Breaking Silence

Breaking Silence
Studio album by Janis Ian
Released 1993 (1993)
Label Morgan Creek Records/Columbia
Producer Janis Ian
Jeff Balding
Janis Ian chronology
Uncle Wonderful
(1983)Uncle Wonderful1983
Breaking Silence
(1993)
Simon Renshaw Presents: Janis Ian Shares Your Pain
(1995)Simon Renshaw Presents: Janis Ian Shares Your Pain1995

Breaking Silence is an album by the singer-songwriter Janis Ian, released in 1993 on Morgan Creek Records in the US and Europe and on Columbia in Canada and the Netherlands.[1]

History

Although Ian was outed as a lesbian in 1976 by the Village Voice,[2] her sexuality was largely ignored until the release of Breaking Silence, when Ian herself brought it to the forefront because of her concern with suicide rates among gay and lesbian teenagers.[3]

Decades previous, Ian met Pat Snyder and, after significant financial and health setbacks, they purchased a house together by 1991. They took on a second mortgage to fund the album, as major record labels were no longer interested in Ian's work. "I thought I was only going to get one more chance to record, so I wanted to make it count," Ian said.[1] It was her first album in 12 years.[3]

The album contains controversial songs such as "His Hands" (about spousal abuse) and "Tattoo" (about the Holocaust). The title track, "Breaking Silence", is about incest.[1] The album was nominated for a Grammy, making it Ian's seventh nomination.[1]

Track listing

  1. All Roads To The River—3:05
  2. Ride Me Like A Wave—3:40
  3. Tattoo—4:20
  4. Guess You Had To Be There—4:07
  5. What About The Love—4:58
  6. His Hands—5:17
  7. Walking On Sacred Ground—3:26
  8. This Train Still Runs—4:03
  9. Through The Years—3:40
  10. This House—5:05
  11. Some People's Lives—3:52
  12. Breaking Silence—3:09

Personnel

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Ian, Janis. "Breaking Silence". Janis Ian. Retrieved 28 May 2016.
  2. Kinser, Jeremy (23 August 2012). "Coming Out in Print". Advocate.com. Retrieved 28 May 2016.
  3. 1 2 "Owen Keehnen: Interviews". Queerculturalcenter.org. Retrieved 2016-05-28.
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