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Author Topic: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album  (Read 88156 times)

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Mr. Joe

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #140 on: September 07, 2015, 07:07:38 PM »
We are pretty on top of it, but it's nice to be able to occasionally tell the Blonde Bombshell Deity that she's awesome. :wub:

That is one of my favorite Jewel lyrics; "the Blonde Bombshell Deity" :jewelsmilie: :wub:
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Mr. Joe

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #141 on: September 07, 2015, 07:40:34 PM »
I'm really amazed by all of your reviews. I can really see what true fans you all are. You hear so many things I don't hear. I'm really a shallowly (is that even a word?) listener. It is nice to read because now I hear more than I heard before.
You all know much more about Jewels history and that give an extra dimension to her music.

Thank you all for sharing. You guys  really giving me an extra perception during listening.
This is almost exactly what I'd write. Knowing what other fans with varying degrees of obsession think is extremely helpful. Different people hear different things.

Both of these boarders address my feelings & observations about this Forum, I am learning so much and filling in lots of blanks. Seeing what many of the EDA's who have been with Jewel her whole performing career is amazing to me.  :angel:

I even like Steve Poltz  now for his stories and comments in interviews, I used to just be JEALOUS of his luck and relationship with Jewel. :jewelboobies: :grumpy:
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Simon

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #142 on: September 08, 2015, 04:41:06 AM »
Not sure if this has already been covered in another thread, but did everyone else get the 'order shipped' email yesterday? Or was that just for the international orders?

Judging by the tracking info, my CD has already made its way through Texas, all the way up to Chicago, and it's now en route to London! Guessing if I'm really lucky, it may be here on Thursday at the earliest.

Matt

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #143 on: September 08, 2015, 04:45:45 AM »
^ I didn't get a shipped email and I'm in Australia but I did order with the book and my order won't ship until closer to the book release date. Did you order the book too?

Simon

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #144 on: September 08, 2015, 04:56:50 AM »
^ I didn't get a shipped email and I'm in Australia but I did order with the book and my order won't ship until closer to the book release date. Did you order the book too?

Hey Matt - no, it was just the autographed CD by itself, so that might explain it. I did think about ordering the bundle with the book too, but it's actually out here the same day as it is in the US, whereas the new album isn't being released until late October in the UK. Hope you don't have too long to wait though!

Nobody

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #145 on: September 08, 2015, 07:03:39 AM »
Google doesn't respect privacy enough in my opinion (not that they are the only one). I'm also not a big fan of social media. We get more and more option to communicate, but all these options only made people communicate worde (in my opnion)

When Jewel wrote something on her site I wanted to give a reaction, but I'm not a member of any social media so that wasn't possible. I think that's annoying :angry:

I'm thinking about Twitter, I heard that is not so populair anymore (does it mean that it will close?). But there are like 3 or 4 people I would like to follow. I quess it's not important enough for me, because I already think about it for a few years.

Javo, I like the way you think.  I hate info scrubbing Google, too.  I refuse to do anything on FB aside from family friends and work. 

Twitter doesn't bother me, because even though I have work connections, I limit everything else (family and friends)

I skipped MP3 and went for an iPod.  It is the ONLY Apple product I own or will suggest.  The compression ofthe files does not loose anything from the original recording.  Plus, if you really want to "hear" music - it HAS to be through headphones.  Good headphones.  I'm a Sony snob.  And if I really get into something, I run it through my studio board, plug in the headphones and you won't see me unless I need another drink or the bathroom. :music: ya gotta.

Mr. Joe

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #146 on: September 08, 2015, 01:20:00 PM »

I skipped MP3 and went for an iPod.  It is the ONLY Apple product I own or will suggest.  The compression ofthe files does not loose anything from the original recording.  Plus, if you really want to "hear" music - it HAS to be through headphones.  Good headphones.  I'm a Sony snob.  And if I really get into something, I run it through my studio board, plug in the headphones and you won't see me unless I need another drink or the bathroom. :music: ya gotta.

