10,000 Maniacs Album - In My Tribe
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Customers rating:
(65 ratings)
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Release Date:1990-10-25
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Type:Audio CD
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Genre:Adult Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative Pop/Rock, College Rock, Folk-Rock, Jangle Pop, Pop, Pop/Rock Music, Popular Music, Rock, Rock/Pop
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Label:Elektra / Wea
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UPC:075596073820
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Approx. Price:$13.96
(USD)
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Review - Amazon.com essential recording :
In My Tribe was 10,000 Maniacs' second (and best) album and the record that made the band collegiate favorites and singer/songwriter Natalie Merchant a star. Producer Peter Asher's rich balance of acoustic and electric instruments gave muscle to the group's folk-rock. "Hey Jack Kerouac" found Merchant musing on the literary beats of the 1950s, but the song's musical hook was the rich bed of rhythm guitars laid atop the solid drums. "Don't Talk" offered a similarly propulsive rock sound, with lyrics that advised troubled lovers to keep it to themselves. R.E.M. singer Michael Stipe offered hipster credibility by guesting on "A Campfire Song," while a cover of Cat Stevens's "Peace Train" offered listeners a familiar port of entry. However, when Muslim convert Stevens announced his support of Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini's call for the execution of Satanic Verses author Salman Rushdie, the band rereleased the album without "Peace Train." --John MilwardCustomer review - 2002-07-20
- Solid Folk Rock AlbumIn addition to being the band that launched Natalie Merchant's career, 10,000 Maniacs were among the best of the late 1980s college rock groups that gained popularity in the wake of R.E.M.'s success. "In My Tribe" was the Merchant and Company's best album, containing the ace single "Like the Weather," and accompanying material that is just as strong. Other highlights are the child abuse take "What's the Matter Here," the tribute "Hey Jack Kerouac," and the catchy "Don't Talk." Unfortunately, the band pulled their wonderful cover version of Cat Stevens's "Peace Train" off of subsequent pressings of this album after Stevens's coversion to radical Islam and his support of Ayatolah Khomeni's call for Muslims to kill author Salmon Rushdie for publishing "The Satanic Verses." While I support the band's thinking, it robs the album of one of its best performances. Overall, an excellent record that sounds as fresh today as when it was released in 1987.
Customer review - 2000-02-27
- 10,000 Stars Are Not EnoughI have held out reviewing this CD for a very long time. Why? Because I don't know what to say about a CD that touched me very personally and changed my outlook on music and life. There are not very many CD's that sound as fresh today as when they were first purchased over 10 ten years ago. But "In My Tribe" does. The word "masterpiece" is overused, even by me, but it definitely applies to this CD. Every track is powerful lyrically and musically. For me, that power culminates in "Don't Talk." It is Natalie and the Maniacs at their very best. The lyrics never fail to get into my soul. If you have ever felt disillusioned in your life, then this song will speak to you. "Like the Weather" captures the mood of everyone at his or her lowest point, when just getting up in the morning doesn't seem to be quite worth it. Ever wonder about the state of marriage in the world today? Then listen to "My Sister Rose." "Gun Shy" could be about so many in our society today. And the tragedy of child abuse and the lack of resources to stop it get brilliant treatment in "What's the Matter Here." Everyone knows that Natalie Merchant has a beautiful voice, and "Verdi Cries" has the title reaction nearly each time I listen to it--it can move all but the hardest heart and soul to tears. Music does not come any better than this CD. It is a wonder, an amazing display of talent. If you do not own it, you will not be sorry you bought it. It is truly tremendous.
Customer review - 2000-06-08
- AmazingI first saw and heard 10,000 Maniacs when they opened for R.E.M on their "Document" tour. The very next day I found someone in my dorm (I was a freshman in college) with a CD so I could make a copy. I wore out the tape and replaced it with a CD. "Verdi Cries" is my second favorite on the album, but the song that is my favorite (and not mentioned by other reviewers) is "Cherry Tree." This simple song about illiteracy is beautiful and touching - it still is fresh well over ten years after release. This is the Maniacs' best album...a musical treasure.
Customer review - 1999-11-11
- The companion piece to a life less ordinary.What can I say about this album. I was a senior in high school when it was released and discovered it through my sister while summering in Cape May, New Jersey. I was touched by Natalie Merchants voice and lyrics in the heavily played "Like the Weather" that summer. I feel shades of Debbie Harry's summer song "The Tide is High" when I hear "In My Tribe" It is the most influential and wonderful collection of music I have ever come across, and I own 2 cassettes and a CD now, after wearing out 2 cassetes and a previous CD. I cannot even relate the scope of memories I have intertwined with this album. I can only say that it changed my life, and it made me see music and voice perfectly realized as a spiritual, creative, and societal touchstone. 'In My Tribe' was the soundtrack of the last 12 years of my life.
Customer review - 2003-01-30
- Passionate, beautiful, important musicThis really is an amazingly good album, filled with depth and passion and shaped by one of music's most distinct, compelling voices (Natalie Merchant). I actually bought this album long ago, before I had even heard any 10,000 Maniacs music. The name of the group had a certain appeal to me, and there is something about the cover and its enticing shade of purple that drew me to it. Of course, what matters here is really the music, and I think this album reveals the very heart and soul of Natalie Merchant and the Maniacs. Not yet superstars, all of the musicians poured copious amounts of passion into each and every song, making this music both incredibly enchanting to the ears and compelling to the heart and mind. Merchant's unique voice is a beacon of soul-seeking enlightenment examining themes most artists (as well as most people) often shy away from. For example, What's the Matter Here? focuses on child abuse, Don't Talk addresses a struggling alcoholic, and Gun Shy is a plaintive lament for a world in which soldiers are needed. Cherry Tree, my favorite, is a song about the personal shame illiteracy can engender in a person, and it expresses such passion and joy in the prospect of learning that it could well serve as the de facto theme song for any adult literacy program. Verdi Cries is, quite simply, hauntingly beautiful. It is unfortunate (yet understandable) that the group's cover of Cat Stevens' Peace Train was removed from later releases of the album because I quite enjoy it-it's certainly much better than the original. About the Weather is really the only song I remember ever getting playing time on the radio, but there are at least half a dozen songs on here that I find even more enjoyable. R.E.M. fans might be interested to know that Michael Stipe lends his voice (albeit rather briefly) to A Campfire Song. I can't get very excited about My Sister Rose, but every other song on the album is simply fabulous. Merchant's devotion to the music is beyond question, considering the fact that she essentially collapsed from exhaustion during the tour that followed this impeccable album's release. It's almost impossible to get tired of any of these songs, no matter how many times you listen to them.
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