Album Review: Rachael Sage Combats Spiritual “Myopia”
Rachael Sage’s Myopia may be named after “near-sightedness”, but the singer-songwriters is not referring to how your eyes see but how your soul does. Tackling the mass apathy that has consistently plagued humanity, Sage builds an album that embodies her roaring voice as an activist. For her, if humanity continues to sleep on its issues, one day, it will find that it can no longer get up.
I reviewed Sage in concert, and found her to be a sparkling, witty, and kind person: all qualities that peruse this album. Yet, her record shows that her compassion is a firm, strong foundation. Don’t let her colorful garbs and quickness to shed a smile fool you into believing that she will not combat “This Darkness”, bring forth the “Daylight”, and or a plant a “Sympathy Seed” in cold hearts. Seeing Sage perform, I know that indifference enrages as much as perplexes her. She is so in tune with her humanity, which is why her guitar melodies feel infused with both sadness and hope. She twinkles and tears her chords so as to say, “ Humanity will get better because it just has to!”
There is a maternal effect to Sage’s voice that makes her notes feel warm, enlightening, and unyielding. Such qualities allow her messages of empathy and also vibrancy to come forward. From “Snowed In” to “Spark”, her voice pins, needles, and threads her lyrics with a lightness that proclaims; if you have fun then, maybe, you will want the world to join. It is unique in point because no one can say that cruel men know true joy because such a thing is shared. Thus, share Rachael Sage And Buy Myopia By Clicking Here.