Come On Now Social
| Come On Now Social | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | September 28, 1999 | |||
| Recorded | 1999 | |||
| Genre | Folk rock | |||
| Length | 57:20 | |||
| Label | Epic | |||
| Producer | John Reynolds | |||
| Indigo Girls chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Come On Now Social | ||||
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| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating | 
| Allmusic | |
| The A.V. Club | (mixed)[2] | 
| Entertainment Weekly | B+[3] | 
| The Music Box | |
| People | (favorable)[5] | 
| Q | |
| Rolling Stone | |
Come On Now Social is the seventh studio album by the Indigo Girls, released in 1999.
Track listing
- "Go" (Amy Ray) – 4:05
 - "Soon to Be Nothing" (Emily Saliers) – 4:29
 - "Gone Again" (Ray) – 3:27
 - "Trouble" (Saliers) – 4:51
 - "Sister" (Ray) – 4:58
 - "Peace Tonight" (Saliers) – 4:11
 - "Ozilline" (Ray) – 4:43
 - "We Are Together" (Saliers) – 3:25
 - "Cold Beer and Remote Control" (Saliers) – 4:17
 - "Compromise" (Ray) – 2:50
 - "Andy" (Saliers) – 4:01
 - "Faye Tucker" (Ray) – 12:01
- Includes a brief outtake of "Sister" and the song "Philosophy of Loss" (Saliers) as hidden tracks.
 
 
The song "Go" has a spoken passage inspired by Meridel Le Sueur's "I Was Marching".[8]
Notes
- ^ Allmusic review
 - ^ The A.V. Club review
 - ^ Entertainment Weekly review
 - ^ The Music Box review
 - ^ People review
 - ^ Album reviews at CD Universe
 - ^ Rolling Stone review
 - ^ "Meridel LeSueur, Kansas author". Map of Kansas Literature. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
 
