FTE
Re: FTE
I would have to agree with you 100% on FTE. That was, by far, my favourite album. However, I don't think we'll see the likes of FTE again. I would love to see a return to her earlier musical style, but alas, idealism has given way to maturity and we have a more rounded, polished and well honed presentation which I'm still not sure is what I want to hear. Like you, I just want to hear something new and fresh. The only question is WHEN??
Q
Q
Re: FTE
It's a great album. Fumbling Towards Ecstasy (the song) is probably the most sensual tune ever written; and I confess I really like Possession (piano version) even though it speaks of a highly sensitive and taboo subject.
One little leaf adrift in the breeze, refuses to fall from the sky
Blown by the wind it clings to the tree, unwilling to wither and die...
Blown by the wind it clings to the tree, unwilling to wither and die...
Re: FTE
It's Fumbling Toward Ecstasy 20th birthday!
Sarah released this album on October 22, 1993!
Here is what she wrote on Facebook
Sarah released this album on October 22, 1993!
Here is what she wrote on Facebook
There are over 1800 comments, so I suppose it's a popular album among fans!20 years ago was the release of Fumbling Towards Ecstasy & we found some goodies in archives (my garage) that I'd love to sign & share to celebrate. One for every song --> http://www.sarahmclachlan.com/music/fum ... s-ecstasy/ Share your favourite song & why here or in the lyric lounge on my website. yea!!! xo,sarah
Karine
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- Location: Everett, WA
Re: FTE
Popular with me for sure! I've been really captured by this album, and its derivative Freedom Sessions and FTE Live, since I discovered them. She has plumbed the depths of the soul with these songs. They're certainly among her best.Karine wrote:It's Fumbling Toward Ecstasy 20th birthday!
Sarah released this album on October 22, 1993!
Here is what she wrote on FacebookThere are over 1800 comments, so I suppose it's a popular album among fans!20 years ago was the release of Fumbling Towards Ecstasy & we found some goodies in archives (my garage) that I'd love to sign & share to celebrate. One for every song --> http://www.sarahmclachlan.com/music/fum ... s-ecstasy/ Share your favourite song & why here or in the lyric lounge on my website. yea!!! xo,sarah
I was a late arrival, but better late than never!
Ed
Ed
Re: FTE
Afterglow was the first SMcL album I bought. I can't remember now which song I'd heard on the radio from the album, but I liked it and bought it. I'd listened to Angel, (on the Santana and friends VHS), a few weeks earlier which had stuck in my mind, again, reinforcing the purchase. I had only just returned from Vancouver to see a friend on mine, his late wife having given me the 12" vinyl of Touch which started me off with SMcL. A lot had happened around the turn of the Millennium for me and for my friend and it really doesn't seem like 10 years. When I listen to Afterglow now it seems much more grown up and adult compared to her earlier work (That isn't meant to be derogatory either!)Karine wrote:It's never too late! In November, it'll be Afterglow 10th anniversary. What a big year!
Let's hope the new album invokes the the same feelings in another 10 years.
Q
Re: FTE
I can't believe she wrote FTE when she was around 24 years old (and she was even younger for Solace). I agree with you, Afterglow is a more mature record. She talked a few times about how hard it was for her to write it and record it and even if the songs don't reflect the loss of her mother or her life as a new mom, I'm sure these events changed her a lot.Quincy wrote:Afterglow was the first SMcL album I bought. I can't remember now which song I'd heard on the radio from the album, but I liked it and bought it. I'd listened to Angel, (on the Santana and friends VHS), a few weeks earlier which had stuck in my mind, again, reinforcing the purchase. I had only just returned from Vancouver to see a friend on mine, his late wife having given me the 12" vinyl of Touch which started me off with SMcL. A lot had happened around the turn of the Millennium for me and for my friend and it really doesn't seem like 10 years. When I listen to Afterglow now it seems much more grown up and adult compared to her earlier work (That isn't meant to be derogatory either!)Karine wrote:It's never too late! In November, it'll be Afterglow 10th anniversary. What a big year!
Let's hope the new album invokes the the same feelings in another 10 years.
Q
Karine
- Islandflyer
- Drifting
- Posts: 456
- Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 4:54 am
- Location: Everett, WA
Re: FTE
It's interesting that you speak of the later records as "more mature". I have really been impressed with the depth of the songs on FTE, and I don't see more maturity in Afterglow, say, as opposed to FTE. Rather, it seems she explores in greater detail, or from a different direction, the basic themes she has written about before. Some of the songs on the former (Elsewhere, Plenty) explore the adolescent phase of life, and on Afterglow she explores issues one encounters later in life (Time, Trainwreck, etc), but I see a similar intense focus on the emotional impact and the fallout from these experiences. The "observational" songs like Ice, and perhaps Wait, seem to come from such a personal place, even though, as she said about "Ice", it was one she had never actually been in. How she can capture the experience so perfectly, with such beautiful music, is amazing. Especially at such a young age.Karine wrote:I can't believe she wrote FTE when she was around 24 years old (and she was even younger for Solace). I agree with you, Afterglow is a more mature record. She talked a few times about how hard it was for her to write it and record it and even if the songs don't reflect the loss of her mother or her life as a new mom, I'm sure these events changed her a lot.Quincy wrote:Afterglow was the first SMcL album I bought. I can't remember now which song I'd heard on the radio from the album, but I liked it and bought it. I'd listened to Angel, (on the Santana and friends VHS), a few weeks earlier which had stuck in my mind, again, reinforcing the purchase. I had only just returned from Vancouver to see a friend on mine, his late wife having given me the 12" vinyl of Touch which started me off with SMcL. A lot had happened around the turn of the Millennium for me and for my friend and it really doesn't seem like 10 years. When I listen to Afterglow now it seems much more grown up and adult compared to her earlier work (That isn't meant to be derogatory either!)Karine wrote:It's never too late! In November, it'll be Afterglow 10th anniversary. What a big year!
Let's hope the new album invokes the the same feelings in another 10 years.
Q
And then there is that sense of mystery, of unknown stories, she has evoked so well, in so many songs. I think we left out Surfacing entirely here. That's a whole other story, isn't it?
Ed