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Encyclopedia > The Indigo Girls

The Indigo Girls are an American lesbian folk-rock duo, consisting of Amy Ray and Emily Saliers. They got their start as part of the Athens, Georgia alternative rock scene which included the The B-52's, Pylon, R.E.M., the Georgia Satellites, and Love Tractor.


The two women met as students at Laurel Ridge Elementary School in De Kalb County, Georgia just outside of Decatur, Georgia. In high school, they started performing together. Emily graduated and started attending Tulane University. A year later, Amy graduated and started at Vanderbilt University. Homesick, both returned to Georgia and transferred to Emory University. By 1985, they started performing together again, this time as the Indigo Girls. While they have both been in relationships with women, Amy and Emily have never dated each other.


Their first release in 1985 was a seven-inch single called Crazy Game; the b-side was Everybody's Waiting (for Someone to Come Home). That same year, they put out a six-track self-titled EP, and in 1987, released their first full-length album, Strange Fire, recorded at John Keane Studio in Athens, Georgia, and including Crazy Game.


The success of 10,000 Maniacs, Tracy Chapman, and Suzanne Vega encouraged Epic Records to look for other women singer-songwriters; Epic signed the duo in 1988.


Their first major-label release, also self-titled, included a new version of Land of Canaan, which was also on their 1985 EP and on Strange Fire.


In 1990, Amy founded Daemon Records (http://www.daemonrecords.com), which has signed Ellen James Society, Kristen Hall and James Hall, among others.


The second album, Nomads*Indians*Saints, went gold, but was not as successful as their first. They followed it with the live Back on the Bus, Y'all. 1992's comeback album Rites of Passage was an enormous success, as was Swamp Ophelia in 1994.


In 1995, they released a live, double-CD, 1200 Curfews, followed by Shaming of the Sun in 1997 and Come on Now Social in 1999. Shaming of the Sun debuted at number seven on the Billboard charts, driven by the duo's high profile contribution to Lilith Fair.


2000 saw the release of Retrospective, a compilation album with two new tracks, and in 2002 the Indigo Girls released Become You, a full album of new songs which gained much critical acclaim and became a fan favorite. Their latest release, and last album for the Sony Epic label, is All That We Let In, released in 2004 with an accompanying tour.


Albums

  • Strange Fire (1987, independent 11-song version)
  • Indigo Girls (1989)
  • Strange Fire (1989, major-label 10-song version)
  • Nomads*Indians*Saints (1990)
  • Back on the Bus, Y'all (1991, live)
  • Rites of Passage (1992)
  • Swamp Ophelia (1994)
  • 4.5 (1995, compilation, UK only)
  • 1200 Curfews (1995, live)
  • Shaming of the Sun (1997)
  • Come On Now Social (1999)
  • Retrospective (2000, compilation)
  • Become You (2002)
  • All That We Let In (2004)

Sound samples

External links

  • Official site (http://www.indigogirls.com/)
  • A detailed fan site (http://www.lifeblood.net/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Indigo Girls - The Boston Globe (219 words)
Indigo Girls DESPITE OUR DIFFERENCES Hollywood Twenty years into the Indigo Girls' recording career, it's easy for fans to take them for granted.
Twenty years into the Indigo Girls' recording career, it's easy for fans to take them for granted.
Indigo Girls play the Orpheum Theatre on Monday.
Indigo Girls - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1222 words)
Indigo Girls at Park West in Chicago, September 18, 2005.
The name "Indigo Girls" is not related to the term "Indigo Children", as that term was popularized a number of years after the band became famous.
Their first major-label release, also titled Indigo Girls, which charted at #22 on the album chart, included a new version of "Land of Canaan", which was also on their 1985 EP and on Strange Fire.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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