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| | Annie Lennox: Bare - PopMatters Music Review |
 | | Lennox has never been afraid to express her own rage, to express it and to mock it, and in "Bitter Pill", after warning "Don't you ever call me. I don't wanna see your face", some of her line readings seem self-mocking. |
 | | Lennox rages through "Erased", a vow to forget a relationship with the knowledge that life goes on, but the intensity one hears and the insistence on forgetting convey how important the relationship has been. |
 | | Annie Lennox's early work was good, but her last two albums with Eurthymics, Savage (1987) and We Too Are One (1989), reputedly the least popular of their recordings, were also among the most mature, most diverse, and the best, just as Lennox's solo albums have been uniquely honest, strong, and emotionally vivid. |
| www.popmatters.com /music/reviews/l/lennoxannie-bare.shtml (2265 words) |
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