yourmusic.com
Already a subscriber? Log In
Search
For Browse Learn More
Subscribe Now
Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
Melissa Etheridge
Your Little Secret
Melissa Etheridge:  Your Little Secret Tell a Friend about this album

$6.99
Listen

Album Review

Released: 1995
Label: Island
Selection #: 111111
The emotional roots-rocker delivers on Nowhere To Go, title cut, I Want To Come Over, This War Is Over, I Really Like You, Change, more.
Listen RM WM
1 Your Little Secret
2 I Really Like You
3 Nowhere to Go
4 An Unusual Kiss
5 I Want to Come Over
6 All the Way to Heaven
7 I Could Have Been You
8 Shriner's Park
9 Change
10 This War Is Over
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

On her fifth album, Melissa Etheridge mixed her primary musical influences--a lot of Bruce Springsteen, some Led Zeppelin, a little U2--with a set of directed love lyrics--a lot of "you," some "I," a little "they"--that seemed to revolve around a romantic triangle. Etheridge's emotional concerns were specifically same sex-oriented, not so much because she flaunted her lesbianism as because of the way she thought about sex and relationships. Her lyrics were full of references to exchanges of identities between lovers: "I really like you, baby / I want to be you"; "Please let me into your eyes"; and "Spend the night inside of my skin" in a song called, "I Could Have Been You." This lyrical focus was the point of distinction in Etheridge's songs, which otherwise came off as generic Americana rock, full of small-town imagery--jeans, t-shirts, tattoos, Wal-Mart--that she failed to valorize as Springsteen did. The other distinguishing characteristic, as it was in all her albums, was Etheridge's impassioned performing style--she may not have had a lot to say or much craft in saying it, but she wanted you to know "she really meant it". One is tempted to say that listeners may have had enough of that aggressive posture by this point, since, surprisingly, "Your Little Secret" was an initial commercial disappointment after the career breakthrough of the multi-million-selling "Yes I Am". (Maybe the album rocked a little too hard for the VH1 crowd that had bought "Yes I Am" after its videos entered saturation rotation. The decline of AOR radio also may have been a factor.) In fact, though, the album probably suffered due because it arrived right on the heels of the belated breakthrough of "Yes I Am", which turned into a smash in 1995 after having been released in September 1993. Island would have been wiser to withhold the followup for six months. Over the longer term, however, Etheridge's challenge would be to grow as a writer, now that incessant touring and a string of good-but-not-great albums finally had brought her to the platinum threshhold. "Your Little Secret" left the question about such growth open. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Back To Top
About This Artist
Biography

Related Artists
Allman Brothers Band
Eric Clapton
Sheryl Crow
Derek & The Dominos
4 Non Blondes
John Hiatt
Bonnie Raitt
Rod Stewart
Bruce Springsteen
Janis Joplin
Bob Dylan
Indigo Girls
Bob Dylan & Grateful Dead
Eric Clapton & B.B. King
Maria McKee


more

Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC