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Author Topic: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album  (Read 88052 times)

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Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #180 on: September 10, 2015, 04:17:00 PM »
Yeah, none of it was going to ship until the book was released and ready, which is/was the 15th. :)


Echo

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #181 on: September 10, 2015, 04:43:16 PM »
I did the putp silver bundle without the book. Its not even listed as shipped yet :/

Randy

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #182 on: September 10, 2015, 07:40:02 PM »
I thought it was only people who ordered the signed CD and nothing else who are getting theirs early.

:unsure:

I ordered gold and I have no reason to think mine is coming just yet, which is fine.  I don't pay much mind to what my account on the website says because it's not exactly Amazon, iykwim.
Well, I can be used as an experimental case because I ordered the signed CD, thought about it, and ordered the gold bundle too. I didn't cancel the first order.

So, the CD is in transit (somewhere between Houston and here) with expected delivery tomorrow. The gold bundle still shows as "complete", not shipped, at the Jewel store. I think any bundle including the book ships based on the book release date, the 15th, right? Hehe, asked and answered. I didn't read everything first.  :blush:

Nobody

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #183 on: September 11, 2015, 06:29:48 AM »
And we still have no answer on the Deluxe Edition, right?  Because I want a hard copy of the book  :book: with the extras on a dvd or cd.  (Geezer emoji here)

I hate reading on a kindle or tablet.  Hurts my old eyes.

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #184 on: September 11, 2015, 08:24:32 AM »
Well, it doesn't look like Target got a bonus track version after all...

I can't find a bonus track anywhere.

Garf

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Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #186 on: September 11, 2015, 09:14:42 AM »
Pieces of Jewel: The Singer Releases A New Album and a Memoir

It’s a big month for Jewel. Not only will she release Picking Up the Pieces—her first studio album in five years—tomorrow, she’ll also share even more of her story with the world in a new memoir, Never Broken: The Songs Are Only Half the Story, out September 15. The singer took a break from performing her new material to talk about her creative process, connecting with her authentic self and the journey from her debut album Pieces of You to its “bookend,” Picking Up the Pieces.

Parade: You’ve called Picking Up The Pieces a bookend to your debut album, 1995’s Pieces of You. How did you decide now was the time for such an album?

Jewel: I knew at some point I was going to make another record that was akin to Pieces of You. I wasn’t sure when it would happen exactly, but I knew it was headed toward that, and as my life took some turns, I realized this was the album I needed to make now. When my son was born, I looked into his eyes and realized I wasn’t quite the woman I wanted him to know and I needed to make some pretty significant changes in my life. I was able to use my writing and my songs and the book as my mechanism to do what I called an archeological dig back to my essential self.

Parade: Many of the songs on this album are songs you’d written (or partially written) in the past. What made you decide to put them on this album?

Jewel: With time, things can become doling, even in your career. You learn the rules, and you learn to play by the rules, and you learn to succeed by those rules, but it isn’t how innovation happens. It isn’t how you move the needle. You get domesticated. You quit being a wild animal, and as an artist, there are parts of a wild animal that are incredibly important, so a lot of making this album was this archeological dig back to myself. It was interesting recording songs I wrote when I was 18, 19, 20, because it was like having a conversation through time travel with myself and saying what did we do here that was right and that was wild and free, and how can I find that again? It was also being able to be 40 and have what I’ve learned about patience, perseverance, tenacity–some things that are really important that I’ve learned over the years–that I was able to tell my younger self.

Parade: Did it change the way you write songs?

Jewel: I’ve never tried to control songs. I’ll sit down and I might write a pop song, or I might write a reggae song. They just come out how they come out, it’s not my job to judge them. I’ve been lucky to be prolific enough over time that I don’t have to control the process. There doesn’t need to be pressure on it, you just get to let songs be, and some of them will never see the light of day and some are good. So my process hasn’t necessarily changed…except that somewhere over time you learn that songs should be three minutes long, and that’s a shame, so I made it a point to put at least three six-minute songs on this record.

Parade: Is writing easier when you’re going through something difficult or after you’ve gotten through it?

Jewel: I’ve never been a writer that writes well in pain. I write better when I’m happy. But a song like “Mercy” [an emotionally-charged track off the new album], I was sobbing when I wrote that song. I needed it. I wrote it for me, it was medicine. I was having a real freaking breakdown and that is the only thing I could think of to do to soothe myself, and that longing and passion you hear in it was birthed of that. I don’t know that I could have written that later.

