K.D. Lang and the Reclines [extended]
- Shadowland [Sire, 1988]
B
- Absolute Torch and Twang [Sire, 1989]
B+
- Ingénue [Sire/Warner Bros., 1992]
- Even Cowgirls Get the Blues [Sire/Warner Bros., 1993]
- Lifted by Love [Sire/Warner Bros., 1994]
- All You Can Eat [Warner Bros., 1995]
- Invincible Summer [Warner Bros., 2000]
See Also:
Consumer Guide Reviews:
K.D. Lang: Shadowland [Sire, 1988]
Whether claiming Nashville for torch song, joining Tracy Chapman's New Dignity movement, or embalming country the way title-tunesmith Chris Isaak embalms rockabilly, Lang resembles Patsy Cline (or whomever) less than the Pet Shop Boys--impossible to suss out her relationship to music she presumably loves. B
Absolute Torch and Twang [Sire, 1989]
Finally she swells with the contained enthusiasm of Tracy Nelson Country 20 years ago, back when authenticity wasn't such a vexed concept. Willie Nelson's "Three Days" and Wynn Stewart's "Big Big Love" do stand out, but not so's they embarrass Lang's originals, most of which are pretty metaphysical for country music. They're just highlights, like her own lusty "Big Boned Gal" and her own metaphysical "Luck in My Eyes." And "Nowhere to Stand" is an even smarter (and more abstract, fancy that) battered-child song than Suzanne Vega's or Natalie Merchant's. Maybe it's out of place on a quasiauthentic country record, though you have to like how she sneaks in the phrase "family tradition." But vexed concepts cut two ways. B+
K.D. Lang: Ingénue [Sire/Warner Bros., 1992] 
K.D. Lang: Even Cowgirls Get the Blues [Sire/Warner Bros., 1993] 
K.D. Lang: Lifted by Love [Sire/Warner Bros., 1994] 
K.D. Lang: All You Can Eat [Warner Bros., 1995] 
K.D. Lang: Invincible Summer [Warner Bros., 2000] 
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