Corazon Libre
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Niños de Nuestro Olvido (The Children of Our Forgetting)
- Olvidau (The Forgotten)
- Cantor del Obraje (The Obraje Singer)
- Sólo Pa'Bailarla (Just for Dancing)
- País (Country)
- Chacarera del Fuego (Chacarera of the Fire)
- Tonada del Viejo Amor (Tonada of an Old Love)
- Como Flor del Campo (Like a Wildflower)
- Zamba de Agramonte (Argamonte's Zamba)
- Sufrida Tierra (Suffering Land)
- Tonada del Otoño (Autumn Tpnada)
- Canción Es Urgente (The Song Is Urgent)
- Todo Cambia (Everything Changes) [*]
- Lapachos en Primavera (Lapacho Trees in Springtime)
- Corazón Libre (Free Heart)
- Y la Milonga lo Sabe (And the Milonga Knows)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #132916 in Music
- Released on: 2005-09-13
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .24 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Reached #4 on Argentina's Billboard chart (Nov 12, 05)
Customer Reviews
A New Pearl from Mercedes
If you are already familiar with Mercedes Sosa, you are probably elated that she has released a new album. Having turned seventy years old and of fragile health in recent years, her recordings have been spare -with live recordings filling wider gaps between those with new songs- which makes this release even a stronger reason to rejoice.
As far as this album is concerned, the wait has been amply justified. Mercedes has chosen an intimate ensemble for these offerings, the accompaniment consists of musicians with whom she's played for many years, and the few instruments and austere -yet heartfelt- arrangements in each song focused on her exquisite voice and the mastery of her interpretations.
To select songs for singular praise is quite difficult since every one of these tracks is magnificent, whether they are songs she's not sung before or those who she's chosen to sing again with new arrangements. That said, there are several which deserve attention and promise special delight.
Among the new songs, "Corazón Libre" which is bound for addition to her long list of classics, "País," "Tonada del Otoño," "Tonada del Viejo Amor" - a duet with the legendary Eduardo Falú- and "Y la Milonga lo Sabe" are stunning in their depth and simplicity.
When it comes to new versions, "Todo Cambia," a song that has reached hymn-like status in Argentina since she first sung it, shines brightly. Furthermore, her choice of recording it in a slower and quieter form, brings to the fore new dimensions and nuances -at least it's true in my case- that you may not have fully appreciated before.
All in all, Mercedes Sosa has made another pearl of an album, and if her voice may not always have the chant-like power of earlier recordings, it has not lost any of the heart and wisdom she's known for infusing her songs with. Whenever I listen to this album I'm reminded of the poet Stanley Kunnitz when he says "I am not done with my changes" because Mercedes is clearly not done with hers. May God bless her.
so happy she's back
Mercedes has been sick for a couplle of years but if that's taken a toll on her voice somehow, her art goes deeper and deeper. I strongly recommend this album to her fans, and to those who want to know what Argentine folklore is all about. Though her sound is somewhat fragile on certain songs, the delivery remains unparallelled, and she's always in tune. In Zamba de Argamonte, she handles her head tones admirably and ends up the song on a far-fetched, perfectly-tuned note. Remarkable!
Corazon Libre - Mercedes Sosa
Excelente disco, como todos los de ella. Lo recomiendo a todos los amantes de la buena musica de conciencia.
Oscar Matos




