Album Results

Voyage To India 

India.Arie

Voyage To India

Genre: ROCK/POP
Label: Motown Records
Release date: 2002

Album Reviews

Despite an excellent debut, India.Arie still had much to prove with her second record. Several of her neo-soul compatriots, from D'Angelo to Erykah Badu to Macy Gray, had faltered with sophomore albums, and it appeared she may have already said everything she had to say on Acoustic Soul. That anticipation, and trepidation, is exactly what makes Voyage to India such a beautiful surprise; it's a record that easily equals her debut, boasting better vocal performances but also better songwriting and accompanying production. As on her debut, there is a marked balance of organic and artificial: an acoustic guitar paces many tracks, though the edges are shorn off for a digital feel; the beats are often sampled, but there are still plenty of handclaps and fingersnaps; and the arrangements are simple yet obviously very polished. The improvement in her songwriting is most obvious from the first three tracks (after the short intro). The themes driving "Little Things" (keeping it simple), "Talk to Her" (the importance of honesty, warmth, and communication in relationships), and "Slow Down" (taking life one day at a time) certainly have been covered already, many times even, but India.Arie writes with a fresh perspective that makes it sound as though she's the first to broach the topic. And, finally, her delivery is the best of any neo-soul vocalist, barring only the incomparable Jill Scott, alternately earnest and playful and sexy and questing. It all adds up to one of the most glowing comebacks of the year (if she ever left), an important record whose stamp -- the Motown logo -- isn't the only thing it has in similarity with a classic LP by Marvin Gaye or Stevie Wonder. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide

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Track Listing


1.  Growth more
2.  Little Things more
3.  Talk To Her more
4.  Slow Down more
5.  The Truth more
6.  Beautiful Surprise more
7.  Healing more
8.  Get It Together more
9.  Headed In The Right Direction more
10.  Can I Walk With You more
11.  The One more
12.  Complicated Melody more
13.  Gratitude more
14.  Good Man more
15.  God Is Real more
16.  Interested: Bonus Track more
Featured Review
Colours Move Colours Move
F**k Buttons
More fine experiments in drone and noise from Bristol's finest leftfield duo; Fuck Buttons crown a triumphant year worldwide with another single taken off their excellent debut "Street Horrrsing", a strong candidate to feature among the year's best records in the most influential media. "Colours move" is a powerful blend of tribal drums, guitar fuzz, human screams and animal noises. But the real surprise in the 12" is the appearance of electronic icon Andrew Weatherall, reworking their former single "Sweet Love For Planet Earth." The man behind "Screamadelica" reshapes "Planet Earth" as an hypnotic, dub-driven track; the closest to the dancefloor Fuck Buttons have been to date and one of the most interesting mixes we have heard for ages.
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