Bound by the Beauty

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Bound By the Beauty
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 12, 1989
Recorded1989
GenreArt Pop, Folk Pop, Soft Rock
Length42:39
LabelDuke Street Records/Reprise Records
ProducerJane Siberry and John Switzer
Jane Siberry chronology
The Walking
(1988)
Bound By the Beauty
(1989)
When I Was a Boy
(1993)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Bound By the Beauty is a 1989 album by Jane Siberry. It received better reviews than her previous album, The Walking,[citation needed] and the title track received more extensive radio airplay than Siberry had seen since "One More Colour" in 1985.[citation needed]

The track "Half Angel Half Eagle" was controversial.[citation needed] Siberry used the images of an angel and an eagle soaring over a city to depict a view of both the beauty and the ugliness of city life; the ugliness was apparent in the lyric "fucking honky nigger Jew/WASP Jap dago fag/fucking homeless preacher dyke/cabbie fucking union scab". Siberry was commenting on the prevalence of this type of offensive language on the streets of a big city.

The track "The Valley" was played during the funeral service for John Balance.[2]

"Something About Trains" also appeared (as "This Old Earth") on The Top of His Head, the soundtrack to Peter Mettler's film The Top of His Head; the song was a Genie Award nominee for Best Original Song at the 11th Genie Awards in 1990.

Mettler also took the album's cover photograph.

Track listing[edit]

All tracks written by Jane Siberry.

  1. "Bound by the Beauty" – 4:41
  2. "Something About Trains" – 3:44
  3. "Hockey" – 3:58
  4. "Everything Reminds Me of My Dog" – 4:17
  5. "The Valley" – 6:04
  6. "The Life Is the Red Wagon" – 4:12
  7. "Half Angel Half Eagle" – 3:55
  8. "La Jalouse" – 3:59
  9. "Miss Punta Blanca" – 1:38
  10. "Are We Dancing Now? (Map III)" – 6:11

Personnel[edit]

Additional personnel[edit]

Charts[edit]

Album

Year Chart Peak position Weeks on the chart
1987 RPM Top 100 Albums 80[3] 6

References[edit]

  1. ^ Allmusic review
  2. ^ Peter 'Sleazy' Christopherson (30 November 2004). "John Balance Service" (PDF). Threshold House. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 March 2009. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  3. ^ "Top Albums/CDs - Volume 50, No. 25, October 16 1989". Archived from the original on 2012-10-15. Retrieved 2010-06-13.