Each week, SPIN digs into the catalogs of great artists and highlights songs you might not know for our Deep Cut Friday series.
Tracy Chapman’s most famous singles appear on her 1988 self-titled debut and 1995’s New Beginning, but all of the veteran singer-songwriter’s eight albums contain great songs. 2005’s Where You Live is an unheralded gem of her catalog, her only album produced by Tchad Blake. Blake’s productions for artists like Los Lobos, Soul Coughing, and Cibo Matto often feature eclectic instrumentation and thumping percussion. And his work on Where You Live is subtle and sensitive, furnishing Chapman’s songs with lush, inventive arrangements.
The longest and quietest song on Where You Live, “3,000 Miles,” is subtle but gripping. Over nearly six minutes, Chapman describes a dangerous world in ominous terms: “Good girls walk in groups of three, fast girls walk slow on side streets / Sometimes the girls who walk alone aren’t found for days or weeks.” Textures swirl around her voice, including lap steel guitar by Joe Gore, upright bass by David Pilch, organ by Blake’s frequent collaborator Mitchell Froom, and Chapman herself on guitar, clarinet, and glockenspiel. The imagery in the lyrics gets progressively more violent, bullets flying and apples filled with razor blades, but outside of a gentle handclap rhythm by Chapman and drummer Quinn Smith, there’s no percussion on the song, and the volume never rises. The refrain “I’m 3,000 miles away” feels like a mantra or a prayer, whether the narrator has physically left her volatile surroundings or is still there, dreaming of a distant sanctuary.
The fan newsletter Tracy Chapman in Depth is going through Chapman’s catalog one track at a time, and in July a thoughtful post examined “3,000 Miles,” noting that the song was nearly the title track of Chapman’s 2005 album. That piece includes excerpts from an interview where Chapman explained that the song was inspired by growing up in Ohio, in the tense period after the state’s schools were desegregated in 1976. “It’s a part of my story and partly the story of little girls who in some way are endangered in an environment that’s not supportive. They manage to escape, maybe just in their state of minds. As a little girl, I often had to walk home from school. It was like going through a minefield,” Chapman told the U.K. newspaper The Sun in 2005.
Three more essential Tracy Chapman deep cuts:
“Behind the Wall”
Chapman sings “Behind the Wall” with no instrumental accompaniment, forcing you to focus on her lyrics, which detail law enforcement’s failure to prevent domestic violence. Chapman’s self-titled album was a major influence on Tori Amos, whose own solo debut included “Me and a Gun,” a similarly chilling a cappella song telling her story of being raped in her early 20s.
“Open Arms”
Soul music great Bobby Womack played guitar on “Open Arms,” a tender love song from 1992’s Matters of the Heart. The song was never released as a single, but Chapman performed it on The Tonight Show and featured it on her 2015 Greatest Hits collection.
“Nothing Yet”
Chapman achieves a rare feat on “Nothing Yet” from her 2000 album Telling Stories, building the song’s electric guitar and hand drum arrangement around a 5/4 time signature without calling attention to the track’s unusual rhythm, making it feel more like a simple waltz.






