Essence | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Lucinda Williams |
Cover: | Essence - Lucinda Williams.jpg |
Released: | June 5, 2001 |
Length: | 50:58 |
Label: | Lost Highway |
Prev Title: | Car Wheels on a Gravel Road |
Prev Year: | 1998 |
Next Title: | World Without Tears |
Next Year: | 2003 |
Essence is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams, released on June 5, 2001, by Lost Highway Records. The album debuted on the Billboard 200 at No. 28, selling approximately 44,500 copies in its first week.[1] By 2008, it had sold 336,000 copies in the U.S.[2]
A critical and commercial success, the album earned Williams three Grammy Award nominations in 2002: Best Contemporary Folk Album, Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for the title track, and Best Female Rock Vocal Performance for the track "Get Right With God", which she won.[3]
Essence was met with widespread critical acclaim. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, the album received an average score of 82, based on 11 reviews. Reviewers observed a departure from Williams' similarly acclaimed 1998 album Car Wheels on a Gravel Road, with Rolling Stone citing the "willful intimacy" in Essences music and Spin contrasting the "halting, spare" presentation with its predecessor's "giddy, verbose" one. AllMusic similarly stated "those hoping for another dose of the bluesy roots rock of Car Wheels on a Gravel Road may be disappointed, but if you want to take a deep and compelling look into the heart and soul of a major artist, then you owe it to yourself to hear Essence.
The Village Voice critic Robert Christgau found it "imperfect" but still praised Williams' artistry, saying "[she] is too damn good to deny." Salon regarded the album as "an emotional mess of a masterpiece".[4] Entertainment Weekly wrote "Lucinda Williams doesn’t merely wallow in suffering. She savors it like a glass of your finest Bordeaux", and called it her "folkiest, gentlest album" and "a steamy slow-crawl — southern humidity as music — that plays into her strengths as the Joan of Dark of the alt-country set". Q listed Essence as one of the best 50 albums of 2001.[5]
Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | Grammy Awards | Best Contemporary Folk Album | Essence | ||
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance | "Essence" | ||||
Best Female Rock Vocal Performance | "Get Right With God" |
All tracks written by Lucinda Williams.[6]
Additional musicians:
Australian Albums (ARIA)[7] [8] | 59 | |
---|---|---|
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[9] | 47 | |
UK Albums (OCC)[10] | 63 | |
US Billboard 200[11] | 28 |