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Dart to the Heart

1994 studio album by Bruce Cockburn From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dart to the Heart
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Dart to the Heart is an album by the Canadian musician Bruce Cockburn, released in 1994.[2][3] Cockburn considered it to be primarily an album of love songs.[4]

Quick Facts Studio album by Bruce Cockburn, Released ...

The album peaked at No. 176 on the Billboard 200.[5] Its first single was "Listen for the Laugh", which was a hit on adult alternative airplay radio.[6][7] Cockburn supported the album by touring with Patty Larkin.[8]

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Production

The album was produced by T Bone Burnett and mixed by Glyn Johns.[9][10] It was recorded at Bearsville Studios, in New York, although it was Cockburn's original intention to record the "quieter" songs in Los Angeles with a different group of musicians.[11][12] Greg Leisz played pedal steel on Dart to the Heart.[13]

"Closer to the Light" is a tribute to the American musician Mark Heard, who died in 1992.[14] "Train in the Rain" is an instrumental.[15] "Scanning These Crowds" is about Louis Riel.[16]

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Critical reception

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Entertainment Weekly wrote that the album "veers from boisterous to a little too sleepy, and includes some beautifully pithy lyrics."[20] The Washington Post called the album Cockburn's best since World of Wonders, writing that it "is dominated by quiet love songs built around acoustic guitar and a refreshingly original take on pop music's most familiar subject."[6] The Los Angeles Times considered it "tenderly hopeful in heart and slightly feisty in folk-rock spirit."[22]

The Milwaukee Sentinel thought that "Cockburn has the intelligent folk rocker's respect for words and almost never writes a throwaway."[23] The Indianapolis Star noted that "Listen for the Laugh" "has a Lou Reed-esque driving beat with edgy, flat vocals."[21] The New York Times determined that the album's best songs "describe a domestic relationship as a precious, all-too-extingishable light in a dark, lonely world."[24] The Calgary Herald concluded that Cockburn "looks within but not without sharpening his sense of observation, his sense of searching for meaning in the presence, the passion of another."[18]

AllMusic called the album "a convincing reminder of a gentler, more reflective Bruce Cockburn."[17] Salon deemed it a "great lyrical" album.[25]

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Track listing

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References

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