soprano that no other singer quite possesses – the edge between vulnerability and willfulness that I find totally, irresistibly sexy."
Ronstadtindeed proves seductive and inviting throughout, whether on the bluesy reading ofClint Ballad Jr.'s "You're No Good," harmony-rich treatment ofHank Williams' "I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You)," folk-rock lilt ofLowell George's "Willin'," or soulful send-up ofPhil Everly's "When Will I Be Loved?" Complete with piano, double bass, cello, viola, and fiddle, as well as support vocals fromMuldaur, the cover ofAnna McGarrigle's title track reinforces the one-of-a-kind expanse and all-for-one chemistry evident throughout the double-platinum effort –the kind of record they just don't make anymore.