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I'm Rickie Lee Jones, bitch! I'm just now getting into her music. What do y'all think? I think she's groovy.
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I am very ashamed to say I'm Rickie Lee Jones Challenged But then again, I might actually know a song or songs and just don't know it. I need to check her out 2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740 | |
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SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said: I am very ashamed to say I'm Rickie Lee Jones Challenged
I was too until recently. | |
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...
I'm a fan, mostly of her early work, though I also loved her 2003 album, "Evening Of My Best Day"... But my all-time favorite is "Pirates"(1981), especially the tracks, "Traces of The Western Slopes", "Living It Up", and "We Belong Together" I also dig her debut(1979) album, and The Magazine(1984), and Flying Cowboys.... and, from the "Who Asked You" dept. , My favorite RLJ tracks: Living It Up Company Traces Of The Western Slopes YoungBlood Woody and Dutch On The Slow Train To Peking So Long We Belong Together Chuck E's In Love The Real End On Saturday Afternoons In 1963 Satellites Ugly Man Second Chance Night Train Lucky Guy The Horses The Magazine Pirates Gravity Last Chance Texaco ... [Edited 3/7/08 13:31pm] " I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout | |
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I saw her album (on LP) and almost bought it just to give it a spin (it was maybe $5). Maybe if I see it there again, I'll pick it up. | |
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never heard of her | |
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paligap said: ...
I also loved her 2003 album, "Evening Of My Best Day"... I need to check that one out. I've read great things. Her most recent album "The Sermon On Exposition Boulevard" got almost universal acclaim and some of the best reviews of her career. It's the one I'll be getting next. Check this out... Review by Thom Jurek
Consulting theologians and Bible scholars during the 1990s, photographer, writer, graphic artist, and everyday mystic Lee Cantelon (aka Pennyhead) assembled a small book presenting the words of Jesus Christ (just Jesus' words, not the stuff surrounding them) in a fitting translation called The Words. He did it for the purpose of presenting those words to people who were not "religious" — people who were put off by organized religion or even offended by it. In 2005, using artist Marc Chiat's studio (on Exposition Boulevard) as the recording space, he invited a number of musicians to begin assembling backing tracks for a spoken word rendition of his book (Mike Watt was just one participant, reading "The Harvest" over the music). Rickie Lee Jones was invited to participate in the summer of 2006, and in a matter of moments she changed the entire nature of the project. Jones claimed she could not read the words with any authority, but asked if she could sing them. She was left alone in a room with a microphone and, without the text, completely improvised the words from her heart. There were two tracks taken from those sessions, the opening cut, "Nobody Knows My Name," and "Where I Like It Best." Those two cuts appear here unchanged from the original recordings made on Exposition Boulevard, as are two others ("I Was There," "Donkey Ride") recorded later at Sunset Sound — first takes, no alterations. The rest were done using the same basic principle, with The Words as the inspiration. The end result is easily the most arresting recording of Rickie Lee Jones' labyrinthine career. The songs Jones cut at Exposition Boulevard sat on a shelf for a while, until she contacted producer Rob Schnapf and asked him to recruit the same musicians to go further. The sheer organic nature of some of these recordings is more akin to what indie rock musicians would try to pull off because of budgetary constraints. Understandable, but the end result here is something so completely unraveled, moving, and beautiful, something so unexpected — even from a latter-day Beat chanteuse like Jones — that it can only be called art. Certainly many of these songs feel raw, but they are supposed to; it's not artifice, it's inspiration. Check the opener, "Nobody Knows My Name," where a three-chord Velvet Underground-styled vamp gives way to Jones as she channels Jesus walking through the streets of history and particularly Los Angeles, as himself, as disguised as a suicide, as a player, as every woman and man, and comes out truly anonymous. The pain in her voice when she gets to the refrains is the wail we only get from her in live performances. This is likewise the case in "Gethsemane," a tad — not much — more polished, and once more with Jones as Jesus, here relating the agonizing experience of the beginning of Jesus' moment of trial before he has been handed over to be put to death. In her voice she says, "I'd like to just sleep awhile" in near whimsy, but the agony is there. In "Lamp of the Body," with Peter Atanasoff, Bernie Larsen, and Joey Maramba in a combined Eastern and Western lilting rock groove as intruding sounds enter the mix, Jones sings as Jesus with the lamp of the body being the eye: "See the darkness shine/How great is the dark/See the dark/And are there not 12 hours of daylight/But if