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- <text id=94TT0678>
- <title>
- May 23, 1994: Music:The Power of Two
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 23, 1994 Cosmic Crash
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/MUSIC, Page 70
- The Power of Two
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The members of the duo Indigo Girls don't always agree, but
- as their new album proves, they make beautiful music together
- </p>
- <p>By Christopher John Farley
- </p>
- <p> In a film studio in Atlanta, Amy Ray and Emily Saliers, who
- make up the folk-rock duo Indigo Girls, stand before a row of
- skeletons illuminated by flashes of light. The two are shooting
- a video of their new song Least Complicated; in another scene
- Saliers lies on her back wearing a white wedding dress and clutching
- a bouquet of red flowers. What does it all mean? Saliers, who
- wrote the song, offers a profound interpretation. "It's about
- repeating patterns in life," she says, "if you wanted to get
- the basic philosophic message. The video is an illustration
- of that." Ray's response is a bit less deep. "Well," she says,
- "to me it really doesn't have a meaning."
- </p>
- <p> The exchange is typical of these two partners, who in many ways
- are opposites. Ray is tough and outspoken and has a growling,
- devilish singing voice. Saliers is quiet and reflective, and
- her vocals are high and angelic. Ray says she's influenced by
- punk bands like the Sex Pistols; Saliers prefers Joni Mitchell.
- The two never write songs together, and for weeks at a time
- they drift apart to their separate circles of friends. But something
- connects them. The children of professional parents, both are
- 30, Atlanta natives and graduates of Emory University. They
- have known each other for 20 years, played together for 12 and
- put out five studio albums since 1989. Ray explains their alchemy
- in unromantic terms: "Me solo is too much of me," she says.
- "Emily solo is too much of Emily."
- </p>
- <p> The just released CD Swamp Ophelia is Indigo Girls' most complex
- and satisfying album. They started off performing at coffeehouses
- and on street corners, and their early songs were naked and
- direct--just the two of them, playing guitar and singing folk
- music. Swamp Ophelia is more ambitious, with waves of orchestration,
- African drums, accordions and trumpets; Saliers even plays a
- long electric-guitar solo. "I think this record is more polarized
- than our other records," says Ray. "There are more extremes
- going on. Electric and acoustic. Loud sounds and soft sounds."
- </p>
- <p> Some fans might miss the simplicity of the pair's earlier recordings.
- But their new, more elaborate songs still have fire, grace and
- melodies that leap out at the listener. Once again, they sing
- beautifully braided harmonies with the occasional hint of dissonance,
- and their lyrics as usual have an eloquent, freewheeling wordiness.
- "I'm just a mirror of a mirror of myself," Saliers declares
- on Least Complicated. On This Train Revised, Ray reshapes the
- classic song This Train into a forceful, impressionistic account
- of her visit to Washington's U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum:
- "Piss and blood in a railroad car/ 100 people gypsies queers
- and David's star."
- </p>
- <p> Indigo Girls aren't made-for-video babes. They are not about
- belly buttons or cleavage or appearing on the Late Show with
- David Letterman chewing cigars and spouting four-letter words
- to get attention. Although their CDs have sold consistently
- well--their self-titled debut album went platinum--both
- Girls harbor acid feelings about the image-conscious video age.
- "MTV has hurt music in one sense because people now judge a
- song by more than just the song," says Ray. But, she concedes,
- "in the sense of having another art form around--video--MTV is probably a good thing. If only they would be more responsible
- and not just play the same videos over and over again."
- </p>
- <p> Later this year, Ray and Saliers will appear with actress and
- comic Whoopi Goldberg in the movie Boys on the Side. Goldberg
- plays a lesbian folk singer who runs into Indigo Girls in a
- Tucson, Arizona, bar. Together, they all sing a few Indigo Girls
- songs along with a cover of Lou Reed's Walk on the Wild Side.
- Saliers and Ray enjoyed working with Goldberg ("Technically,
- her voice is only a little above average," says Ray, "but she's
- got soul and can really deliver a song"), although they disagree
- on whether more films are in their future. Says Ray: "I don't
- have the patience." Says Saliers: "I plan on writing music for
- movies."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever their differences, Saliers and Ray succeed in the magical
- process of collaboration, and they intend to stay together for
- a long time to come. "I can't imagine having separate careers,"
- says Saliers. "My greatest fear is that it'll end." Adds Ray:
- "My greatest fear is that Emily has a fear that it'll end."
- A few hours into the shoot for Least Complicated, the Girls
- are standing around in the darkened studio waiting for the next
- setup. In the lull, they begin softly to strum their guitars.
- One tune they play is Mystery, from the new CD. The last words
- to the song are:
- <list>
- We're standing at opposite poles
- Equal partners in a mystery
- </list>
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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