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Life On a String

Laurie Anderson

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Album Review

2001's Life on a String is a peculiar entry in Laurie Anderson's career, in that elements of it echo her previous work without sounding much like anything she's done before. In particular, the album has ties both to 1982's Big Science (like that album, Life on a String largely consists of songs taken from a much larger work, her musical theater piece Moby Dick) and 1989's Strange Angels (it returns to the more musical side of her style, which had been largely abandoned on her two '90s releases). The sound is a new and intriguing development for Anderson; an accomplished violin player who previously had only used the instrument pretty much as a prop, Anderson fills all of these songs with front-and-center string sections that provide an entirely different texture for her usual meandering melodies. "Slip Away" is a moving song about the death of her father that's probably the most direct and emotional song Anderson has ever written. It's the clear high point of Life on a String.

Customer Reviews

Slip Away

Slip Away Is the most haunting song ever created. Amazing.

Trust the iTunes Morons...

... to mess everything up: the one song offered here is "My Compensation," not "Life on a String," but how would iTunes staff know Laurie Anderson? Some people really deserve nothing better than Devendras and Britneys.

Biography

Born: June 5, 1947 in Chicago, IL

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

After briefly entering the mainstream pop radar in 1981 with her lone hit "O Superman," Laurie Anderson enjoyed a public visibility greater than virtually any other avant-garde figure of her era. Her infrequent forays into rock aside, Anderson nevertheless remained firmly grounded within the realm of performance art, her ambitious multimedia projects encompassing not only music but also film, mime, visual projections, dance, and — most importantly — spoken and written language, the cornerstone...
Full Bio

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