Parade: Do you get emotional all over again when you perform the song?

Jewel: I feel it every time I sing that song. Any song. Even Who Will Save Your Soul that I wrote when I was 16. I’m a very emotional singer. I don’t phone anything in, and if I don’t feel like I can emotionally connect to a song, I don’t sing it. And my fan base is fine with that. I don’t write a set list, I do different songs every night just by feeling the crowd and singing what I can authentically connect to.

Parade: You’ve been performing some of these songs for two decades. Are there any you’d like to retire?

Jewel: I hated singing Standing Still for a long time. I got tired of all the strumming, it was exhausting! And then I started playing it in this muted eighth note version and I kind of fell in love with it again.

Parade: What was it like to transition from songwriting to penning a memoir?

Jewel: It was a different process entirely. I’d never written long form before and I kept asking my editor, ‘Do I need a writer?’ And she was like, ‘No you’re doing good!’ Her job was picking me off the floor on a daily basis. My style of writing tends to be a lot of meaning and very few words, so talking so much felt like a crime, like my God, this must suck because I’m talking a lot! I must be horrible at my job! But you have to say more in a book and you have to learn to find different pacing—how to keep time, how to keep people’s attention, where to drop in or slow down, where to get philosophical and extrapolate—so it was a learning process and I really enjoyed it.

Parade: How personal is the book?

Jewel: I didn’t put everything in. It’s not a tell-all. But there’s a lot there. I didn’t tell anybody else’s story, it’s none of my business. I didn’t write this because I was bitter, or to try and get revenge or be salacious, because that isn’t in the spirit, so I was actually able to share a lot, but I don’t think anybody that reads it will be like, whoa, she went to town on that person! But I went to town on myself. I really feel like you have to be incredibly transparent to connect with people, and if we don’t share what really makes us human and our flaws then we miss the opportunity to understand ourselves, and a lot of artists will do that. They will make themselves seem perfect. I have not had a perfect life, it’s been a real roller coaster and it’s been difficult, but the takeaway I wanted people to have is that no matter what you face, no matter how many times life brings you to your knees, you can stand up and you are not broken.

Parade: Give us three words to describe yourself 20 years ago, on the eve of your debut album’s release, and three words to describe yourself today.

Jewel: On the eve of my first album launch I would say I was excited, too inexperienced to know better and nervous. Now I would say I’m peaceful, too stubborn to know better—too stubborn to do better, I could do better, I’m just too stubborn to do something different—and I feel courageous.

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #187 on: September 11, 2015, 09:23:38 AM »
I would like to hear a Jewel reggae song!

Randy

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #188 on: September 11, 2015, 09:25:51 AM »
Quote
Parade: Give us three words to describe yourself 20 years ago, on the eve of your debut album’s release, and three words to describe yourself today.

Jewel: On the eve of my first album launch I would say I was excited, too inexperienced to know better and nervous. Now I would say I’m peaceful, too stubborn to know better—too stubborn to do better, I could do better, I’m just too stubborn to do something different—and I feel courageous.

That's a hell of a lot more than 6 words!

Oh, Jewel. Never change.  :wub:

kennycable

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #189 on: September 11, 2015, 11:29:29 AM »
I thought it was only people who ordered the signed CD and nothing else who are getting theirs early.

:unsure:

I ordered gold and I have no reason to think mine is coming just yet, which is fine.  I don't pay much mind to what my account on the website says because it's not exactly Amazon, iykwim.
Well, I can be used as an experimental case because I ordered the signed CD, thought about it, and ordered the gold bundle too. I didn't cancel the first order.

So, the CD is in transit (somewhere between Houston and here) with expected delivery tomorrow. The gold bundle still shows as "complete", not shipped, at the Jewel store. I think any bundle including the book ships based on the book release date, the 15th, right? Hehe, asked and answered. I didn't read everything first.  :blush:

How did you see where your order is?

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #190 on: September 11, 2015, 11:54:11 AM »
http://tasteofcountry.com/jewel-picking-up-the-pieces-interview/

Jewel delivered an understated, yet powerful performance in Nashville Thursday afternoon (Sept. 10), when she previewed selections from her latest album, Picking Up the Pieces, for a small group of journalists.

The singer-songwriter is releasing the new project on Friday (Sept. 11), marking a return to the no-frills approach of her now-iconic 1995 debut, Pieces of You. She moved easily through a variety of styles and moods in her hour-long set, casually sharing stories from her life and career and breaking the serious mood by joking with those in attendance, warning everyone to “eat quietly” and wondering, “Why am I not drinking and having random sex?” after her much-publicized divorce.

“That would be easier” than what she has undertaken, she mused — namely, a staunchly un-commercial folk album and a searingly honest new memoir, Never Broken.

“I always knew I would do a record that had a similar spirit to my first one,” Jewel tells Taste of Country after the performance. “Being mentored by Neil Young, seeing Harvest and Harvest Moon — you were allowed to do that. You were allowed to dip in and out of different styles and come back to certain styles. I always felt that was in my future; it became apparent that it was now. I almost did a standards record, but where I went in my life … having my son made me really want to figure out if I was the woman that I wanted him to know, and what I needed to do and change in my life.”

Part of that process was to produce herself for the first time, which only happened after Paul Worley was unavailable. “He backed out last minute, saying that I was the only one who could do it,” Jewel recalls. “I thought he was saying that as a cop-out because he wanted to go take another job. He said, ‘You’re gonna thank me one day,’ and I ended up thanking him in the liner notes. He was right — I just needed a kick in the pants to do it.”

Jewel chose to record the new material as organically as possible, eschewing vocal comps and multiple layers of tracks in favor of recording the instrumental bed tracks and vocals live in the studio, with minimal vocal harmonies as the only overdubs. She collaborated with Rodney Crowell on “It Doesn’t Hurt Right Now” and brought Dolly Parton in for a duet on an autobiographical track titled “My Father’s Daughter.”

“As soon as she stepped into the vocal both, she said, ‘Now honey, you don’t be afraid to tell me what you need out of me,’” Jewel says, slipping into an endearing imitation of one of her own musical heroes. “‘You just boss me around. And if you don’t keep me honest, I brought someone that will.’ She brought somebody with her that, if I wasn’t gonna speak up if something didn’t sound just right, he was gonna. It kind of empowered me to do that. But she’s such a pro; she really doesn’t need any guidance. I was just glad to be there along for the ride.”

Kip Moore also contributed to a song titled “Pretty Faced Fool,” but the most surprising collaboration on the album is “The Shape of You,” a song inspired by losing someone to cancer that Jewel co-wrote with David Lee and bro-country king Dallas Davidson, who’s best-known for testosterone-laden hits like “That’s My Kind of Night” and “Kick the Dust Up.”

The song shows a very different side to Davidson’s talents. “I don’t think it would be a typical song that Dallas would write,” she laughingly acknowledges, but the track is as strong as anything else on the collection.

Drawing on such diverse influences, the resulting album stands in stark contrast to the vast majority of contemporary releases, which is its greatest strength. But Jewel is aware that she’s facing an uphill battle to make Picking up the Pieces into a commercial success.

“It feels like a risk. I took five years off. That’s a big no-no,” she admits. “I did it to build a family, and I lost a family. I have a son. I knew I couldn’t go back to a major label, because I couldn’t promote a record the way you need to at a major label, and I didn’t want to waste their time or money. I knew as a mom, I was probably unwilling to do six months straight on the road at radio. So you make decisions, and they’re tough decisions. I decided to make an indie record, and a folk record, and something that probably wouldn’t be commercial,” she adds with a laugh, “after taking five years off … ’cause I am a glutton for punishment! But it’s the only honest thing I knew how to do. My goal has always been to have a 40 or 50-year career of being a great singer-songwriter, and I think you do have an onus to make those types of decisions.”

She’s not yet decided exactly how she’ll structure touring to promote the album.

“I haven’t had a band in 100 years,” she says, “so maybe I’ll take a band out. I do tend to tour solo acoustic. I was also thinking about doing a one-woman show that’s based on the book, sort of more a theatrical thing that has music. I’ve acted in a couple of films, and I do a lot of stand-up in my shows, so I think it would be this amalgamation of drama, comedy and music, and I’d shape it in a way that fit a format of about an hour-and-a-half. I’d have to write it, so …. we’ll see,” she says with another laugh. “We’ll see what I get up to here!”



Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #191 on: September 11, 2015, 03:36:54 PM »
Jewel Says Ex-Husband Is 'Going to Get Blamed for a Lot of Songs' on 'Picking Up the Pieces'

Jewel knows without being told that when fans are listening to her new album Picking Up The Pieces, they are likely going to be connecting the emotional dots. "Yeah, that's probably going to happen," she said. "My ex-husband is going to get blamed for a lot of songs."
 
