"In My Waking Dream"
Album Release Party 2013 Shelter Bay, La Conner, Washington |
Amy's music is also available directly from her. Check out the CD's described below and enjoy an autographed CD!
Experience her healing and uplifting voice anytime, anywhere. Enjoy one of Amy's award winning songs "Gandhi and King: Becoming the Dream"
on her CD "In My Waking Dream" This song was endorsed by Arun Gandhi, son of Mahatma Gandhi 💜👳🏻 Enjoy 🎵🙏 Go to Contact Page and leave email and name and she will send!! |
Amy's 1st CD, Beneath the Surface, 1992
is not available at this time.
It will be released in an updated version soon.
BENEATH THE SURFACE 1992
"Dirty Linen" Review
~ B e n e a t h t h e s u r f a c e ~

Dirty Linen Review
{Kamaya Productions 007 (1992)}
Amy Hindman takes a chance with her debut release, Beneath the Surface, revealing, as she does, intense and personal hurts while asserting the alchemical process of awareness. Feminist by example, songs like "Solo" - with Suzi Schadle's bass flute playing around Hindman's clear vocal - - offer freedom through enticing images of the Pacific Northwest. "Prayer for My Child," an apologetic and belated goodbye, is crisply sad, uplifted with juxtapositions of natural beauty and human loss. Grieving is done, and with an ease grappled from serious private soul-searching, in "The Gift . . . for Karleen." "Deep Therapy" emerges as if from a diary selection: unrelentingly honest, purifyingly true. That freedom, arrived at by working through pain, is the ultimate gift of this deceptively plain and simple cassette. (LP)
{Kamaya Productions 007 (1992)}
Amy Hindman takes a chance with her debut release, Beneath the Surface, revealing, as she does, intense and personal hurts while asserting the alchemical process of awareness. Feminist by example, songs like "Solo" - with Suzi Schadle's bass flute playing around Hindman's clear vocal - - offer freedom through enticing images of the Pacific Northwest. "Prayer for My Child," an apologetic and belated goodbye, is crisply sad, uplifted with juxtapositions of natural beauty and human loss. Grieving is done, and with an ease grappled from serious private soul-searching, in "The Gift . . . for Karleen." "Deep Therapy" emerges as if from a diary selection: unrelentingly honest, purifyingly true. That freedom, arrived at by working through pain, is the ultimate gift of this deceptively plain and simple cassette. (LP)