Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Sixpence None The Richer Pictures
Band:
Sixpence None The Richer
Origin:
United States, Austin - TexasUnited States
Band Members:
Matt Slocum (songwriter, guitar, celo), Leigh Bingham Nash (vocals), Dale Baker (drums, percussion), Justin Cary (bass guitar), and Sean Kelly (guitar)
Sixpence None The Richer Album: «Sixpence None The Richer»
Sixpence None The Richer Album: «Sixpence None The Richer» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.2 of 5)
  • Title:Sixpence None The Richer
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
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Customers rating
Track listing
Review - Product Description
Sixpence None The Richer by SIXPENCE NONE THE RICHER

This product is manufactured on demand using CD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.

Review - Amazon.com
Some songs define moments in our lives we will never forget. They're songs that years later can evoke the sights, sounds, and even smells of the time we first heard them. "Kiss Me," the red-hot, irresistible single from this self-titled release, will probably be one of those songs for the many who've by now experienced its charms. The culprits? A trio of youthful central Texans, by way of Nashville, called Sixpence None the Richer. On the rest of this Grammy-nominated gem, Sixpence serve an airy blend of Abra Moore-meets-Sundays acoustic pop. It's beautifully rich and constantly augmented by Leigh Nash's earthy vocals, Matt Slocum's songwriting genius, and steady rhythms from Dale Baker. Like Jars of Clay, Sixpence have "raised the bar" for the rest of late-'90s contemporary Christian music. --Michael Lyttle
Customer review
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
- Sixpence must definitely be Richer...

You must buy this album, because it is damn worth it. I bought it only having listened to "Kiss Me" before. I put it in my CD player, and it still is in my CD player. It starts off with a continuous three-piece song, beautifully linked together in the most ingenious way. It goes deep into your thoughts, making you think about past experiences - before "I Can't Catch You", I had already thought about my ex-girlfriend, my family, my college life, my future, my... To me, "I Can't Catch You" is definitely the standout track on this album. Equal to this is "Sister, Mother", where Leigh Nash's voice really develops to unbelievable heights. This is an album to think about if you're ready to think about the past, the present, the future. If you like songs with a deep meaning, then this is the album for you...

Customer review
23 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
- An alternative pop classic

Sixpence None the Richer is incredible!I listen to a lot of other music styles like alternative,punk,ska,and some metal,but I still love this disc!All you people who think this cd is bad(or "weird")are just mindless people who bought it for "Kiss Me"(fess up,you know exactly who you are),or don't know music when you hear it.Don't get me wrong,I hated "Kiss Me"until I heared the whole album.Now I love it!Every single song is awesome,though two outstanding songs are "Kiss Me" and "There She Goes".The only song I ever skip is "The Lines of My Earth"(which is still a great song).This is on my top ten best "christian" cds list,one of the very few that I will lable "perfect".Dark but uplifting,Sixpence None the Richer is made up of a rich and well textured style of music with rythmic but subtlely grinding guitars coupled with a miriad of other instrements.Their alterna-pop sound can easily compete with a number of bands in the secular music industry.Anyone who loves good music should love this disc.

Customer review
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
- A Melancholy, Acoustic Journey

Bittersweet, a lot of that you'll be hearing lyrically, musically, and vocally throughout this album. Perhaps that is what makes this cd such a passionate standout. The whole vibe of this cd is pretty magical, one you can really loose yourself in. However, these are the songs I found to be the biggest standouts.

1. We Have Forgotten -I was drawn into this song from the very beginning. Starts out with an entrancing beginning, then softly melts into Leighs dreamy sounding vocals. Beautiful lyrics written here as well.."Horses bred with starlaced wings but it's so hard to make them fly."

4. Kiss Me -The shiney guitars at the beginning. The sparkling romantic lyrics, to the sweet breathy vocals, as overplayed as this track was on the radio, it still tastes of summer in every drop.

5. Easy To Ignore -I adore the violins in this song. You can really hear the emotion echoing out through Leighs voice.

8. The Lines Of My Earth -Really impressive, and it's great to know the lyrics match up with it's brilliant beat. A lot of emotion and passion from vocals, to the fainting guitars softly heard in the background.

10. I Won't Stay Long -Leighs vocals are so sad in this song. Its a bit softer and short, almost seems like an introduction to the next track.

