Critic's Review
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Reintarnation rounds up the highlights as selected by lang herself from the decade when she was making her way as a country singer (she also approved slight remixing here, often amounting to the removal of some of the heavy echo from Angel with a Lariat). It is by no means a balanced collection representing each of her country records evenly; there is only one cut from Shadowland here and none of her four charting country singles ("I'm Down to My Last Cigarette," "Lock, Stock and Teardrops," "Full Moon Full of Love," "Three Days") are here. Half of her 1987 major-label debut, Angel with a Lariat, is here, along with two cuts from her 1984 debut, Truly Western Experience; her rare 1983 first single, "Friday Dance Promenade"; the demo "Changed My Mind"; three cuts from her soundtrack to Gus Van Sant's 1993 film Even Cowgirls Get the Blues; and a full seven of the 12 songs from her 1989 high-water mark, Absolute Torch and Twang. This rundown might seem rather idiosyncratic, but even with the virtual absence of Shadowland, this functions as a good overview of the first part of lang's career, effectively eliminating the need for any of her early albums (besides, of course, the one that's conspicuously MIA). Which isn't to say that all this music will have aged well for all listeners: in retrospect, the camp in lang's performance often overshadows the strength of her music. As powerful as her voice is, it often seems that she's over-singing, as if being over the top will subvert country clichés. To those listeners who remember lang as part of a posse that included Yoakam, Lovett, Steve Earle, and maybe even the Beat Farmers, this theatricality can sour their memories, but for those who love lang as a vocalist or icon, this plays right into her image. Either way, Reintarnation winds up as an effective, even definitive, summation of k.d. lang's early years.

