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Audio CD review:
Olivia Newton-John - Indigo: Women of Song

Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Olivia Newton-John reviews here, or go back to the Olivia Newton-John tabs.

     

Olivia Newton-John - Indigo: Women of Song
Olivia Newton-John Band: Olivia Newton-John
Title: Indigo: Women of Song
Rating:
Release Date: 02 November, 2004
Media: Audio CD

Tracks: 1: Love Me or Leave Me 2: How Insensitive 3: How Glad I Am 4: Anyone Who Had a Heart 5: Where Have All the Flowers Gone 6: Cry Me a River 7: Summertime 8: Send in the Clowns 9: Rainy Days and Mondays 10: Lovin' You 11: Alfie

Customer Reviews
Olivia-Indigo...A pleasant surprise
Olivia's voice and multiple styles of singing are just wonderful. I was thrilled to receive, listen to, and thoroughly enjoy the likes of Indigo. I love to hear Olivia sing, and Indigo offers a fantastic delivery of music. I love Indigo. . . . one of my favorite albums to come along in a while. Thank you Olivia.
Douglas,
Atlanta, Georgia USA.

Why no U.S. release? Once again, Amazon.com to the rescue!
Well, I'll sit through anything on a comp ticket (including Heart - and not when they were good, either!), and besides, what could be lovelier than a cool summer night under the stars, the air fragrant with eucalyptus, as Olivia charmed her gym-toned faithful with her enviable string of gold singles that is the soundtrack to our childhoods? For free no less! Newton-John told us she'd recently spent five days with producer Phil Ramone in a Malibu studio recording an album described as a tribute to the girl singers who either inspired her or whom she just plain admired, and the three selections she performed that evening - Anyone Who Had a Heart, Cry Me A River, and Alfie - were among the evening's most enchanting. As if my life weren't gay enough, I found myself at the Greek last summer when a friend of a friend chanced into a set of unexpected comps to Olivia's summer barnstorm across North America with an orchestra and a few rock pieces. Yet Indigo: Women of Song would enjoy no U. S. release. Once again, Amazon. com to the rescue!

Anyone looking to Indigo for definitive reinterpretations of these classics will surely be disappointed. It is not Olivia's intention to, say, out-Streisand Streisand, for to do so would be disrespectful to those whom she means to honor. She instead merely wants to share with her audience the music that made her want to sing professionally in the first place, including some numbers that began her journey to icon status. She sang Summertime, for example, on her first ever television appearance at age 15. Her Anyone Who Had a Heart doesn't need to eclipse Cilla Black or Dionne Warwick; it appears because it was the song she performed in the finals of a televised Australian talent contest that won her a trip by ship to London in 1966. The rest, as they say, is history. We forgive her for not even ATTEMPTING a glass-shattering Minnie Ripperton Maxell Moment on Loving You because the liner notes reveal that Ripperton was the first woman Olivia knew to die of breast cancer, a fate that the eternally youthful Australian managed to dodge herself in the early 90's.

In a career marked with hit after hit and achievement after achievement - from unwittingly ticking off Nashville's old guard after country music's establishment embraced a foreign pop singer, to the enduring popularity of Grease, to giving the aerobics craze of the 80's a theme song, Physical, whose racy video winks at gym queens disappearing into a steamroom together, thus ensuring its recurrent status on gay bar playlists everywhere - Newton-John's catalogue does not boast a career-defining, non-soundtrack studio album worth owning, which probably explains why the artist is oft-anthologized (enough with the greatest hits packages already!). Nothing in the league of, say, Tapestry, Nick of Time, Dusty in Memphis, Jagged Little Pill, Blue, or The Broadway Album. But while Indigo: Women of Song does not elevate Newton-John to Serious Chanteuse status, at least it won't sound dated in ten years.

SERVING SUGGESTION: Dolly Parton's tribute to hits of the 60's & 70's, Those Were The Days.

1970's pop star...still at it!
The sometimes charming seventies songbird surfaces from time to time with new albums, and her efforts are a mixed lot. Those with an interest in nostalgia and 70's pop culture might be advised to sample this album. Ranging from the unbearable "Gaia" to the ill-advised "Back With A Heart",both filled with unmemorable new tunes, this latest effort is a cover version album. Many reviewers choose to fault Olivia's weakened voice, but I have a fondness for her and we must allow our singing stars to age, it's natural. I found my copy of this CD for a buck, but it's enjoyable enough to purchase at full price. There's no question, it's the most listenable album she's recorded since the end of the 1970s, and is perhaps a perfect ending to a career. .

. You can see a complete list of all Olivia Newton-John discography, or go back to the Olivia Newton-John tabs

 



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