11. Love -The mysterious vibe of this one you might find yourself setting on repeat. The way Leigh sings out "It is rain after the dryness, I need love." You can sort of feel your emotions right next to hers.

I enjoyed the rest of the songs as well. They certainly draw your attention, but my only complaints is that some of them don't draw me in enough to play the whole way through. "The Waiting Room" is a haunting song, but I find it dragging out a bit too much. The song "Anything" didn't really seem to reel me in all that much eitheir. The rest of the songs really ligh it up though. From the angelic sadness of "Sister Mother," the upbeatness of "I Can't Catch you," "Pudeo Escriber," is a unique track, but takes an aquired taste to listen to, and "Moving On" was an inspiring track to me as well, was a great ending finalie on the violins.

Customer review
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
- THE WARM SOUND OF SUMMER

Picked this album up on impulse because I've always loved those radio-friendly songs There She Goes and Kiss Me, which featured in the film She's All That and TV's Dawson's Creek.

There's something about this jangly American guitar band and their upbeat summer sound - plus singer Leigh Nash has that cutesy, girl-next-door voice that adds to the happy feel good factor that singles out Sixpence None The Richer.

Guitarist Matt Slocum is such a fantastic songwriter - he composed most of the tracks himself. I especially like the song The Lines Of My Earth with its haunting melody and lovely line "This is the last song that I write, 'til you tell me otherwise."

I don't know if the band are still going, as I haven't heard anything from them for ages, but I do hope so otherwise.

Beautiful album that I just can't stop playing.

Customer review
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
- The Harvester Is Near

Since discovering Sixpence None the Richer I am now assured that there *is* hope for contemporary pop-rock. This cd is particular is melodic, rhythmically innovative, lyrical without pretense, quietly intelligent, and deeply meaningful in its overall project. Matt Slocum's songwriting (with some help from Leigh Nash)and production is solid throughout, the musicanship is original and refreshing, and Leigh Nash sings with a sense of phrasing and sincere emotion far superior to any of the current "pop divas." Nash has become one of my favorite singers due to the both the unique quality of her voice (at once confident and fragile) and, more importantly, her ability to invest a song with true feeling.

The songs themselves run from good to brilliant. The "Waiting Room" is the cut that begins to separate this album from the ordinary pack of 90s pop - followed by the tenderly magical "Kiss Me." Some might dismiss this song as run-of-the-mill pop on first hearing, but the more one really listens to the song and its different elements - the gentle guitar structure that moves the song forward, the romantic touches that come through from the various instruments, the sweetly innocent lyrics, and Nash's impeccable delivery - one realizes that this is a first-rate foray into the delights of young love. Compared to the crass explicitness of more salacious pop offerings (the awful "Bootylicious" springs to mind), this is a cleansing breath of fresh air. The song is followed by the honest and heart-felt "Easy to Ignore," a song that, with the simplest of lyrics, captures the other side of the coin - the hesitation and doubt that often accompanies new attraction. From here the band puts Neruda to music, shifting both the musical mood and lyrical emphasis of the cd, and serving as a mid-point between the more romantic first half of the album (save for "Waiting Room") and the more spirtiual second half.

Before moving into the spirituality of the latter half, "I Can't Catch You" offers more rhythmical change up combined with straightforward, tasteful lyrical testimony. But it is with "The Lines of My Earth" that the band really begins to raise this record into a higher plane - both artistically and philosophically. The last three songs, "I Won't Stay Long," "Love," and "Moving On" are the cd's best work, and are among the best music available today, making this recording one of the 3-4 best of the 90s (but there really isn't a weak cut on the recording). "Love" captures the spirit of St. Paul's First Letter to the Corinithians with such musical clarity that one has to conclude that the original author of these sentiments would have surely approved. "Moving On" is a powerful and confident expression of eager anticipation and preparation for transformative rebirth. Again, Nash sings both of this songs with flawless delivery - conveying Slocum's intelligently devout message in a way that makes it accessible and acceptable to anyone with a good ear and open mind. Slocum writes with tremendous reverence, but he does so with both the mind and the heart, and Nash presents his lyric with a beauty and clarity not found anywhere else in contemporary pop vocals. She is worth all the mega-stars out there - and more.

This is highly recommended - you won't regret purchasing what I am convinced is among the top albums of the past 20 years - or more.