While the singer says that some of the 14 tracks on the album were influenced by last year's divorce from rodeo star Ty Murray, quite a few of the songs on the disc were written years ago. She says that stems from the fact that her pen is always writing -- whether she's recording for an album or not. 

"I was really lucky to be mentored by Dylan, Neil Young and these people who drummed into my head when I was 19 or 20 that I had to follow my muse as a songwriter. It was your sacred duty. So, I've tried to do things that kept me alive as a songwriter," she told Billboard. "My first record [1995's Pieces Of You] became so popular that I felt a lot of pressure, but then I realized that I had a lot of money and didn't actually have to have another hit again. So, that took the pressure off and if I saved my money, I could spend the rest of my life doing whatever the heck I liked musically. That's what I set about doing -- asking myself 'What do you feel like being now? Who am I now as a songwriter, what do I want to say and how do I want to say it?"
 
She said that has allowed her to approach her music exactly the way she wanted to -- sometimes defying conventional wisdom.

"I've taken left turns when I should go right, right when I should have gone left, took years between records and had breaks in momentum," she said. "But, I felt that's what I needed to do as a writer and I feel like it has kept me alive. I feel like I'm writing better -- or at least as good as I ever have and that was my goal. When I was 18 and being signed, I asked myself why the best novelists write their best work in their 50s and why do songwriters write their best in their 20s. I thought it was lifestyle. I thought it was fame. That's why I never tried to surround myself with cronies. I tried to never do anything by the book or idolize fame or keep the momentum going if it didn't serve me as a writer. It's taken me on a hell of a journey."

But, while some of the lyrical content was written before she married Murray, that's not to say the emotional attachment to the songs were any less when recording it.

"A lot of people will think this is a break-up record," she said. "And it is in a lot of ways. I wrote some of it going through a divorce. Though I wrote 'Everything Breaks' 15 years ago, I felt everything I was going through when I sang it. But, a lot of them aren't written about him.... but some of them are."

And, the album is definitely full of emotion, from a duet with Rodney Crowell on "It Doesn't Hurt Right Now" to the stunning "Carnivore." The singer said that while preserving her inner muse was important, it was also a way to grow as a mother to her son Kase.

"I realized after I had a child that there were parts of me that went to sleep and there were parts that I needed to wake up." she said. "There was a part of me that felt very confined in the life I had built for myself. It's one thing to do that at 18, but another when you are building a family. A lot of that was about giving myself this internal permission to say, 'Am I the woman I want my son to know and what do I have to do to be that?' Not just for him.... but for myself. Am I the woman that I want to look back on?

"There's things I let go of that I feel compromised me. That was an intense and personal journey that lived itself out in the writing of the record and I learned to do this archaeological dig and peel away the things that I don't feel added to me and might have covered up a light of mine that I burned brighter in some aspects. In a lot of ways, it was like time travel making this record. It was my 18-year-old self that wrote some of these songs tapping me on the shoulder and saying, 'This is the ways we're brave and this is the way we are courageous.' My 40-year-old self got to talk to the 18-year-old and say, 'You're going to be OK and I know how to do this. It was a very interesting healing process that forced me -- because I was recording some older songs -- to meet myself both as a younger woman and an older woman and to let them have that conversation."
 
At the same time she was preparing the album, she was also working on her memoir, Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Journey, which will be released on Tuesday. She admitted that the creative process for the book was much different than writing a song or poem.

"I wrote it three hours a day while my son was at school," she said with a laugh. "But, whatever it is about me, I will be thankful that if I sit down for three hours, I can do it effectively and then do it the next day. It wasn't until the last couple months that I buckled down and wrote six and eight hour days."
 
Picking Up The Pieces is out now.

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #192 on: September 11, 2015, 03:39:04 PM »
Quote
Parade: Give us three words to describe yourself 20 years ago, on the eve of your debut album’s release, and three words to describe yourself today.

Jewel: On the eve of my first album launch I would say I was excited, too inexperienced to know better and nervous. Now I would say I’m peaceful, too stubborn to know better—too stubborn to do better, I could do better, I’m just too stubborn to do something different—and I feel courageous.

That's a hell of a lot more than 6 words!

Oh, Jewel. Never change.  :wub:

I think those are the six words, maybe?
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jewelwiki

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #193 on: September 11, 2015, 03:41:34 PM »
I would like to hear a Jewel reggae song!

