Come from the Shadows


Come from the Shadows is an 1972 album by Joan Baez. After recording for the independent label Vanguard for more than a decade, Baez signed with A&M, and attempted to point her career in a slightly more "commercial" direction. In addition to her own compositions such as "Prison Trilogy","Love Song to a Stranger", "Myths", and "To Bobby", Baez included John Lennon's "Imagine", Anna Marly's "Song of the Partisan", and Mimi Fariña's "In the Quiet Morning ".
"In the Quiet Morning" and "Love Song to a Stranger" were released as singles. The album was recorded at Quadrafonic Sound Studios in Nashville. The cover photo features an elderly couple being arrested at an anti-war protest, holding hands and flashing peace signs as they are led away.
feature a Baez quote: "...In 1972 if you don't fight against a rotten thing you become a part of it."

Critical reception

Noel Coppage from Stereo Review was underwhelmed by the album, finding much of it "merely generally pleasant" and "poorly constructed". Robert Christgau gave Come from the Shadows a "C+" in Creem magazine. He mocked Baez's attempt at populist politics and her cultivated vocabulary, singling out the lyrics to "Myths": "I don't know about The People, but just plain people say 'scattered upon the four winds,' not 'upon the four winds scattered.' Actually they don't say 'scattered upon the four winds' either". AllMusic's William Ruhlmann later gave it three out of five stars.

Track listing

  1. "Prison Trilogy " - 4:23
  2. "Rainbow Road" - 3:03
  3. "Love Song to a Stranger" - 3:55
  4. "Myths" - 3:19
  5. "In the Quiet Morning" - 2:58
  6. "All the Weary Mothers of the Earth " - 3:34
  7. "To Bobby" - 3:53
  8. "Song of Bangladesh" - 4:49
  9. "A Stranger in My Place" - 3:07
  10. "Tumbleweed" - 3:32
  11. "The Partisan" - 3:17
  12. "Imagine" - 3:27

    Personnel