Thanks for the good synopsis of the MP3 vs. iPod. I bought my wife an MP3 about 10 years ago, she liked it but I could hear the loss of the high and low ends of the music, because of their compression methods. I definitely agree that good headphones makes all the difference, but earbuds just don't do it for me. Having a studio board would be great but not all of us are so lucky or have a career that requires that kind of equipment.  :thumbup:

BTW I miss your Avatar.   ;)
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Nobody

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #147 on: September 08, 2015, 02:34:39 PM »

Thanks for the good synopsis of the MP3 vs. iPod. I bought my wife an MP3 about 10 years ago, she liked it but I could hear the loss of the high and low ends of the music, because of their compression methods. I definitely agree that good headphones makes all the difference, but earbuds just don't do it for me. Having a studio board would be great but not all of us are so lucky or have a career that requires that kind of equipment.  :thumbup:

BTW I miss your Avatar.   ;)
[/quote]

Avatar should be back. :w

Jess, would probably say I'm an audiophile. :shrug2: maybe. I just think if you really want to experience music or sound, there is a standard.  Sony developed the technology first, so my personal opinion is Sony headphones.  If you can afford noise canceling... :music:

Everyone was going on about Beatsaudio - I have it in my new laptop, and everything through these speakers sound like tin cans. :barf:

The boards are a luxury.  You can get a small board for a few hundred bucks - but most people don't really have the need.  If you look at my Twitter pics, the small Tascam is my travel board.  Better than the Roland, that a friend has.  I could go on, but I'm probably boring everyone :yawn:



Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #148 on: September 08, 2015, 03:22:21 PM »
I have Bose noise-cancelling headphones.  They're a miracle on the airplane.  I can still hear the pilot, but I can't hear the whine of the engines - and I don't need to have the volume super high to hear my podcast/movie/album clearly. I'm sure the Sony are just as good and/or better.  Bose has a special sound their speakers put out.  I don't actually think I prefer it, to be honest.

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #149 on: September 08, 2015, 05:53:17 PM »
Our friend Darwin got an early copy!  I love the back cover!

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Nobody

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #150 on: September 08, 2015, 09:54:34 PM »
Bose are pretty awesome, in my book.  Never used their headphones, but external speakers were great.

Mr. Joe

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #151 on: September 08, 2015, 10:18:32 PM »
Avatar should be back. :w

Jess, would probably say I'm an audiophile. :shrug2: maybe. I just think if you really want to experience music or sound, there is a standard.  Sony developed the technology first, so my personal opinion is Sony headphones.  If you can afford noise canceling... :music:

Everyone was going on about Beatsaudio - I have it in my new laptop, and everything through these speakers sound like tin cans. :barf:

The boards are a luxury.  You can get a small board for a few hundred bucks - but most people don't really have the need.  If you look at my Twitter pics, the small Tascam is my travel board.  Better than the Roland, that a friend has.  I could go on, but I'm probably boring everyone :yawn:

I am an Electronics Engineer, but spent my time in Helicopter Aviation, servo systems, sensors etc... I appreciate audiophiles and love music in its full range of sound.  :music:

I like Bose as well, and Dave Clarks for voice audio.  :yes:

The Beatsaudio stuff is popular bullshit. :bs: Way over rated & overpriced but the young folks are buying the hype and Headphones.  :rolleyes:

But I don't find your opinion on this boring. Thanks again.  ;)
"Mr. Joe, of the Philadelphia Joes"

Garf

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #152 on: September 09, 2015, 02:51:58 AM »
I want my copy early! :angry:

Sandy

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #153 on: September 09, 2015, 05:24:16 AM »
You didn't even order it until 5 minutes ago, Garf!  :lolsad:

Garf

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #154 on: September 09, 2015, 05:29:46 AM »
:lol:

That's beside the point! :angry:

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #155 on: September 09, 2015, 06:45:13 AM »
You didn't even order it until 5 minutes ago, Garf!  :lolsad:

:lol: :lol: :lol:

Told.

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #156 on: September 09, 2015, 08:32:52 AM »
Jewel Returns To Her Roots with Picking Up The Pieces

This Friday, Alaskan-raised singer-songwriter and former child yodeler Jewel will release her new album Picking Up The Pieces, a raw and confessional song-cycle that is meant to bookend her multi-Platinum debut smash Pieces of You.

We caught up with Jewel recently and talked about the new album (which comes out on Sugar Hill Records), her forthcoming memoir Never Broken, and the recent success of the Americana movement.

You’re also doing a reading from your book the night you play AmericanaFest. Are the book and the album companion pieces?

Yes. Obviously, they are such different mediums that you have to do them in a way that is appropriate to each medium. My goal with the record and the book was to be incredibly raw, and very transparent and [have it] where the emotion elicits a very visceral response, so that the emotion I have in my body is the response I’m trying to put in other people’s bodies. I really tried to produce the record like the way I sing live. I’m a much better singer live than I’ve ever been in a recording, because you have an audience in front of you. When I’m in the studio in a vocal booth, it’s so sterile and I have no idea how to get that out of myself.

To get around that, we set up mics in an old-school way and mixed the record by how far I placed the drums from the mic, etc. I pushed “record” and then I pushed “stop record.” It really was a very live performance. I also recorded live at The Standard in Nashville and had fans fly in from all over the world and did a recording there, sort of like I did in the coffeeshop for Pieces Of You.

