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Free Music Notes for The AwakeningFree Music Review: Souls Take Another Journey Toward Heaven Hit: 5 StarsEvery CD that Melissa Etheridge has released moved my soul to another height. The Awakening has made it soar. From the first track to the last, I felt as if I walked beside her through the journeys of her life, sharing every pain, every tear, every triumph, every sorrow and every joy.
This CD is unlike any that you have heard before from Melissa but it will crawl into your heart and nestle there contently. You can hear the pain and deep regret in Track 3, an apology to an unknown. My favorite track is number 9 I've Loved You Before. In my own life, I know that my love has been before in another time. Melissa captures that feeling so deeply in this song. The album title is ironic, this CD is truly "The Awakening"
I don't know how much higher you can take my spirit and my soul, Melissa, with your music, but, I can't wait for the continued flight. Peace to you,Tammy and the children, my friend and thank you.
Free Music Review: Best Work Yet Hit: 5 StarsMelissa has done an amazing job of entertaining us while telling of her journey in life. It is musically great and again delivers a message to us all.
Free Music Review: outstanding Hit: 5 StarsHer voice and writing have matured so much through the years...this is a further example of the wonderful things she has yet of offer!
Free Music Review: worth waiting for Hit: 4 StarsI totally love the CD, Melissa at her best yet. I was disappointed I had to wait for it as I had preordered it, but I am happy with it now that I have received it.
Free Music Review: Ethridge's AWAKENING Is (Mostly) A Somber, Sobering Affair Hit: 4 StarsMuch like Carly Simon's 2001 release THE BEDROOM TAPES, THE AWAKENING was an album that Melissa Etheridge HAD to make. Battling back from a bout with breast cancer, Etheridge is understandably changed, seeing life ~ and the world ~ thru a different set of eyes. Sadly, however, those eyes are, for the most part, represented here in only one color, a sort of somber midnight blue. Unlike Cindy Bullens' brilliant 1999 masterpiece, SOMEWHERE BETWEEN HEAVEN AND EARTH, or last year's (for me, anyway!) Album of the Year, Rosanne Cash's stunning BLACK CADILLAC, THE AWAKENING seems stuck in neutral. The two aforementioned albums, which chronicled the vibrant highs and somber lows of life and death, love and loss, covered the full spectrum of the emotional scale, while THE AWAKENING, while certainly honest and sincere, seems to be weighted down by just one or two. Where is more of the primal fear? The joy? The vulnerability? Aside from such tracks as "Message To Myself" and "Threesome", they're limited at best. Mind you, in no way is this a bad album; I just would have liked more from Etheridge, especially since I know she's capable of it. There are definitely some nice moments that add to the overall flow and concept album vibe of the disc, including a number of short spoken and/or sung interludes between songs (Note to Melissa: While this idea works here, don't repeat it....it can quickly wear it's welcome out. Just ask any Janet Jackson fan!), but, overall...! The first actual song is the gently lilting "California." All strumming acoustic guitars and muted percussion, Etheridge delivers the biographical tale in a voice that is strong, yet sincere. Very nice! The biographical slant continues with "An Unexpected Rain", albeit darker and edgier. Etheridge's vocals wrap around the words like a husky musical constrictor, squeezing out the story of someone she met (and quite possibly hurt) on her climb up the fame ladder. Unflinching in her honest ("The fresh scars on your wrist/I can't make it go away"), it's that honesty that keeps you rooting for her, even in her darker, less proud, moments like this one. Things take a 180 degree turn with "Message To Myself", the first of only two really up-beat tracks on the album. However, this isn't just a piece of pop fluff...instead, anchored by a bouyant arrangement, Etheridge comments on where she's been ("Each day I spent in hell/I chose to stay") and where she's at now ("I'm sending out a message to myself/So that when I hear it on the radio/I will know that I am fine"). Not since Carly Simon's "You're So Vain" has there been a song like "Map Of The Stars", one that could have people guessing as to the identity of the starlet mentioned in this tale of Hollywood and it's ups and downs, sacrifices and rewards. A smooth vocal, unadorned instrumentation and pointed lyrics all add up to a real winner (My guess, by the way? Well, let's just say her initials are J.A.!). There's a giddy joyfulness to "Threesome" that's absolutely infectious. Part percussive rocker, part Southern Country boogie, I'm betting one or two of Country music's more adventurous up-and-comers will cover this energetic number about fidelity in the next year or so! I really believe THE AWAKENING would have benefited from more of the humor and care-free attitude found on this track. Another strong cut is the gorgeous "I've Loved You Before." You could look at this as a song about reincarnation, or you could just say love knows no boundaries....whatever the case, Etheridge clearly makes her point, aided by delicate instrumentation, a lovely vocal and poignant lyrics ("When there's no one else that makes me whole/I am never wanting more/I get this feeling/I know I've loved you before"). Definitely one of ME's Top Ten Best....EVER!! "Heroes And Friends" also has a nice acoustic groove to it, along with a wistful message that is both simple and profound in it's universality. Sweet and sincere, this is Etheridge at her most real, naked and honest. It's at this point that things get a little spotty. "The Kingdom Of Heaven" boarders on preachy, while the production on both this cut and the following one ("Open Your Mind") is bloated and over the top. You can have an appreciation for classic rock, but you have to be careful you don't veer into dated arena rock, which happens here, resulting in some moments that are painful at best (Along these lines, I think it's time for Melissa to work with a stronger producer....she's gone as far as she can go co-producing with David Cole). The disc ends with a trilogy of songs, all marked as part of "The Awakening." "The Universe Listened" is the strongest of the three, what with it's hushed vocal, urgent, yet easy, arrangement and thoughtful lyrics, both dark ("I'll pay the price, any price/Just give me the fame") and light-hearted ("I found my angels, found my spirit/Guess I found my soul"), while both "Imagine That" and "What Happens Tomorrow" have some nice moments. Sooo...final thoughts on THE AWAKENING? As I stated earlier, it's definitely an album Melissa Etheridge needed to make at this point in her life. There's an innate honesty to the disc that is undeniable. However, after fighting back from the darkness, I wished Etheridge had used a wider pallet as she described her journey back to the light, along with the new ideas, feelings and thoughts she had once she got there. Here's hoping those subtle greens, rosy reds, shimmering golds and velvety purples are the cornerstone of her next release. After all, there's more to life than just midnight blue. (As with with all my reviews, I'm giving the disc an extra half a star for including the lyrics).
More Free Music Notes: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
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