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Format: CD
 Apr 2002
 Record Label: Phantom (Japan)
 Recording Type: Studio
 UPC: 766488789027 |
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Track Listing 1. Dont Know Why 2. Seven Years 3. Cold Cold Heart 4. Feelin The Same Way 5. Come Away With Me 6. Shoot The Moon 7. Turn Me On 8. Lonestar 9. I've Got To See You Again 10. Painter Song 11. One Flight Down 12. Nightingale 13. Long Day Is Over, The 14. Nearness Of You, The 15. What Am I To You - (bonus track)
Album Notes Personnel: Norah Jones (vocals, piano, Wurlitzer piano); Jesse Harris, Kevin Breit (acoustic & electric guitars); Tony Scherr (acoustic guitar, slide guitar); Adam Levy, Bill Frisell (electric guitar); Adam Rogers (guitar); Jenny Scheinman (violin); Sam Yahel (Hammond B-3 organ); Rob Burger (organ); Lee Alexander (bass); Brian Blade (drums, percussion); Dan Reiser, Kenny Wollesen (drums). Producers: Arif Mardin, Norah Jones, Jay Newland, Craig Street. Recorded at Sorcerer Sound, New York, New York and Allaire Studios, Shokan, New York. Norah Jones won the 2003 Grammy Award for Best New Artist. COME AWAY WITH ME won the 2003 Grammy Awards for Album Of The Year, Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Engineered Album (Non-Classical). "Don't Know Why" won the 2003 Grammy Awards for Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. Arif Mardin won the 2003 Grammy Award for Producer Of The Year (Non-Classical). Japanese edition adds an extra song. A direct descendant from the pedigree of one of the 20th century's virtuosos, Norah Jones might not be on such a lofty artistic level as her dad Ravi Shankar, but certainly inherited some musical intuition from him. With nary a sitar nor raga within earshot, the young newcomer sounds very much an assimilated, western, 21st century pop-jazz singer. One thing that separates her from the pack is Ms. Jones' own piano stylings--not flashy, but deftly doubling or echoing her voice--that discreetly act as the glue holding together these airy, delicate, and beautiful arrangements. But the centerpiece is certainly the 22-year-old's confident-beyond-her-years vocal delivery in addition to a precise diction and velvety tone. Shades of Nina Simone, vintage Phoebe Snow, and a less beatnik Rickie Lee Jones are evident throughout as the young siren coolly sashays through mostly new material by guitarist-songwriter Jesse Harris (formerly of Once Blue) and a few choice covers. Veteran producer Arif Mardin frames a most notable debut with a translucent touch, and appearances by jazz heroes Bill Frisell and Brian Blade gild the lily.
Industry Reviews ...Jones' album has the lope of Western swing and the flow of a good live set....Her voice is supple and precise, her touch on piano lovely... - Rating: A- Entertainment Weekly (03/08/2002)
...Jones' debut is a calming delight, a delicate acoustic dance that pulls country, blues and jazz into a gorgeous, soft-edged rootsy singer-songwriter world...Soothing and substantial. Mojo (04/01/2002)
...Ranks among the most bracing and beautiful in recent memory... JazzTimes (06/01/2002)
3.5 discs out of 5 - ...She allows a pared-down, semi-acoustic backdrop to showcase her lilting soprano....an auspicious debut... Vibe (04/01/2002)
3.5 out of 5 stars - ...Jones delivers...multigenre cross-cultural eclecticism....It is a voice containing seductive mysteries and also the most exposed human vulnerabilities... Down Beat (06/01/2002)
3.5 stars out of 5 - ...A quietly captivating triumph of torch song[s]... Rolling Stone (03/28/2002)
Ranked #10 on EW's list of 2002's Albums of the Year
Ranked #8 in Rolling Stone's list of 2002's 10 Best Debuts Rolling Stone (12/26/2002)
Ranked #74 in Mojo's 100 Modern Classics -- [S]eductive, mysterious songs, slouched jazzily around the rhythm, and slipped in a lonesome touch of twang.
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