Looks like you can't keep a good ol' country girl down. A few short years ago Dolly Parton seemed all washed up, more famous as the butt of a thousand smutty jokes than for her actual music. When radio stations stopped playing her records, however, the little lady got mad - and the result was a creative burst that's put her firmly back in business, earning her several Grammy awards along the way. Halos and Horns is another worthy addition to the Parton catalogue, a strikingly self-confident collection that's firmly rooted in the Tennessee bluegrass tradition of her youth. Predominantly acoustic, it's effectively made up of old songs that somehow never got recorded until now - and whether she's narrating an old southern ghost story or complaining about her treatment by the media, Parton's sheer feistiness always makes for entertaining listening. The pouting songstress even has the nerve to close with a haunting cover of Led Zeppelin's 'Stairway To Heaven', that succeeds through its sheer audacity alone. So hello again Dolly - it's nice to have you back where you belong.