Come Out of Your
Mine was recorded in Yale University’s Dwight Chapel,
very late one night in the fall of 1997. Mia was living in
New York City at that time. The songs reflect her growing
body of experience and her obsession with alliteration, wordplay
and puns. “Independence Day” chronicles an outing
to Boston to attend a friend’s wedding. “Strawberries”
and “Jackals” recount vivid dreams and their effect
on reality. Hijikata was the founder of the modern Japanese
dance form Butoh; Mia was greatly influenced by his ideas
and would soon be on her way to Japan to study dance. “Your
Room” and “Sunday Afternoon” are mementos
of a great love, while “Age,”sung a cappella,
is an old-fashioned pastoral poem with a naughty twist. The
last song, “The River & the Ocean,” was written
near Washington Square Park; it was a hot, sweaty summer.
The 16-page booklet of highly-detailed pen-and-ink song illustrations
is a surreal and fanciful work of great imagination.

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