Regarding the book, I feel like a lot of people feel that they know my life. They know broad strokes. I think they’ll be pretty surprised. The [book deals with] how does a person heal in the face of so much heartbreak and so much setback? And I went about it in a very specific way. Statistically, girls like me end up with what they were raised with … I should have been addicted to drugs, I should have been knocked up by 18. So how do you avoid becoming a statistic? How do you re-nurture yourself if you can’t change nature? It’s like a scientific experiment and I’m writing about my findings and it became a career.

But the book is really about the process and revealing the truth of what happened. I never had resources so I was figuring these things out on my own and developed my own system. I’m aware of the suffering of other people, andI hope this encourages people to be architects of their own lives. You don’t need therapy, you don’t need money, you don’t need a house even.

When you’re writing so close to the bone and the subject matter is autobiographical, do you have any internal blocks that keep you from “going there,” and if so how do you to get over those?

In the book I write about the first time I was homeless. I learned so much about being able to not succumb and get myself out of that. And one of the things I did was to start writing down secrets and being really honest. Shame loves secrecy and the antithesis of that is communication and I had nothing else to lose, literally, so [I thought] I better try it. And it had a profound effect. And with some of the first songs I wrote, I got on stage at a coffeeshop in front of two surfers and just bled my heart out … I [revealed] certain embarrassing truths about myself that I thought would make me unloveable and it had a really shocking effect — it actually touched people and I felt less alone because the audience felt the same way.

Very few people are willing to tell the truth and show what a real human life is like. We try to pretty it up, especially in art, and use it as propaganda to make ourselves seem more perfect than we are to sell an image. And that’s never been me. It doesn’t make me comfortable to do that.

Was the production style you opted for on this album borne out by the intimate nature of the songs, or had  you planned on making a really stripped—down record for a while?

My goal was to make a bookend to Pieces Of You, my first album. It was that time in my life. I was going through a divorce, and it was a very holistic process as nothing in my life is untouched by another area. So I was getting back in touch with my most official self, stripping away what got added through the years that I don’t think belonged to me. I challenged myself to be as raw and as bold as I was as a 20 year old before I knew better — before I knew about the business, before I knew about genre, before I learned about radio. Learning how to forget that is really a challenge in the studio … so I knew I had to make this record live.

Originally, I went to [producer] Paul Worley and he came to me and said he was backing out, saying, “You’re the only who should make this record.” And I thought that was a total cop-out …  But he said that [any other producer] would be a filter … He said I’d end up thanking him one day … and I did thank him in my liner notes.

What is your take on the Americana movement and its recent success? Your new label Sugar Hill Records is an Americana label for the most part and you’ve been on a country label with the Big Machine imprint. Recently, it seems like there’s been a blurring of the lines between Americana and country and it’s not as dichotomized as it has been in the past.

That’s interesting, and to have done this for 20 years and watch the shift of what people call things. The music’s always been there, and there’s always been people who are very lyric-driven, let’s say. When I came out nobody knew what to call me … I found it hilarious that I made a living on pop radio … You listen to Pieces Of Me today and you think, “That’s not a pop record, that’s an Americana record,” and for a while it would have been considered a country record. So it’s been interesting but I feel like a lot of what I’ve done hasn’t changed that much … but the genres at the radio have changed a bunch.

For your book, did you use any other memoirs as a blueprint?

I never read a lot of memoirs … I read a lot as a child. I read a lot of philosophy and great fiction, like Steinbeck. I have tremendous respect for writing but I’ve never been a long-form writer. I’ve always written poems, essays, short stories. The longest thing I’d written was a 12-page essay or something like that … So tackling long form for me, especially a memoir, was really a new experience. I didn’t know how it would do, really. So I had to just dig into it and find my way through it. For a lot of the book I felt like a bad writer … But then I got really fascinated with the timing and the pacing and having recurring themes and an arc over 400 pages. [I had to learn] to be more lyrical and use a lyrical style of writing to really slow it down.

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #157 on: September 09, 2015, 08:37:06 AM »
Did Jewel really call Pieces of You "pieces of me?" :unsure:

Why do people keep writing Pieces of Me? 

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #158 on: September 09, 2015, 09:29:38 AM »
Did Jewel really call Pieces of You "pieces of me?" :unsure:

Why do people keep writing Pieces of Me?

Maybe they're all secretly in love with Ashley Simpson?  :shrug2:

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #159 on: September 09, 2015, 09:45:07 AM »
:lol:

I thought of Brittney Spears and I'm not even sure why