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Melissa Etheridge
Lucky
Melissa Etheridge:  Lucky Tell a Friend about this album

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Album Review

Released: 2004
Label: Island
Selection #: 152086
Exuberant, blues-rocking set infused w/themes of love & romance. Breathe, Meet Me In The Dark, If You Want To, Secret Agent, Come On Out Tonight, Mercy, more.
Listen RM WM
1 Lucky
2 This Moment
3 If You Want To
4 Breathe
5 Mercy
6 Secret Agent
7 Will You Still Love Me
8 Meet Me in the Dark
9 Tuesday Morning
10 Giant
11 Come on Out Tonight
12 Kiss Me
13 When You Find the One
  
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Album Review

A mirthful turnaround from the soul-searching breakup record "Skin", Melissa Etheridge's "Lucky" is a breezy celebration of new romance. But it also revels in the easy freedom of making music unburdened by the itchy yoke of having something to prove. Eight albums and numerous accolades in, Etheridge finally seems comfortable in her skin. She's willing to play the record company game, juicing some tracks with sound-alike electronic programming and cutting an obvious play for Hot AC hit status in the sappy lead single "Breathe," a track cribbed from modern rock also-rans Greenwheel by Etheridge producer John Shanks. But despite "Lucky"'s glossy, easily digestible tendencies, it still burns bright with the usual Etheridge fervor. Her love life has been common knowledge for quite a while, but "Lucky" might be her most unflinchingly honest record yet. Her chrome-plated heart is finally, fully out in the open -- she's jazzed up about her new lady, and isn't afraid to sing about it. There's the challenging, brazen rock of "Come Out Tonight" ("Does your mama know who you're hangin' around/A souped up punk in a rock & roll gown, small town"), as well as "Kiss Me"'s come-hither slink, which is sexy at its highest volume. But as much as she still loves the unabashed, beer-soaked rocker, Etheridge's softer moments have continued to mature. "This Moment" is one place where the album's touches of synth work beautifully, building a romantic universe inside the chorus' fleeting passage of time. "Meet Me In The Dark" and the fabulous "Mercy" are even more personal, the latter employing accompanying vocalist Bernie Barlow to establish the dialog between the aging, wanting Etheridge and her vibrant new gal. Woah. Is it getting hot in here? But it's that directness that keeps the album and Etheridge herself vital after all the production niceties and mainstream curlicues have fallen away. "Lucky"'s best stretch might be at its midpoint, "Secret Agent" and "Will You Still Love Me." The two tracks seamlessly blend each side of Melissa Etheridge -- the bawdy rocker, the heartfelt searcher, and the talented songwriter -- and prove that, in just her jacket and jeans, she can make a hit record for the mainstream that's as personal as a love letter. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

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