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21 Reviews
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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best of the best.,
By
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
Just about the most amazing album in my collection. I've got music from rap to country, from indie to pop, from alternative to new wave-- and everything in between. I have lots of folk albums in my collection too.... but this one... this one just tops them all. This is the album I can listen to when I can't decide what to listen to... when I can't figure out what kind of mood I'm in. This is the album I listen to when I need to be lifted up. Or when I need to sing at the top of my lungs in the car. Or when I need to revel in melancholy. THIS IS THE ALBUM. In my humble opionion, this album beats out every other IG album. If you buy only one IG album, make it this one. I think Rites of Passage is about more than death and rekindling, it's about GROWTH. It's about moving on, and acknowledging your past in order to move forward with your life. No one here has touched on the song "Nashville," which describes the pain felt when being shut out (ie being a lesbian, attending Vanderbilt University, which is quite the conservative school). Shut out of a community, shut out of a city... when your hopes clouded your vision, thinking your dreams could fill up the place and you could change peoples' views... I could probably write an essay on every song on this album, but the most important thing you know is-- you've gotta buy it. And LISTEN to it... it's infectious... and the melodies, the brilliant lyrics, will take you over. And wash over you,
18 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The standard by which all others are measured.,
By
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
This is my favorite IG album, and if you are starting your collection, it is probably the first one you should pick up. Emily is at her best -- "Gallileo" & "Virginia Woolf" are stellar. It also includes one of Amy's masterpieces, the oft-debated "Chickenman" (one of the only IG songs to repeatedly show up both on fans' most liked and least liked Indigo Girls songs). Like it or hate it, Chickenman is not standard IG fair, but it has become a staple of their live show, and it has an absolutely infectious rhythm backbone.Musically, there is no denying that this album is truly brilliant. But perhaps even more notably, the lyrical content of this album makes it also one of the most cohesive works in the Girls' catalog. The album seems to have a central focus on coping with death, life after death, and communication with the deceased. Heavy, dark topics, indeed, but the Girls manage to explore these topics in such a way that we are somehow left feeling good. Observe: "Galileo" puts a clever slant on reincarnation by not only exmianing a soul's past lives, but also it's future lives: The song's take home message is that we should live the best we can and straighten things up in this life in order to not only "let the next life off the hook", but also to prevent it from being able to cast blame upon past lives for its own situation. Brilliant! In "Virginia Woolf", Emily presents an alternate interpretation of immortality, allowing spirits to live forever by simply learning about their lives and carrying on their message. This song contains a brilliant metaphor -- communicating with deceased spirits "kind of like a telephone line through time". In "Ghost", one of Emily's most beautiful arrangements, she laments the loss of a loved one, yet we feel she is almost content to be able to communicate with the passed spirit, even if it is only fleeting. The sprightly "Airplane", as bright as the music is, hides perhaps the darkest lyrics on the album, in which Emily prepares for death, "making a deal" with God to clean up her act if He spares her. The Roches make an appearance on this song, and their signature "slightly off key" vocal hoarmonization is brilliantly placed in this song, somehow giving us the feel that the airplane is already in the process of crashing. It's almost eerie. Finally, Amy's "Cedar Tree" deals very explicitly with the passing of a loved one. But it lifts up our spirits with a very sprightly Celtic jig, that is still not out of place in such a dark song. In the end, after listening to this album, you'll feel like you've gone on a journey, visiting past lives, communicating with those who have passed, and exploring the afterlife. And you will feel strangely refreshed. An absolutely brilliant album.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Folk harmony, social conscience, and tortured love,
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
I usually prefer the upbeat songs of the Indigo Girls to their slower ones. That's when the complex harmonies of their contrasting voices and the interplay of their acoustic guitars dazzle. One of their best songs is "Three Hits" and this CD gives you both a studio and live version. I slightly prefer the live version which cuts a little closer to the bone. I also like "Jonas and Ezekial" which is close to being a rock and roll song. "Nashville" is another good tune. Drums, harmonica, fiddle, cello, flutes and horns join the girls on many tracks. This is pretty avant garde folk music.
