Reviews
Strong lyrics that compel attention...
“Toronto-based Sara Marlowe 's sound is very reminiscent of Ani Difranco and to further the comparison, she writes strong lyrics that compel attention.”
--Victor K. Heyman, Sing Out! The Folk Song Magazine
Should be required listening for any modern studies syllabus...
Sara Marlowe has been likened to Ani diFranco, Tracy Chapman and Joni Mitchell. She writes socially aware songs, protesting against war, poverty, hunger and political corruption and -- high and clear -- her voice sings her words to the world.

You can be lulled into skimming the lyrics in favour of the funk/folk/jazz flavour of the music in general, but time and again her vocals pitch into your consciousness with some telling phrase. She prints the words on the cover sleeve, and it is sobering reading -- every word valid, the message, over and over, is anti-war, highlighting the horrors of children enmeshed in battle, dying so young, whether with a gun in their hand or only because they were "born in the wrong place, the wrong time, ... the wrong skin.". Her anti-war message highlights the grinding of the political machinery, which creates its own noise to drown out the protests of the people, highlights the rare beauty of a starlit night where nobody has to hide from bombs and bullets.

Whether your political views coincide or collide with Marlowe's, she presents her arguments lyrically, coherently and intelligently. Her voice is in the same upper register as Joni Mitchell or Kate Bush, and I prefer to hear a more mellow alto tone; however, this is not really music to listen to with half an ear or fill in the background. Marlowe is in the forefront of protest, and though her voice is undoubtedly heard more in North America than in Europe, she addresses global issues and should be required listening for any modern studies syllabus. Music's power is not necessarily merely measured by volume.

--Jenny Ivor, Rambles: A Cultural Arts Magazine, August 2004
She's creating a musical answer to Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11.
If you're mad about Bush winning the election, you have a friend in Sara Marlowe. The delicate-voiced songstress sings of world injustice and damns the war against Iraq on her new cd. "Maybe" doesn't sound like an earnest protest song, but Marlowe I superior to most protest singers and crafts a jazzy, expansive backdrop for her thoughts. "Not in our Name" is the anti-war in Iraq song and it's very powerful. "The mightiest of the mighty are bombing the ones who don't stand a chance" notes Marlowe. She's creating a musical answer to Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11. "Not as They Seem" asks that we look beyond the surface of things to a sophisticated setting. "Blind" is an exotic-sounding gorgeous song with another strong lyric. It's a record to make you think rather then passively receive and as such it's great.
--Anna Maria Stjärnell , Luna Kafe, December 2004
Provides the inspiration not to give into complacency...
"Socialist, feminist, folk artist - these descriptive nouns often strike fear into the hearts of music-buyers. The image these words paint is one of being preached to by someone who is finding their way onto a disc by virtue of their politics, rather than by their talent. Happily, this is not the case with Toronto's Sara Marlowe. While the aforementioned description fits Marlowe like a glove, sh'e also a great singer-songwriter. The production on 'times like these...' is up to that of any mainstream artist. However, unlike the creators of most consumer pop, she's putting her energy into writing about relevant issues. In these uncertain times, 'times like these...' provides the inspiration not to give into complacency."
--Cindy Filipenko, Herizons Magazine, Winter 2004