you walk by night/You will fall...." This gives way to the nearly pop-sounding "It Hurts." This track simply has to be heard to be believed. It rocks, it rolls, it stings and stabs, and it breezily calls forth all the complex emotions of being human and divine. It's angry and tender, uncertain and immediate.Is this "Christian" music? Not in any CCM sense. It's punk rock, it's shimmering heat L.A back-court street rock, it's back-porch rock, garage rock, and just plain rock. But Jones is trying in her way to offer proof of the inspiration she found in Cantelon's book, and to relate the humanity of the one called Jesus Christ as an actual person, who is in and around every one of us, no matter how broken, poor, angry, violent, deceitful, happy, or wealthy. There is no new agey overtone to this set. And besides all that, it rocks, it rolls, it swings and strolls. This is pop music from the jump, but it's pop that would never, ever be considered for play anywhere except on the home jukebox. And there is no Christian-ese; probably some fundamentalists who want their God held above street level, up in the heavens, will find this offensive, but that's too damn bad. The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard feels raw and immediate, and most of all, it rings true. The music here was made because Jones had to make it. There isn't any calculation here and New West should be applauded for putting this baby on the market. The songs on this record feel like they come from the street in order to go back there, not to witness or testify, but simply to be there as a witness to life in the process of spending itself. The Jesus of this record isn't a Christian; he warns people (as he did in the Bible) to be wary of the religious. It's very much a Los Angeles album, but it translates in heart to Chicago, Detroit, New York City, Miami, Baltimore, or anywhere else. On "Elvis Cadillac," the hallucinatory Elvis, or perhaps Jesus, is writing a letter to his father about all that has transpired and how he wishes he could just sing his song; it's strange and winding and faltering and beautiful. On the closing track, "I Was There," a nearly eight-and-a-half-minute tome is performed completely solo on guitars and whispering keyboards in a circular chord set that wouldn't have been out of place on Van Morrison's Astral Weeks. She is speaking to Christ in reverie, in a love song of a different kind, but a true love song nonetheless: "Most of all I loved your hands/I loved them so much it hurt/And all the bartenders knew your name/And all the pimps knew your car...and we were blessed/Yes we are...and I was there where Jesus walked." What's amazing is how easy to believe she is. She is speaking in her own kind of tongues here, and we are all the richer for it. This is the least polished and crafted recording of Rickie Lee Jones' career, and it stands alone in her catalog. It's a ragged kid in ripped blue jeans singing her heart out to you without drama or falsity. How can it be anything less than a masterpiece? | |
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She's not Tori or Kate or Joni...
What's her Bedtime Stories album? | |
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MikeMatronik said: She's not Tori or Kate or Joni...
No, but she's the same calibre of artist. What's her Bedtime Stories album?
Umm. As much as I'd love to answer that, I can't say I'm really qualified to do so. | |
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She is an American original. her music is deep and emotional and her voice is one of a kind. I was very lucky to see her live last year and it was electric. She is one of those amazing artists that are even better live. "We belong Together" makes me cry like a baby every time. | |
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Funkateer said: She is an American original. her music is deep and emotional and her voice is one of a kind. I was very lucky to see her live last year and it was electric. She is one of those amazing artists that are even better live. "We belong Together" makes me cry like a baby every time.
I would love to see her live. But she's cancelled her U.S. dates other than a brief residency that's winding down in California. I think she's doing the European festival circuit this spring. Hopefully she returns here soon. | |
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GangstaFam said: MikeMatronik said: She's not Tori or Kate or Joni...
No, but she's the same calibre of artist. What's her Bedtime Stories album?
Umm. As much as I'd love to answer that, I can't say I'm really qualified to do so. just kidding with you! u know I love ya! Our love for Madonna and Tori has bonded us | |
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Rickie Lee Jones' catalogue is a treasure trove.
My favorites are: Coolsville Skeletons Night Train Ghost Train Easy Money Stewart's Coat Mink Coat At The Bus Stop We Belong Together The Horses Last Chance Texaco Just My Baby Living It Up Satellites Pink Flamingos Rodeo Girl It Takes You There Chuck E's In Love Pirates (So Long Lonely Avenue) The Real End Atlas' Marker Company Woody and Dutch on the Slow Train to Peking Beat Angels | |
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I'm a die-hard Rickie fan. She's so unique and good. My fave Rickie albums are last year's SERMON ON EXPOSITION BOULEVARD and her wonderful 1997 alternative/trip hop CD - GHOSTYHEAD.
SERMON ON EXPOSITION BOULEVARD (2007) GHOSTYHEAD (1997) [Edited 3/7/08 14:00pm] | |
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Love her. Have loved her since I was a child...
start with the songs "Chuckie's in Love", after that "Company"...so much more, but I am too tired to think about good song suggestions | |
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Wowugotit said: wonderful 1997 alternative/trip hop CD - GHOSTYHEAD.
Okay, now I'm really intrigued. | |
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MikeMatronik said: just kidding with you!
u know I love ya! Our love for Madonna and Tori has bonded us Ya know, I miss Tori more than anyone else when she's away. | |
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GangstaFam said: MikeMatronik said: just kidding with you!
u know I love ya! Our love for Madonna and Tori has bonded us Ya know, I miss Tori more than anyone else when she's away. The American Doll Pose era was so powerful | |
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SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said: I am very ashamed to say I'm Rickie Lee Jones Challenged But then again, I might actually know a song or songs and just don't know it. I need to check her out
One of my favorite cuts from her back in the day was Chuckie is in Love. Its kind of bluesy. [Edited 3/7/08 18:27pm] | |
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GangstaFam said: I'm just now getting into her music. What do y'all think? I think she's groovy.
Followed her through those first 3 Warner albums... ...and then she kind of lost me. I'll have to check out some of the more recent material. She and Tom Waits made the perfect looking... ...homeless/street people couple. tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431 "Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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theAudience said: GangstaFam said: I'm just now getting into her music. What do y'all think? I think she's groovy.
Followed her through those first 3 Warner albums... ...and then she kind of lost me. I'll have to check out some of the more recent material. She and Tom Waits made the perfect looking... ...homeless/street people couple. tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431 Agreed. She did hit a roadblock. I haven't heard any of her recent stuff. I didn't know she still recorded. I thought more or less she was just gigging in small venues and that's it. | |
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Ottensen said: Love her. Have loved her since I was a child...
start with the songs "Chuckie's in Love", after that "Company"...so much more, but I am too tired to think about good song suggestions From the link GangstaFam mentioned, a bit of "Chuck E." trivia... Rickie Lee Jones (late 1979): "I didn't have any real friends back then [1977] and I didn't have any place to live. I didn't have any money. So I'd go sit over at the Tropicana motel and rest. A guy I know, Ivan Ulz, was performing at the Troubadour one evening and he asked me to come over and sing a couple of songs. This fella Chuck E. was working back in the kitchen of the club, and that's how I met him. I sang 'Easy Money' and a song Ivan wrote, called 'You almost look Chinese.' A little later on, Tom saw me there, and he and Chuck E. and I started hanging out together. That was a high point in my life. Before that, I guess I had learned not to depend on anybody else, 'cause once people start affecting what happens to you, it's trouble. But I think Chuck E. and Tom have been my family for a while now. It seems sometimes like we're real romantic dreamers who got stuck in the wrong time zone. So we cling, we love each other very much." http://www.tomwaitslibrar...adour.html ...Tom Waits puts the L.A. choke-hold on Chuck E. Weiss. tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431 "Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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MsLegs said: theAudience said: Followed her through those first 3 Warner albums... ...and then she kind of lost me. I'll have to check out some of the more recent material. She and Tom Waits made the perfect looking... ...homeless/street people couple. tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431 Agreed. She did hit a roadblock. I haven't heard any of her recent stuff. I didn't know she still recorded. I thought more or less she was just gigging in small venues and that's it. She's made some waves since her early days. Flying Cowboys (1989) Naked Songs (1995) The Evening of My Best Day (2003) and especially The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard (2007) have all gotten fantastic receptions. | |
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I LOVE HER!!! Next to Joni, she's my absoultute fav!! Very similar in style, but rickie has an edge to her that just perfect!
Please, Please, Please....if you don't know about R.L.J, go find her CD's! You'll fall in love her music instantly!! | |
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tricky2 said: I LOVE HER!!! Next to Joni, she's my absoultute fav!! Very similar in style, but rickie has an edge to her that just perfect!
Please, Please, Please....if you don't know about R.L.J, go find her CD's! You'll fall in love her music instantly!! Her CD's are getting rather hard to find. :hmrph: | |
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Who you callin' bitch, bitch? | |
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...
a bit of RLJ trivia for The Steely Dan fans: Donald Fagen played keyboards on the title track to "Pirates", and Walter Becker produced Rickie's album, "Flying Cowboys"... ... " I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout | |
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Always flippin past her Warner era records when I'm diggin'. Her big hit is that one that funkpill posted right? ^ | |
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