Rickie Lee Jones - Kicks
Label: |
The Other Side of Desire |
Genre: |
Pop/Rock |
Product No.: |
ATOSD 021
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UPC: | 644216808410 |
Availability: |
Back Ordered
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Category: |
Vinyl Record |
This item is Back Ordered and currently unavailable.
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New music from Rickie Lee Jones
Includes "Lonely People," "Bad Company" and "Quicksilver Girl"
Rickie Lee Jones is that rare musician who has transcended the singer/songwriter mantle by incorporating different radio genres from the get-go and she continues that tradition on her forthcoming album Kicks, her newest collection of songs from the great American songbook. Due out June 7, the album spans two decades (1950s-'70s) of pop, rock and jazz, presenting her unique and sophisticated interpretations of these songs.
Jones' own label, OSOD (other side of desire), will release Kicks with Thirty Tigers distributing. The past decade has seen her team up with manager Ron Stone (Nirvana, Bonnie Raitt, among others) and her team is innovating a new fund-raising campaign to promote this project. A pre order of the self-released album is available here, along with a variety of official Kicks merchandise including t-shirts, posters, totes and other items.
It is fitting that one of the American treasures of songwriters should be comfortable with this diverse collection of the great songwriters of the 20th century — she is one of them. On Kicks, she brings emotion to sleeper album tracks like "My Fathers Gun"and her tongue-in-cheek humor to songs such as "Houston." The album will be previewed by the infectious, insistent track of hope "Lonely People"; it was a Top Five Billboard hit in 1974, originally recorded by America.
Weaving the connection between '70's rock and 50's jazz was no leap for Jones. "It is all part of what I heard growing up," says Jones. "The radio played everything! 1960's AM radio was the primordial zone for our musical life today. As a kid I heard R&B, country, rock, and the most sophisticated singer-songwriters of the day forming their genre. Radio was a college education for a budding musician because these songs are all playing on my internal radio all the time, it's not a stretch for me to put them together on an LP. Really, I just love to sing."
Kicks was created entirely in New Orleans, using local musicians, mixers and studios. Produced by Rickie Lee Jones with her band-mate, vibraphonist Mike Dillion, it features 10 songs of a highly infectious nature. Check out "Nagasaki," her traditional jazz offering of tight three-part harmonies, and "Bad Company," where Jones cuts loose on electric guitar.
The album cover, by artist Peregrine Honig, is a super-hero woman in boxing gloves. Sound like anyone we know? Rickie Lee Jones, superhero, with a super weapon smile! "In times like these," Jones smiles, "a smile can be subversive. Here is Rickie Lee's musical smile."
Bad Company (Bad Company, 1974) | My Fathers Gun (Elton John, 1970) | Lonely People (America, 1974) | Houston (Sanford Clark, 1964; made famous by Dean Martin, 1965) | You're Nobody 'Til Somebody Loves You (Russ Morgan, 1944; made famous by Dean Martin, 1960/1964) | Nagasaki (Ipana Troubadours, 1928; most famous by Benny Goodman Quartet, 1952) | Mack The Knife (Louis Armstrong, 1956; made famous by Bobby Darin, 1958) | Quicksilver Girl (Steve Miller Band, 1968) | End Of The World (Skeeter Davis, 1962) | Cry (Ruth Casey, 1951; made famous by Johnnie Ray and the Four Lads, 1951) |
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