Like
the Pixies before her,
Lisa Loeb had an early demo dubbed "The
Purple Tape" that circulated before she hit the big time -- and, like that Boston quartet,
Loeb's
Purple Tape was instrumental in getting her big-time exposure. Self-released as a cassette in 1992,
The Purple Tape was a collection of ten original tunes by
Loeb, all featuring no more than just her and her acoustic guitar. This is the tape that wound up in Ben Stiller's hands, which of course led to
Loeb's "Stay" being the key song in his 1994 comedy
Reality Bites, which in turn made
Loeb the first unsigned artist ever to top the Billboard charts. "Stay" is not among the ten songs on
The Purple Tape, which finally saw a CD reissue in 2008 where it was paired with an interview disc, but the songs here certainly share the sweet melodiousness and emotional vulnerability of her breakthrough hit -- and they're also simple and unadorned, lacking the big-budget productions that made
Tails and
Firecracker sometimes seem over-inflated. That's certainly not the case here. This is as simple as it gets, sounding exactly like what it is: a collection of endearingly open songs from a young coffeehouse singer who sometimes tries too had and stumbles, but that awkwardness just makes you root for her all the more. Really, of all the music
Loeb has yet made, this
Purple Tape comes the closest to delivering an album of songs similar to "Stay" -- this is intimate, ingratiating music and it's hard not to see why
Ethan Hawke and Ben Stiller got a crush on
Lisa based on this tape. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine