Norah
Jones's Biography :
When Norah Jones released
her debut disc, Come Away With Me, on Blue Note Records in
February 2002, the then 22-year-old singer had no idea the
album would be a best-seller. In fact, she kept her expectations
low. "I like having low expectations, 'cause then if
something turns out well, you're always surprised in a good
way," says Jones at Sear Studios in New York while doing
the final mixes on her new album.
As it turns out, Jones
enjoyed an abundance of surprises. A runaway hit, Come Away
With Me became a multi-Grammy winner, multi-platinum seller
and opened the door for her to perform around the world with
her band. Her producer Arif Mardin surmises that the CD was
a tipping-point album. "People were ready for heartfelt
music," he says, while working with Jones on the mixes.
"Norah is in the vanguard of another kind of pop music
listeners have been yearning for. We're now in a period of
time where listeners are looking for real artists."
Norah Jones returns to
the heartfelt on the eagerly anticipated Feels Like Home,
her new Blue Note album. The collection features the singer-songwriter-pianist
once again teaming with Mardin, engineer Jay Newland and her
close-knit touring band. Jones has penned several songs-by
herself and with songwriting partner Lee Alexander-gathered
other songs from her band mates and friends, and delivers
three covers: Townes Van Zandt's "Be Here To Love Me,"
Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan's "The Long Way Home"
and Duke Ellington's "Melancholia," which she wrote
lyrics to and retitled "Don't Miss You At All."
The CD was recorded in
two sessions. Last April Jones and her band convened in an
upstate New York studio and worked on new songs, including
some they had been performing in concert. After an extensive
U.S. summer tour, everyone reassembled in New York City to
revisit the tracks already recorded, work on different arrangements
that had been road-tested and add new numbers to the mix.
On the disc, Jones plays
piano, Wurlitzer electric piano and pump organ and features
her core group, comprising guitarists Adam Levy and Kevin
Breit, background vocalist Daru Oda, bassist Lee Alexander
and drummer Andrew Borger. She also brings aboard a select
short-list of guests, including Dolly Parton, drummer Levon
Helm and organist/accordionist Garth Hudson of The Band, long-time
friends guitarists Jesse Harris and Tony Scherr, drummer Brian
Blade and keyboardist Rob Burger.
Mardin oversaw the production
and again watched Jones work her magic. "These new songs
have been a wonderful journey. This album is not about synthesizers
or computers. It's about Norah being au natural. She doesn't
need pitch correction. She's always in tune, and her voice
always touches you. Millions of people around the world feel
the same way."
Like the first album,
Jones imbues the music on Feels Like Home with country, pop
and jazz colors. Unlike the quiet, balladic mood of Come Away
With Me (which she once characterized as "mellow"),
Jones varied the tempo on the new album to reflect the evolution
of her live performances. "I'm very proud of my first
record, but I was ready for something a little different,"
she says, then jokes, "This time it's not quite as mellow.
But it's still pretty low-key."
The first single of the
CD, "Sunrise," has a bright, buoyant feel and is
a tune co-written by Jones and Alexander. "We've been
writing a lot together the last two years," she says.
"We finally figured how we work best."
The Borger-Oda tune "Above
Ground" grooves with funky tinges and chills with gorgeous
harmony vocals. "We played this song for the first time
in April, and the rehearsal ended up being the take. I'm glad
Jay taped it!"
Levy's contribution,
"In the Morning," features Jones pushing beyond
the mellow zone with a bluesy wail and a Wurlitzer solo. "Well,
that's rockin' out for us," she says with a smile. "Actually,
that was one of the first new songs that we played when we
started."
Alexander's hoedown,
"Creepin' In," another Jones and Co. upbeat in-concert
highlight, almost didn't make it onto the record because the
group wasn't sure it would mesh with the rest of the material.
But after Jones was invited to Nashville to sing with Dolly
Parton at the 2003 Country Music Awards, she decided to ask
the country singer for a favor: to duet with her on the bluegrass-spiced
number. "We asked Dolly if she'd like to sing on the
album and she said yes," says Jones. "We were so
nervous when she came into the studio. She came in and sang
her butt off. She sounds great, and Kevin has a great guitar
solo on it."
Equally exciting for
Jones was the participation of Helm and Hudson. A big fan
of both, she brought the pair in to help her finally nail
"What Am I to You," her tune that had been recorded
previously. "We've recorded that song five times but
never quite got it." On a whim, she called Tony Scherr
to take a stab at it when her other two guitarists were out
of town. Then she brought in Helm and Hudson. "It was
real special. I have a lot of respect for both of them, and
they're so nice."
There are several other
band originals in the collection, including two slow-tempo
beauties with Harris guesting on guitar: Jones and Alexander's
melancholic "Carnival Town" and Alexander and singer-songwriter
friend Richard Julian's lyrical "Those Sweet Words."
Jones and Alexander also collaborated on another live favorite,
the gently flowing "Toes"; Breit contributed the
character sketch "Humble Me," and Jones co-wrote
"The Prettiest Thing" with Alexander and Julian.
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