- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
The white-girl blues thing very rarely does anybody any good.
-
Barricades and Brickwalls paints a broad spectrum of alt.country/ bluegrass/honkytonk music, and that variety is its greatest strength.
-
It's the breath-taking songwriting that clinches the deal here.
-
Q MagazineIt's a little one-paced over the long haul, and she does wail at inappropriate moments, but there's enough here to build on. [May 2002, p.108]
-
Kasey Chambers has created a series of stirring, passionate songs that capture raw emotion and a simultaneous toughness amidst a blend of country, blues, and folk musical influences.
-
In saluting hell-raisers of country past, Chambers unintentionally illustrates she should be more of one herself.
-
Simply striking.
-
UncutAn album of tough-edged, passion-fuelled songs full of real emotion. [Jun 2002, p.109]
-
Easily one of the year's top 10, if not top five.
-
In stark contrast to most Nashville and alt.country products, even when the words let it down, Barricades & Brickwalls is carried by its classic sound.
-
Chambers's two solo records are more fun than a barrel of Foster's, mostly because she doesn't sound daunted by the history of the music.
-
Chambers' voice is a birdie chirp. She's sexy, but has less edge than the tiniest bleached-blond in the Dixie Chicks and half the sass of Dolly Parton.
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 3 out of 5
-
Mixed: 0 out of 5
-
Negative: 2 out of 5
-
MarkJ.Jul 23, 2002A striking album. completely different from the manufactured music of today's "stars"
-
ErikN.Feb 20, 2002Her first album was better. She needs to mix up her genres a bit. Too much of the blues on this album. Still good though.