You mean aside from the Morning Song remix? :w
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Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #194 on: September 11, 2015, 03:49:47 PM »
I never do listen to that, and I should, because I don't hate it.  Not sure how I keep missing it in my Jewel playlist, but it's a p big f playlist at this point :lol:

It would take me nearly a week nonstop to get through all of it.

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #195 on: September 11, 2015, 03:52:09 PM »
Jewel on Coping With Heartache: ‘I Peel Off Every Scab and Stick My Finger in Them’

The singer-songwriter talks to TIME about her new album and new book

Jewel isn’t sure if her new album will get much radio play. At 41, the singer-songwriter has criss-crossed genres enough times to realize that in order to make something she could call art, she had to shed decades’ worth of music industry acumen. Rather than getting bogged down with distractions like crossover appeal and radio formats, she mined the emotional terrain of her last five years—heartbreak, divorce, motherhood—for something a little more raw. “I don’t think there was an area of my life that wasn’t touched,” she says.

Picking Up the Pieces (Sept. 11), a title that more than subtly invokes her 1995 debut album Pieces of You, could easily be described as a bookend, a return to roots or the end of a chapter. But Jewel doesn’t see it as any of these. It’s “just similar in spirit,” she says. So similar, in fact, that several of the songs on the album were written at the same time as the songs on Pieces of You, but endured two decades as grainy bootlegs, only now making their way from the live stage into the recording studio.

While she set out to capture, in the studio, the emotional intensity of songs previously performed only onstage, Jewel also wrote a host of new songs for the album, like its opening track “Love Used to Be.” A poetic rendering of the pain of divorce from her husband of six years, Ty Murray, the lyrics adhere to the kind of vulnerable self-reflection for which her fans know and love her—namely, peering deep into the bottom of a wound, then turning it inside out for the world to see: “Dig a six foot hole inside my chest,” she sings, “Heart like a gravestone lay it down to rest.”

While gearing up for the consecutive release of the album and her new memoir, Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Story (Sept. 15), Jewel spoke to TIME about why she’s zig-zagged between genres, how she avoided becoming a teenybopper and why she idolized Dolly Parton from a young age.

TIME: Several of the songs on Picking Up the Pieces were written when you were 17 or 18. Had you been playing them consistently over the last two decades, or were you revisiting them for the first time in a long time?

Jewel: Some of them have been requested as much as any of my hits. They became these underground bootleg hits with my fanbase. I bet every single show for 20 years I’ve sung “Everything Breaks” and “Carnivore.”

Having accumulated so much life experience since you first wrote these songs, do you approach them differently than you did when you were 18?

These are songs that I had the ability to write quite young but never had the ability to produce in a way that didn’t diminish emotion. If you’ve heard me sing a song live, I think the reason people have loved it is because it’s very intense and emotional. Typically I’ve had difficulty in the studio. I don’t sing as raw, it’s just a bit more tame. I’m a live singer who’s always fed off the energy of the audience. In a studio, you’re just looking at a wall—it feels very odd to me. I’ve been a live performer since I was six years old.

The reason I recorded the album live with the band was so that I could play guitar, which I usually never do in the studio, while I sing at the same time. The band was accustomed to following singer-songwriters and feeling for me slowing down and speeding up. It has a real ebb and a flow and a naturalness that didn’t inhibit my singing or performance.

When you record these older songs, or when you go back and listen to Pieces of You, can you see how you’ve evolved as a musician and as a person?

There’s been evolution that’s good and evolution that I don’t perceive as valuable. On this record, it was really ridding myself of the evolution that covered me up. Twenty years later, you know too much about the industry, about what having a radio crossover means, what it means to say, “I spent the last 10 years building up a country fanbase, and I’m making a folk record, and I shouldn’t walk away from that, and I don’t even know what genre this record is, and oh my God, there’s no radio single!” You have to get all that out of your head and just be willing to make art. On top of that, I was going through a divorce, and looking at my entire person and saying, what is my essential self? I don’t think there was an area of my life that wasn’t touched.


Your memoir comes out just a few days after the album. Do you see them as companion pieces?


Yeah, I wanted them to come out at the same time. When I do live shows, I do a lot of storytelling and music, and it’s hard to get that all in one place unless you do some kind of TV special. They give you the whole story, if you put them together. My number one job was being a mom. My number two job was making sure I was giving enough time to transition Ty and I into a new phase of our relationship with the divorce, and it took a lot of energy to do that. And then my third job was writing the book and doing the record.

