Skip to Main Content Skip to Left Navigation Skip to Product Information Tabs Site information and information for assistive technology users

Your Little Secret (Lyrics included with album) Products and Promotions

Target Bullseye

Site Navigation

Target.com Navigation

Christmas Delivered. Free shipping when you spend $50 on 125,000+ select items. Give Happy This Holiday. Shop Target Gift Cards.
Quick Info

Your Little Secret (Lyrics included with album)

Be the first to write a review.

The following promotions apply

    $2.99 shipping/order on Movies Music Books

Availability:

This item is out of stock.

We're sorry. This item is out of stock

Print this page (opens print dialogue)
Email a Friend

Email this Item

You must be signed in to share this item by email. Sign in now to continue.

Your email address:

The email address you provide in this form will only be used to send this one time email message

Separate multiple recipients with commas

Your message is on its way! Send another email?

Close Email Layer

Items purchased from the Music, Movies + Books category have a standard shipping fee of $2.99 per order. Items in your order purchased from other categories are subject to standard shipping charges.

See offer details. Opens in New Window

1 Disc(s)

  1. 1.

    Your Little Secret 4:19

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play Your Little Secret
  2. 2.

    I Really Like You 4:09

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play I Really Like You
  3. 3.

    Nowhere to Go 5:53

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play Nowhere to Go
  4. 4.

    An Unusual Kiss 5:21

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play An Unusual Kiss
  5. 5.

    I Want to Come Over 5:25

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play I Want to Come Over
  6. 6.

    All the Way to Heaven 4:54

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play All the Way to Heaven
  7. 7.

    I Could Have Been You 5:56

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play I Could Have Been You
  8. 8.

    Shriner's Park 5:23

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play Shriner's Park
  9. 9.

    Change 4:37

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play Change
  10. 10.

    This War Is Over 6:57

    Melissa Etheridge

    Play This War Is Over

Description

On her fifth album, Melissa Etheridge mixed her primary musical influences--a lot of Bruce Springsteen, some Led Zeppelin, a little U2--with a set of directed love lyrics--a lot of "you," some "I," a little "they"--that seemed to revolve around a romantic triangle. Etheridge's emotional concerns were specifically same ******-oriented, not so much because she flaunted her lesbianism as because of the way she thought about ****** and relationships. Her lyrics were full of references to exchanges of identities between lovers: "I really like you, baby / I want to be you"; "Please let me into your eyes"; and "Spend the night inside of my skin" in a song called, "I Could Have Been You." This lyrical focus was the point of distinction in Etheridge's songs, which otherwise came off as generic Americana rock, full of small-town imagery--jeans, t-shirts, tattoos, Wal-Mart--that she failed to valorize as Springsteen did. The other distinguishing characteristic, as it was in all her albums, was Etheridge's impassioned performing style--she may not have had a lot to say or much craft in saying it, but she wanted you to know she really meant it. One is tempted to say that listeners may have had enough of that aggressive posture by this point, since, surprisingly, Your Little Secret was an initial commercial disappointment after the career breakthrough of the multi-million-selling Yes I Am. (Maybe the album rocked a little too hard for the VH1 crowd that had bought Yes I Am after its videos entered saturation rotation. The decline of AOR radio also may have been a factor.) In fact, though, the album probably suffered due because it arrived right on the heels of the belated breakthrough of Yes I Am, which turned into a smash in 1995 after having been released in September 1993. Island would have been wiser to withhold the followup for six months. Over the longer term, however, Etheridge's challenge would be to grow as a writer, now that incessant touring and a string of good-but-not-great albums finally had brought her to the platinum threshhold. Your Little Secret left the question about such growth open. William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Details

Description

    On her fifth album, Melissa Etheridge mixed her primary musical influences--a lot of Bruce Springsteen, some Led Zeppelin, a little U2--with a set of directed love lyrics--a lot of "you," some "I," a little "they"--that seemed to revolve around a romantic triangle. Etheridge's emotional concerns were specifically same ******-oriented, not so much because she flaunted her lesbianism as because of the way she thought about ****** and relationships. Her lyrics were full of references to exchanges of identities between lovers: "I really like you, baby / I want to be you"; "Please let me into your eyes"; and "Spend the night inside of my skin" in a song called, "I Could Have Been You." This lyrical focus was the point of distinction in Etheridge's songs, which otherwise came off as generic Americana rock, full of small-town imagery--jeans, t-shirts, tattoos, Wal-Mart--that she failed to valorize as Springsteen did. The other distinguishing characteristic, as it was in all her albums, was Etheridge's impassioned performing style--she may not have had a lot to say or much craft in saying it, but she wanted you to know she really meant it. One is tempted to say that listeners may have had enough of that aggressive posture by this point, since, surprisingly, Your Little Secret was an initial commercial disappointment after the career breakthrough of the multi-million-selling Yes I Am. (Maybe the album rocked a little too hard for the VH1 crowd that had bought Yes I Am after its videos entered saturation rotation. The decline of AOR radio also may have been a factor.) In fact, though, the album probably suffered due because it arrived right on the heels of the belated breakthrough of Yes I Am, which turned into a smash in 1995 after having been released in September 1993. Island would have been wiser to withhold the followup for six months. Over the longer term, however, Etheridge's challenge would be to grow as a writer, now that incessant touring and a string of good-but-not-great albums finally had brought her to the platinum threshhold. Your Little Secret left the question about such growth open. William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Features

Additional Information

  • DPCI: 244-09-0186
  • ASIN: B002SW6MIM
  • Catalog #: 11704461
  • Item can not be gift wrapped.

Shipping & Policies

Guest Reviews

There are no reviews for this item.
Have any thoughts you'd like to share?

Be the first to write a review