Album Of The Day: This Beautiful Mess by Sixpence None The Richer

Album Art of Sixpence None The Richer's This Beautiful Mess album - A painting that is mostly a red background with a bit darker red on the left side. To the right 3/5ths of the artwork, a rough black square is painted and inside is a very modern painting of a person with hair down to the neck on the sides. The person is all a light yellow and has black lines outlining the eyes, nose and mouth. The features are a bit out of proportion and the lines connect in unexpected ways. Above the person in a box, it has the band's name in white in two lines of a very handwritten-style font. At the bottom in a smaller, dark yellow, it has the album title.

Released 30 years ago tomorrow, this is the second album from alternative rock band Sixpence None The Richer. I did not become a fan of this band until about 5 years after this release, and I think that I like their music from 1997 on more than these early albums, but it's definitely not a bad album either. Leigh Nash's ethereal vocals mix well with the band's jangly guitars. Lyrically, This Beautiful Mess talks a lot about struggling with a relationship with God and the ideas of faith, plus I think a few songs are love songs—longing for a friend. This album and their first album have less polish and more of a garage rock feel than their later works, but it's cool to hear where this band came from before they hit it big with "Kiss Me" and other hits as a pop/rock band in the late '90s and throughout the 2000s. It's also so exciting that they have resumed touring and released an EP last year, and I've heard that they even play some of these old songs on tour. Please do a headlining gig in Minneapolis sometime!

Release Year: 1995
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