The leap
Trisha Yearwood made as an artist between her debut in 1991 and
Hearts in Armor in 1993 is remarkable. It remains one of her highest achievements. In addition, this one was wrought from conflict; it was released just after her divorce and the record feels like an exorcism. As with her debut, producer
Garth Fundis and
Yearwood selected songs from the cream of Nashville's hit producers; "Wrong Side of Memphis," a tough, near spitting rocker tempered by honky tonk fiddles was written by
Matraca Berg and
Gary Harrison, opened the disc and may have thrown fans of her ballad style. But fears would have been unfounded as "Harrison's Nearest Distant Shore" was all ballad and then some. There's the R&B-flavored "You Say You Will," by Beth Neilsen Chapman, that's sassy and tough, full of funky piano and a killer acoustic guitar solo by
Billy Walker Jr. and a killer backing vocal by
Raul Malo (before anyone knew who
the Mavericks were).
Chapman also contributes a stunning ballad to this set, "Down on My Knees," that is wrenching in its pure intent. "Walkaway Joe" features a harmony vocal by
Don Henley and Dobro ace Jerry Douglass.
Yearwood's telling the story she tells best, working-class love gone bad. But the finest moment on
Hearts in Armor is
Yearwood's cover of
Emmylou Harris' "Woman Walk the Line," with
Harris singing backup with
Stuart Duncan on fiddle and
Sam Bush on mandolin along with
Yearwood's band; this is the ultimate testament about being woman cheated on who goes out to have a drink to hear some music and walk the line between marriage and dissolution. It's searing in its heartbreak and full of the tension that comes with the territory of loving someone who needs by his very nature to cheat. It's devastating, helped in part by
Harris' unobtrusive but emotionally loaded backing vocal to
Yearwood's open-throated wail.
Henley also guests on the closer, which is the title track. If there is any speculation about whether
Yearwood was airing her dirty laundry on the album, it becomes obvious in this song, that this is about her dealing with her own emotions, her own issues. Blame is useless in this ballad, there's nothing left but heartbreak and emptiness and the challenge of rebuilding a life haunted by the ghosts of another.
Hearts in Armor is stunning; it's one of the best heartbreak records country music delivered in the '80s and '90s. ~ Thom Jurek