1996


25
Jun 09

Tidal (1996) by Fiona Apple

fiona apple tidal

Fiona Apple
Tidal

1996, Clean Slate/Work
alt rock, soul
5

I’ve mentioned before that my musical education pop began in 1997. Well, I still remember the single “Criminal” from that time as one of the songs that really shaped my musical tastes, and my recent ‘rediscovery’ of this album only makes me appreciate Fiona Apple that much more.

If one were to really describe Apple’s voice, I’d say she is the vocal child of Jane Monheit and Grace Slick with double Slick’s charisma. The strength of vocal delivery despite the fact that she doesn’t have the typical pop voice, and the astonishing array of styles she shows in Tidal indicates a pop star in the truest sense of the term: a vocalist who can convincingly inhabit and deliver every song she sings, regardless of lyrics or style. The fact that the lyrics to this album are just as respectable as her vocal ability set aside Apple as a star to begin with. It’s too easy to swim aurally through this album and not even realize that you’re listening to distinct songs. If there’s any album from this month’s set of reviews that you must listen to, it is this one.

“Sleep to Dream,” “Never Is A Promise,” “The First Taste.”
myspace, last.fm
Bird York’s The Velvet Hour, Stephanie Dosen’s A Lily For The Spectre

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24
Jun 09

Surfacing (1996) by Sarah McLachlan

sarah mclachlan surfacing

Sarah McLachlan
Surfacing

1996, Nettwerk/Arista
piano pop
4½

Surfacing was Sarah McLachlan’s fourth album, but it still stands as her most popular album to date. This was the one that earned her her Grammy’s, but in comparison to her previous albums, Surfacing falls short. Both “Sweet Surrender” and “Building A Mystery” lacked that essential honesty that once endeared McLachlan’s previous blatantly pop songs to her listeners. The one single from this album that defied this change was “Angel,” which is probably the most profound song McLachlan has ever written and will ever write. The beauty of that previous statement is that the song required only a piano and its lyrics to be that memorable. One would think that McLachlan would learn from that lesson and apply it to the other songs in Surfacing or even in her newer work since then, but she has stubbornly remained in her over-produced-pop rut. At least we have “Angel” to make this album easier to swallow.

“Do What You Have To Do,” “Adia,” “Angel.”
myspace, last.fm
Catherine Feeny’s Hurricane Glass, Rachael Yamagata’s Elephants… Teeth Sinking Into Heart

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