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| CD - Bonus Tracks | $14.99 |
| CD - Special Edition | $16.49 |
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If Donny Hathaway and Roberta Flack had created a musical love child, she would sound something like vocalist and guitarist India Arie. On her breathtaking, poetic debut, Acoustic Soul, the ethereal Arie not only sings with the grace and passion of those aforementioned soul pioneers (most noticeably on the yearning ballad "Ready for Love"), but on two unplugged interludes she sings the names of her music idols, including Hathaway, Sam Cooke, Marvin Gaye, Bessie Smith, Karen Carpenter, and Sarah Vaughan. Like her thoughtful singer-songwriter contemporaries Me'Shell NdegéOcello, Alana Davis, and Dionne Farris, Arie practices what she preaches. In the self-affirming first single, "Video," Arie admits that she's "not the average girl from your video," but she doesn't seem to care. Instead, the Denver native boasts, "I know my creator didn't make no mistake on me/My feet, my thighs, my lips, my eyes/I'm lovin' what I see." That same thread of unconditional self-love runs through feel-good songs such as the lush "Brown Skin," on which the dreadlocked singer praises the beauty of her own and her lover's dark skin ("Brown skin...I can't tell where yours begins or where mine ends"), and the optimistic, vibes-and kick-drum-fueled "Strength, Courage & Wisdom" ("It's time to step out on faith/It's time to show my face"). With the emergence of empowering artists such as Arie, Jill Scott, and Erykah Badu, it appears that there's a sisterhood of female soulsters willing to step outside the music industry's conventional box to be heard. As Sam Cooke sang decades ago, "a change gon' come" -- and it's about time. Tracy E. Hopkins, Barnes & Noble