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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure, clean, scary, January 10, 2002
By 
Michael A. Cohn (Ann Arbor, MI, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
Whenever I talk about this first album, fellow fans are quick to point out that Suzanne's voice is not yet properly trained, and that the production values are bottom-of-the-barrel. I agree, but I don't care. These songs have a clean, piercing purity which I think is sometimes lost in her later work.

This is definitely her edgy-slightly-unhinged folk-singer face, so it may not be for people who prefer her more energetic or sound-oriented work.

I also believe that the entire album is an associative poem, but this is still an unverified quack theory.

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Perfect Debut, September 9, 2001
By 
"dkre" (Washington, DC United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
Suzanne Vega personified the neo-folk revival with this beautifully crafted literate album. Vega carves out a niche that she alone occupies with her hushed and stacatto singing style that recalls beat poets and confessional singer songwriters of the Leonard Cohen variety. Vega's spare guitar accompaniment jars and cajoles the listener into ruminations on self, love, loss, uncertainty, destiny. Stand outs include "Marlene on the Wall" an urgent portrait of Vega's affairs of the heart, all conducted under the ironic gaze of the poster-sized Marlene Dietrich; "Small Blue Thing" self-examination in the palm of a hand; "Some Journey" a soaring reflection on missed opportunity; "The Queen and the Soldier" a picture of willful arrogance that recalls the rich storytelling tradition of the Child ballads; "Neighborhood Girls" hipsters who are gone gone gone. Tactile and visceral images are juxtaposed in a sensual lyricism that reveals Vega as a maturing self who is reflective, protean, and open. The production values underscore the quiet intensity and overall moodiness of the album. A stunning set of songs that still inspires and moves.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars crystalline masterwork, December 16, 2005
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
Suzanne Vega's debut is one of the 80's most overlooked and underrated treasures. Remarkably assured for a debut, the almost ethereal melancholy of this album denies any real comparison; it is unfailingly unique. Opening with "Cracking", a semi-spoken word piece piercingly scored with acoustic guitar and airy synthesizer, a tone is set that is mesmerizingly maintained throughout. The tone is crystalline, and its brittle beauty is remarkable in its timelessness. There have been some who have criticized the lush production and "new age" synth work, this criticism now seems dated itself; the instrumentation is utterly true to the spirit of the music and lyrics. In "Freeze Tag" the contrast of folk guitar and synth continues, again with haunting effect. "Marlene on the Wall" is almost lighthearted (in contrast), and "Small Blue Thing" does the remarkable trick of turning self-absorbed bathos into a gorgeous elegy. The three highlights of the album (besides the chilling "Cracking") are "Some Journey", "Straight Lines" and "The Queen and the Soldier". "Some Journey" is as erotic as anything she has done, and features some great Darrell Anger violin at the end. "Straight Lines" is a smartly unsentimental tale of a woman's suicide, with lines like "She is streamlined, she is taking the shade down from the light, to see the straight lines."
Finally "The Queen and the Soldier" is a straight up folk ballad that neatly sums up the dangers of love, while being opaque enough to be adapted to anyone's pain; brilliant. Suzanne Vega, in my opinion, never again reached the pure lustre of this jewel. It is a work that deserves to be considered genius.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars poetry in motion, March 19, 2005
By 
PSM/Bokor (United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
I must admit that I'm not familiar with Vega's other works; however, I have always found this CD to be brilliant. Vega's words are more poetry than song lyrics. Her musical style is intriguing. Her timing and pacing on the guitar aptly complement the words sung.

There is a starkness and surrealism that I have not experienced on any other CD, by any other artist. This isn't background music; one must sit and listen to the songs, the words.

This is poetry in motion...
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of the instigators of the modern folk revival., February 27, 2000
By 
D. Mok (Los Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
Suzanne Vega's eponymous debut heralded the arrival of an unabashedly sophisticated singer/songwriter whose verbal skills, detached but lovely delivery, urban wit and storytelling skills ranked her among the best of her genre.

Though not her best album -- I give Solitude Standing an edge thanks to richer arrangements and songwriting -- this album is her most idiosyncratic, and most verbose. Vega at this point hasn't completely mastered her vocal delivery, but her coolly sympathetic voice already sounds great, and the songs are like a vibrant stream: The quietly resounding guitar of "Undertow"; the tight wordplay of "Marlene on the Wall"; the spoken-word leanings of "Cracking"; the heartfelt narrative power of "The Queen and the Soldier" (later covered by Kathryn Roberts and Kate Rusby).