The unexpected treasure of this CD is Amy's hoarse, tortured vocal and solo guitar on Dire Straits' "Romeo and Juliet." She does a spectacular job on this sad, streetwise tune of lost love starring a lovestruck Romeo and a harpy Julie.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great CD,
By A Customer
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
I recently bought this CD and now I listen to it constantly. It's my first exposure to Indigo Girls and I love what I hear.Generally with a CD I settle into a pattern, listening to the songs I like and skipping the ones I don't. Not a problem with "Rites of Passage." Besides the better-known songs, like "Galileo" (the first IG song I ever heard), the haunting "Ghost" and "Love Will Come to You," and the rocking but thoughtful "Chickenman," there are other gems on the CD: "Joking," a rousing, defiant musing on friendship lost; "Romeo and Juliet," a bare-bones rendition of my favorite Dire Straits song; and "Let It Be Me," an uplifting call to shine the light of life in a dark and confused world.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A MUST have for every collection!,
By
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
Beautiful music, intelligent lyrics, what more could you ask for. I first heard this album at the tender age of 14 (I am almost 30 now) while I was working at a music store. One of my coworkers was obsessed with this album and kept playing it in the store. After awhile I realized I was singing it at home and school, and I bought myself a copy.
I love music, and own an uncountable number of CDs. But I think I can safely say THIS CD is my favorite of them all! The lyrics are intelligent and elegantly crafted, the music is moving. Galileo (with it's make you think factor) is my favorite song on the CD, with a romeo and juliet coming in 2nd for it's humor factor. Ghost can make you feel emotions stir at your very core if you have ever lost a lover. After 16 years of hearing Ghost, it can still make me cry. This CD is great for taking in the car, especially on long drives. Do yourslef a favor and get this one.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent,
By A Customer
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
One of the most moving and heartfelt collections of music I've heard. After almost 3 years, it's still one of my most played CDs. The lyrics could stand alone. Amazing. Listen and enjoy.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Deathbed Music,
By Johnny Deep (Hicksville, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
Yup, this is the album I'd choose to listen to if I had an hour of consciousness left before dying. It's that good. And if I only had five minutes? I'd listen to "Love Will Come To You"... and happily expire.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of Their Best!,
By
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
Until this album Amy Ray may have been a little in the shadow of Emily Saliers, when it came to songwriting. It's beyond question that Ray adds a lot of edge (necessary) to the sound of the Indigo Girls; but with songs like "Three Hits", "Jonas and Ezekial" and "Nashville" Amy's songwriting is also beginning to catch up Emily's.
In fact, I think that several of Emily's songs on this album are harder to get into than hers usually are. My favourite Emily songs here are "Galileo", "Let it Be Me" and "Airplane". This is one the most consistent Indigo Girls albums, and one of my favourites! Once again the girls are supported famous friends such as Benmont Tench, Jackson Browne, David Crosby and regulars Sara Lee, Lisa Germano and Jerry Marotta.
12 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
their best album,
By
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
This is the first Indigo Girls album I ever heard and eventually owned. The lyrics of "Ghost" and "Love Will Come to You" are hauntingly beautiful and resonate with the universal theme of lost love---but with "Ghost," it is more than simply lost love. How could anyone refute that the words "[N]ow I see your face before me / I would launch a thousand ships / to bring your heart back to my island / as the sand beneath me slips / as I burn up in your presence / I know now how it feels / to be weakened like Achilles / with you always at my heels . . ." are not some of the most articulate and poignant lyrics within the realm of song? "Ghost" is not the only amazing song on the album, "Galileo," "Let it Be Me," and "Cedar Tree," all recommend it. Though I have several of their other albums, "Rites of Passage" remains my favorite.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Indigo Girls - Poetry In Motion.....,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Rites of Passage (Audio CD)
"Passage" is one of the Indigo Girls most popular albums with the band's fans, and is indeed one of their strongest releases. The girls had burst out of the Athens music scene (which also spawned R.E.M.) with their previous album, and were ready to reach even bigger heights with this one. Lot's of special guests were brought in including Jerry Marotta (from Peter Gabriel's band), Kenny Aronoff (from John Mellencamp's band), Jackson Browne, and David Crosby (CSN). The subject matter of the songs covers politics, world events, and relationships. The girls make take a stand on just about every tune, but never get preachy or morose. The album starts off with two Indigo classics "Three Hits" and "Galileo" which is still a sing along staple of the band's encores in concert to this day. Other strong songs follow including a very effective cover of Dire Straits "Romeo And Juliet", a song which the Indigo Girls take a completely different take on from the original and make it their own. Other strong tunes include "Jonas And Ezekiel", "Virginia Wolf", "Chickenman" and "Airplane". Overall this is one of the Indigo Girls best albums and has stood up very well 16 years after it's release.
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Rites of Passage by Indigo Girls (Audio CD - 2000)
$19.99
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