In my opinion, the best thing ever (except for the fact that in my dream last night it was Monday so when I woke up I thought it was Tuesday and was SO happy to realize halfway through my shower that it is, in fact, FRIDAY) is when you re-buy an album from your youth. One you used to own and listened to so much that it basically wore out, and that somehow between then and now you gradually grew out of and forgot about. Then one day you hear a song, or a snatch of conversation that reminds you of it and you immediately Must Have It Again.
There are several albums for me that fit this description. The one I am talking about today is Indigo Girls "Rites of Passage".
When I was 14, and a senior at overnight camp, everyone had this album and everyone was always singing songs from it. I had never even heard Indigo Girls but by the end of the month I knew many of their songs by heart just from hearing other girls singing them. For Christmas that year my parents bought me that album and for that whole year I think that is probably all I listened too. The song "Ghost" was like my angst-ridden teen anthem about loving and losing, although at the time I had never been in love but that song made me feel like I had been.
And that year, all my girlfriends and I had these blank journals we called "Nothing books" and we would fill them up with quotes and song lyrics and you better believe 1/2 of these Nothing Books were page after page of Indigo Girl songs.
Later that year 1200 Curfews came out, a double disc album that had some of the songs from Rites of Passage as well as some new ones I had never heard of but soon came to love. And you know when I think about 10th grade (it was not the best year ever because my sent me to private school that year to escape the "bad influence" of public schools, meanwhile I didn't ever do (or even SEE) a drug or drink booze until i went to private school), all of the good times somehow involve listening to the Indigo Girls. Sitting at my friend Kate's house with a bunch of my girlfriends, eating chicken salad sandwiches from Bueggars, gossiping and leafing through magazines; driving down Route 3 in my friend Matt's convertible (who was nice enough to always let me blast whatever music I wanted); play practice late at night huddled in the corner with a radio and the rest of the "Chorus"doing homework/totally not doing that at all.
My point is, Indigo Girls for me have always been associated with awesome memories, never mind the fact that they are two of the best songwriters and classical guitar players around. So the other day when I was at work and "Least Complicated" came across my yahoo streaming music, I knew what I had to do and that night I went out and bought myself "Retrospective" (they didn't have 1200 curfews OR Rites of Passage, but as a "Best Of" kind of album, Retrospective is pretty kickass). And let me tell you, my commute the past few days has been SO much better when I have "Kid Fears" and "Power of Two" to sing along with.
If you are not familiar with Indigo Girls, I highly suggest you go and download some songs right now. My favorites are Ghost, Prince of Darkness, Mystery (esp. the live version) and Kid Fears. But really I think I love them all.
Friday, October 27, 2006
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13 comments:
I like the Indigo Girls as well (though I've never owned an album.) They remind me of the days of mix tapes. I was dating this guy for a while in college & the mix he made for me had several of their songs on it. Good stuff.
However, South Park has forever polluted my memories of the Indigo Girls with one episode where the boys had a crush on their teacher named (what else but) "Miss Ellen". Miss Ellen is a lesbian, but as the boys don't know what that is, they think it's something they can become to impress her. The following exchange always pops into my head:
Stan: "What the hell are you doing Cartman?"
Cartman (face down on the rug): "My mom says if you want to become a lesbian, you have to lick carpet."
Kyle: "Really?"
Stan: "Well, I got a Indigo Girls CD. The guy at the record store said it was perfect."
Kyle: "And I got these cool Birkenstocks."
Cartman: "This is a bunch of crap. I've been licking this carpet for three hours and I still don't feel like a lesbian."
ha! my musical choices in 10th grade were totally lesbonic: Indigo Girls, Tori Amos, ANI!? then in the spring of 10th grade someone introduced me to Van Halen and it was all over for the lesbians. sorry girls.
I think my taste in music is still "lesbionic". Am a huge Tori Amos fan. And my sister and I are going to an Ani DiFranco concert in a little over a week. My male friends used to refer to my tunes as "Vagina Music". And I wonder why sometimes people think I swing both ways...LOL.
No KD Lang or Melissa Etheridge for me yet, though. Haven't quite crossed that line. (o:
i have to be honest. i have a slight girl-crush on Melissa Etheridge. Ever since that song "I'm the only one" came out. I actually sang that at karaoke a few weeks ago!
there is a little lesbionic in all of us i guess.
I prefer the term "Lesbitarian". LOL. (Thanks Judy Tenuta!)
Sarah - I totally remember the nothing books! I went to Camp in Algonquin Park, Ontario and totally thought they were a Canadian thing. Indigo Girls were played heavily up there as well - I still try to see them when they are on tour.
i saw them a few years ago when they came to Boston. they are perfect live!!
GHOST is one of my favorite songs on that album. Now i have to break out that album again to hear it!
My husband and I both used to listen to that album all the time on road trips
GO INDIGO GIRLS!
Marisa:)
Exactly, Sarah! My stand-alone memory of Indigo Girls music is the 12-hour drive to our summer house in Canada that my family makes every summer. The first summer that I could drive (and therefore take over some of the burden), I requested Indigo Girls (the self-titled album), as my dad had played it the previous summer during the trip. For every summer thereafter (until last summer), I rocked out to the Indigo Girls while my parents slept. For me, there's nothing like "Secure Yourself" while driving alone through the darkness of the Maine highway or "Blood & Fire" while driving along the Sunrise Trail in Nova Scotia. Good call!
i forgot all about Secure Yourself. SO GOOD. the Amy Ray solos = so soulful.
How can you NOT love Ghost? I sang that song like it was my JOB!
And kudos on the private school comment - same with me. I had to go to private school before I found out what drugs and booze actually were!
Great blog, btw!
I looked at the first Indigo Girls CD this morning and put it in my car for a surprise the next time you get in. We are so of one mind.
The concert = what did it for me. We NEED to go again. They do all the hits!
And plus, as a bonus, that album cover just happens to be awesome. And pink! :)
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