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Savage Garden - Affirmation (CD)

Affirmation
$1.58 - $6.99
4.7 out of 5.0 stars 157 Ratings (157 Reviews)

Album Details: Affirmation

Release Date:02/26/2003
Label:Sony
UPC:074646371121

Other Available Formats: Affirmation

User Reviews: Affirmation

  • Overall:

    This album/CD is my world

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 4, 2001 | 1 out of 1 found this Affirmation review helpful

    I have listened to this album more than 500 times and all different days and times of my life and will never get sick of it.

    Thankyou SG - you are truely inspirational

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    !

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 3, 2003

    absolutely beautiful work

Pro Reviews: Affirmation

  • All Music Guide

    Savage Garden managed to slip underneath everyone's radar and go multiplatinum with their 1997 debut. The Australian duo wasn't hip enough to warrant coverage in the music press, even after they had a series of hit singles, largely because they traded in the leastrespected rock genre: soft rock. Like any softrock group, they were a product of their times. In the early '80s, that meant adding some litecountry influences to the melodic pop base. In the late '90s, it meant adding mild danceclub beats, even on the ballads. Roxette sort of pioneered this in the late '80s, and Savage Garden really picked up the torch for this danceinflected soft rock, whether they want to admit it or not. Unfortunately, that also means that they, like Roxette, are primarily a singles act, capable of crafting a handful of good tunes on each album, along with a bunch of pleasant filler. That was the case with the multiplatinum Savage Garden, as it is with this sequel, Affirmation. Since Savage Garden was such ...a success on adultcontemporary radio, it's not a surprise that Darren Hayes and Daniel Jones have decided to lean a little heavier on the ballads this time around, to the extent that even uptempo tracks like "Affirmation" and "Hold Me," or midtempo numbers like "The Lover After Me" feel like ballads. On the whole, this isn't a bad thing, since it gives the album some coherence. (Also, "Chained to You," the hardest dance song here, feels a little forced.) Plus, Savage Garden has a knack for delivering this professional, wellcrafted melodic pop if some songs aren't as memorable as others, that's just the way the game of mainstream pop is played. There aren't any bad pieces on Affirmation (well, with the exception of the lyrically tortured "The Animal Song"), just some that aren't quite as hooky or memorable as "I Knew I Loved You" or the title track, or for those fans who like SG's piano ballads, "I Don't Know You Anymore." Like the debut, Affirmation is hardly earthshattering, but it's welldone mainstream adult pop whose best moments are ideal for radio play. Those moments may be better heard on a greatesthits collection someday, but this album is fine on its own terms; it is so wellconstructed that the filler goes down easily. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Savage Garden

Australian pop duo Savage Garden have taken the world by storm without the record company hype and career establishing game plan that is often the background to poporiented acts. Daniel Jones comes from a long line of musicians. When Daniel was ten he was already playing the keyboard and drums in bars and hotels. Darren Hayes' show business experience extended no furthe... Read more