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1994-05-26
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<text id=94TT0332>
<title>
Mar. 21, 1994: The Arts & Media:Music
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 74
Music
Glimmers Of Ecstasy
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Sarah McLachlan writes songs from love's ragged edges
</p>
<p>By David Thigpen
</p>
<p> Beneath the placid surfaces of Sarah McLachlan's songs runs
an emotional torrent. As her piano and lonesome guitar sketch
folk-rock tunes of elegant simplicity, McLachlan sings vivid
tales of love gone wrong, of troubled souls grappling with infatuation,
rejection and other extreme conditions of the heart. On Circle,
a cut from her gorgeous new album Fumbling Towards Ecstasy,
McLachlan captures the fractured hopes of a love affair headed
south: "What kind of love is this that keeps me hanging on/
Despite everything it's doing to me?" In Possession she sings
of a love that has crossed into obsession: "My body aches to
breathe your breath/ Your words keep me alive/ And I would be
the one to hold you down/ Kiss you so hard, I'll take your breath
away." Far from indulging in simple emotional bloodletting,
McLachlan creates exquisitely poised songs that resist anger
or pathos.
</p>
<p> Growing up in Halifax, Nova Scotia, McLachlan was a shy, awkward
child who never fell in with the crowd. By her teens, accomplished
on guitar and piano, she would kill time on long, frozen winter
nights writing songs. She recorded her first album, Touch, at
19, drawing rave comparisons to another Canadian songwriter,
Joni Mitchell. But McLachlan's background gives only partial
clues to her emotion-laden style. "I write in an instinctual
way that can apply to anyone who's fallen in or out of love
or felt lost and hopeless," she says.
</p>
<p> Now 25, McLachlan cuts a refreshingly lyrical path against the
rage pervading society by suggesting that the answers to life's
emotional earthquakes can come through perseverance and compassion.
"It's a long way down," she sings on Ice Cream, reaching out
to a brokenhearted lover. At such moments, McLachlan holds out
hope for the desperately troubled. "To work through this stuff
and come out on the other side," she says. "That's the ecstasy."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>