Without the pop hooks of a "Luka" to drive it, Suzanne Vega relies on the power of the word to make a point. And the point was heard clearly by many -- this album remains a favourite among Vega's fan circles.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vega's Folk Poetry, August 8, 2001
By 
Garth Henkins (Baton Rouge, LA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
This was Vega's first and perhaps her best, if judged by folk criteria. The songs have a very sparse feel, allowing the listener to enjoy the poetry that is her lyrics. Her later recordings are remarkable in their own way too...much more powerful, driven, raucous. This recording is that of the frail folk-waif in an unjust world and it's gorgeous.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Debut Album - Suzzane Vega, September 11, 2007
By 
SeanMusic (Clifton Heights, PA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
An impressive and unique debut for one of the most introspective, and sparse acoustic players.
Often detached in her storytelling, she still manages superbly to convey a sense of intimacy & urgency.
A MUST HAVE!!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The woman on this album still fascinates me, March 7, 2007
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
This was my first Suzanne Vega album and remains one of my two favorites along with Solitude Standing. Suzanne's lyrics gave you just enough of a glimpse to make you long to understand the unspoken secrets lurking in the head of this mysterious, extremely intelligent yet strangely vulnerable woman. Very SEXY stuff without any sense of her consciously trying to be.

Like most of her fans I especially enjoyed "Marlene On The Wall" and "The Queen and The Soldier" -- but I'm also terribly curious about what kind of man she was writing to when she wrote "Some Journey". I wonder about the "rose tattoo from the fingerprints on me from you" -- was she abused herself? There are mysteries here that you may never solve, but your mind and your heart will grow in the process. Buy it, enjoy it. This is Suzanne at her best.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still my favorite after all these years...., October 24, 2009
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (MP3 Download)
I bought this the year it came out, hearing Marlene on the Wall at the great Chicago progressive rock station WXRT in Chicago. I agree on just about everything that has been said except on one major aspect: to my ears, this is not "folk" music and I would not classify her as a "folk" musician. Now I am not a professional music critic but if you listen to this particular album, it sounds almost anti-folk to me. I guess to me the genre "folk" evokes an almost country-pop music structure or formula, and this album does not evoke that. I think "folk" and I think Joan Baez, Indigo Girls, Emmylou Harris, Alison Kraus and maybe even Jewel. But this album to me is so spare, stark, clean-lined, and precise that it's almost in it's own category and I know of no other album by a male or female artist that is close to the overall feel that this album creates.
When you think of folk, you think of the stereotypical country guitar twang, the granola-esqueness, the organic-ness, and emotional sentiments being song. This album is spare, ethereal, clean, sharp, dry, psychological, abstract, and Suzanne sings almost from a more emotionally detached state, observing, commenting poetically an abstractly. Her lyrics are definitely not folk-oriented but rather modern or post-modern, psychological as opposed to emotional, and texture musically is more contructed as opposed to organic. A good example is "Freeze Tag". It's like a poetry slam, rap, jazz song with its syncopated phrasing and crystaline guitarwork. Or listen to Small Blue Thing which musically and lyrically to me is so far removed from being a "folk" song - it's got more in common with Laurie Anderson than say Sheryl Crow.

All the lushness, decorations, and ornamentation have been stripped from the "folk" and you are left with a crisp, beautifully naked, sometimes haunting, sometimes dark, sometimes catharthic, sometimes enlightened, state. Her guitarwork, vocals, pacing, and lyrics all work together to elicit that state (for me).

The small amounts of accompaniment here and there are so intentionally slight and light that they almost sound as if they're ashamed to break-up the crispness of the guitar and of Ms. Vega's vibrato-free voice.

I frankly was quite disappointed when her next work, Solutide Standing, came out. It became too pop and formulaic with too much post-production (at least compared to her debut). Now I love love love SV and I've come to love and admire her other albums of course but this debut to me is the highest and purest distillation of her artistry and soul and the one I still play over and over regularly. I love the spareness, the reliance of her voice and guitar to carry through most of the songs. 20+ years later and this work still sounds like so much like "fresh air". It transcends all the other formulaic productions that other producers and artist seems to follow to sound edgy and "modern" but eventually dates them, too. This album never ever sounded "dated" to me. It always sounds "fresh"
and clear.

I guess a funny analogy I can use is that this album is an aural, emotional, and musical "palette cleanser". I love music of all kinds and much of it is rock, pop, jazz and classical - all multi-layered, loud (usually), formulaic in many cases, and typically overly produced. When I go back to this album it brings me back down to the "basics" and while this album has teeny tiny bits of pop, rock, jazz phrasing, classical, and, yes some - GULP -FOLK(!) in it, it is added in a judicious, conscientious manner - just enough satisfy a well-rounded, music-loving ear. This is an album I would bring to a desert island. Suzanne Vega is thought of the first "modern" "folk" artist that susequently ushered in countless others woman folk guitarists afterwards but I think with this album she transcends the "folk" "rock" and "pop" labels and genres and is really to me the first modern woman musical "artist", taking the baton from the other ground-breaking "folk" artist Joni Mitchell.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Suzanne Vega doesn't bore me, July 19, 2007
This review is from: Suzanne Vega (Audio CD)
This was the second CD of Suzanne Vega's that I ever bought. I figured that since I liked 'Solitude Standing' (my first) I would like this one. And I was right. I could not explain it but every song grabbed my attention. I think it has to do with the fact that Suzanne Vega can write lyrics about tangable things and not bore you to death with superficial repeatitive lyrics whose rhyme you can figure out before it is sung. Suzanne Vega's lyrics don't bore me. They are food for my ears, mind, and spirit.
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