Album Reviews
A concept LP about working-people's lives, 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs is eminently intelligent. Four Parton compositions, including the theme from her movie debut, show that Hollywood hasn't warped her wide-eyed directness. "9 to 5," a typical office-worker's lament, is so bouncy that its complaints become self-assertions. In "Working Girl," the artist name-drops Halston and Diane Von Furstenberg in one verse, then in the chorus quaintly compares working women to "the tallest of trees." Only Parton could get away with such a sharp fusion of urbanity and folksiness.
Parton's originals are balanced by an interesting mixture of folk and country chestnuts with working-class themes: "The House of the Rising Sun," "Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos)," "Detroit City." In contrast to those on her last solo LP, Dolly Dolly Dolly (on which the singer sounded like a windup toy), these cover versions are surprisingly intense sweet, but never coy or mawkish. It's nice to have Dolly Parton back from the trash bin unscathed.
(Posted: Mar 5, 1981)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.