5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Jane Wiedlin colours my world with a blue kiss, January 4, 2004
This review is from: Jane Wiedlin (Audio CD)
With her departure from the Go-Go's after the release of their Talk Show album, guitarist Jane Wiedlin was on her own with her self-titled album, released in October 1985. Boasting a typical 80's pop sound with some traces of new wave, it proves Jane could do her own thing.
"I colour my world with a blue kiss" sings Jane on her first single. "Blue Kiss" is a cute mid-tempo pop single and this is the kind of song that later evolved into "Rush Hour." Lots of colour imagery and motifs here: "How can you choose a white-coloured world when I got a rainbow for you." and "last night a spectrum filled the sky (I miss you) this morning, it shattered with your goodbye."
With a Go-Go's-like rhythm section, what kind of cruel world does Jane Wiedlin say goodbye to in "Goodbye Cruel World"? "No more children hungry or bruised no more land r-ped and abused/no more animals hunted for fun/it's time to undo the damage we've done" I'm for that. The naivete of "why is it so naive to believe in love/why do bombs, we got more than enough?" is touching but a dream, unfortunately. This song, along with the title track of her second album Fur, shows her politically conscious side.
The upbeat "Sometimes You Really Get On My Nerves" sports early 80's new-wave type keyboards and describes the mixed up signals, tensions, and irritations that lead to situations where "anger's a weapon we can't handle." "We get petty/we get mean/when I want some quiet/you want to scream" and the priority of getting things straight at home before paying attention to world problems is also mentioned.
Jane sings about riding on silver bullet trains, drinking sake, and other things in Japan in "East Meets West." An interesting comparison is when she sings about eight million gods in a Shinto shrine, and eight million being the viewer number for Solid Gold.
Another engaging keyboard and drums number, with a rapidly sung chorus and BPM, "Somebody's Going To Get Into This House" was the B-side of "Blue Kiss."
The upbeat "Forever" has a sound that could belong on a Cyndi Lauper B-side from She's So Unusual, while she questions the 80's dating rituals in "Modern Romance": "what's so great about modern romance/what's so neat about foolin around/taking her heart and running it into the ground" she asks. The tempo and guitar of "I Will Wait For You" might place it on a Missing Persons album.
Her favourite track from here, according to her greatest hits album liner notes, is taken from Bill Clinton's (if you can believe it) favourite book, Gabriel Garcia Marquez's "One Hundred Years Of Solitude." This was the B-side of the UK single release of "Blue Kiss." This wistful mid-paced song is mostly about reminiscences and how it feels like a hundred years of...
"Where We Can Go" is another engaging track that could've made it on a Go-Go's album.
The Celtic-tinged "My Traveling Heart" featuring pipes, ends the album, and with lyrics like "all I'm left is my traveling heart" and "our time together, I lose my sense of me" indicates her feelings about leaving the Go-Go's. She was glad to be with them, but after a while, her wanting to do something on her own prevailed.
A good start, and a good sound. Apart from "Blue Kiss" and "Where We Can Go", nothing much singleworthy, but these songs herald an improvement for her 1988 album Fur.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Jane's shining debut album, October 30, 2001
This review is from: Jane Wiedlin (Audio CD)
I am ver much impressed with the debut CD from Jane Wiedlin.Jane's music is fun and up beat and very catchy.There is not one bad song on this whole CD.Songs like "Blue Kiss","Sometimes You Really Get On My Nerves","Goodbye Cruel World",and "I Will Wait For You" are songs that should have been pop hits.It's a shame that Jane didn't have a good of solo career as Belinda Carlisle.Her music is just as good and catchy as hers.If you ever find a copy of this CD grab it cuz you probably won't find another copy of it.This a must have for anyone who loves the Go-Go's or pop music.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A pleasing first shot from the first Go-Go to go-go, January 10, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Jane Wiedlin (Audio CD)
In her first solo venture, Jane Wiedlin proves that although her voice remains sugary, her style continues to evolve. From the Celtic-sounding "My Traveling Heart" to the dance-style "Somebody's Going to Get Into This House", Wiedlin demonstrates a willingness to go beyond the punky-pop quirkiness of the Go-Go's to develop a sound that is light yet remarkably individual and with a sense of fun. Her writing style, which supported her former band's rise to fame, remains lyrically sound and poetic, enough to keep the listener attentive through the eleven tracks on the disc. Wiedlin's first solo proves that this ex Go-Go has the power to keep on going.
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