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Suzanne Vega
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Suzanne Vega
Current price: $17.99
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Barnes and Noble
Suzanne Vega
Current price: $17.99
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Though early comparisons were made to
Joni Mitchell
,
Suzanne Vega
's true antecedents were
Janis Ian
and
Leonard Cohen
. Like
Ian
, she sings with a precise, frequently half-spoken phrasing that gives her lyrics an intensity that seems to suggest an unsteady control consciously held over emotional chaos. Like
Cohen
Vega
observes the world in poetic metaphor, her cold urban landscapes reflecting a troubled sense of love and loss. The key track is
"Small Blue Thing,"
in which the singer pictures herself as an object "Like a marble/or an eye," "made of china/made of glass," "lost inside your pocket," and "turning in your hand." The sharply picked acoustic guitar and other isolated musical elements echo the closely observed scenes -- everything seems to be in tight close-up and sharp focus. Often, the singer seems to be using the songs to measure an emotional distance; sometimes, as in
"Marlene on the Wall,"
she observes her own actions from a remove. In
"Freeze Tag,"
she tells a companion, "I will be Dietrich/and you can be Dean"; in
"Marlene,"
a poster of the aloof movie star "watches from the wall," observing the singer's succession of lovers, and she tries to emulate her heroine's persona, telling the current one, "Even if I am in love with you/all this to say, what's it to you?" The ten songs on
constitute the self-analysis of a young woman who desires possession without offering commitment; no wonder that, upon its release, it was taken to heart by young women across the country and in Europe. ~ William Ruhlmann
Joni Mitchell
,
Suzanne Vega
's true antecedents were
Janis Ian
and
Leonard Cohen
. Like
Ian
, she sings with a precise, frequently half-spoken phrasing that gives her lyrics an intensity that seems to suggest an unsteady control consciously held over emotional chaos. Like
Cohen
Vega
observes the world in poetic metaphor, her cold urban landscapes reflecting a troubled sense of love and loss. The key track is
"Small Blue Thing,"
in which the singer pictures herself as an object "Like a marble/or an eye," "made of china/made of glass," "lost inside your pocket," and "turning in your hand." The sharply picked acoustic guitar and other isolated musical elements echo the closely observed scenes -- everything seems to be in tight close-up and sharp focus. Often, the singer seems to be using the songs to measure an emotional distance; sometimes, as in
"Marlene on the Wall,"
she observes her own actions from a remove. In
"Freeze Tag,"
she tells a companion, "I will be Dietrich/and you can be Dean"; in
"Marlene,"
a poster of the aloof movie star "watches from the wall," observing the singer's succession of lovers, and she tries to emulate her heroine's persona, telling the current one, "Even if I am in love with you/all this to say, what's it to you?" The ten songs on
constitute the self-analysis of a young woman who desires possession without offering commitment; no wonder that, upon its release, it was taken to heart by young women across the country and in Europe. ~ William Ruhlmann