Some of your songs are autobiographical, and others read more like stories. Do you approach an autobiographical song differently from one that has a fictional premise?

I don’t. They all feel like me somehow. I feel emotion very intensely. I wrote “His Pleasure Is My Pain” when I was 17 or 18. It’s a very complex song about a woman who’s much older than me at age 17, but I felt all those feelings. I think it was just a lifetime of watching people and having pain myself. Any of my short stories or poems or songs, I run the emotion through my body. It feels very real to me.

When you’re writing a song that’s very personal, like “Love Used to Be,” is there fear in putting it out in the world or in sitting down to write it?

I don’t experience fear in that way. I don’t know a single person that hasn’t been through some sort of heartbreak, whether they were married or it was a break-up or they lost somebody they loved to death. The disillusionment of innocence and first love is pretty universal. I’ve always found music really healing. I talk in my book about this moment when I was homeless and didn’t have anything left to lose, and I was like, “I’m going to start saying my worst fears, my deepest hopes, the things that I think make me unlovable.” I started writing songs and was really shocked that I wasn’t rebuked or shut down. I was seen for the first time. Oddly, people in the audience felt seen for the first time, and we all felt less alone.

It’s counterintuitive that the more transparent you are, the safer you are. I think it’s what helped me in my career with fame. I’m a pretty introverted person. When I was looking at getting signed, I felt very uncomfortable at the prospect of being idolized, because I was so deeply flawed. I had a very abusive background and I was homeless, so the idea of having to be perfect was horrifying. The only thing that gave me comfort was if I could lead with my flaws and say, “Hey, let me keep myself off of any pedestal anybody ever might consider putting me on.” That allowed me, at age 18, to never be considered a teenybopper act that had to transition into being an adult.

You’ve said that your fans had a fair amount of influence on the songs you included in the album, and even, on “Carnivore,” which bridge you chose to go with. Have you always been that deferential to your fans?

Honestly, I forget my music. I have hundreds of songs, and they have bootlegged and catalogued all of them. I get complete amnesia about many of my songs. Fans bring lyrics to shows because they know I’m going to forget something. So it’s not necessarily that I defer, but I use them as a valuable resource. I forgot I wrote that bridge to “Carnivore.” Quite a few years ago, some fans said, “Hey do you remember this bridge?” And I clicked the link and said, “Oh, that’s actually better.”

When you started making country albums, did your fan base come with you, or did you pick up a new one?

My hardcore fans stay with me. The formats were shifting dramatically in radio. Where “You Were Meant For Me” snuck into the alternative movement in the ‘90s, today if that came out, that’d be too country for country. I can’t tell you it’d make it on pop radio or country, frankly. I’ve always been in between worlds, and you’ve got to figure out where your best shot is. When I was looking at the shift, I was looking at pop music going very different from the kind I was interested in making, and if I wanted to be a singer-songwriter and tell stories, it became obvious the place for that was country radio. Now country radio has shifted again. It’s become much more pop. [The new record] is an Americana folk record, and I can’t say that it’ll get played on any radio station.

When you think about future projects, do you think in terms of genre?

The onus of a singer-songwriter is to follow your heart, and it’s a pain in the butt. It’d be a lot less draining to know what target you’re hitting and just hit it. That isn’t how I approach things, and it creates a lot more work, but that’s the privilege and burden of being a singer-songwriter. I don’t know what’ll come out of me next. I’d like to do some spoken-word poetry set to music. A standards record is something I’d enjoy. I’m a much better singer than the melodies I write for my own music, because I’m so interested in telling the story that I try to sing just enough to tell the story. The standards really let you sing. They’re what I cut my teeth on, so I’d love to pay homage to that.


One of the tracks on the album, “My Father’s Daughter,” is a duet with Dolly Parton. It’s a very personal song. How did you decide that it should be a duet, and that it should be with her?


When you grow up as a girl on a homestead with an outhouse, you don’t have many heroes in the public eye. Dolly and Loretta [Lynn] were them, because they had outhouses and they had a similar lifestyle to me. I loved their audacity. They were women who were so outspoken and they had no shame in being who they were. They were so ahead of their time, and I always thought it was quite heroic. So I asked her to sing on the song, and I was pretty surprised she said yes. I’m tremendously honored. We got in the studio, she started at 8 a.m. and was 10 minutes early and well-prepared and looked amazing and was sarcastic and witty and everything you would hope Dolly Parton would be.

Reflecting on the process of making this album, did you come out on the other side seeing yourself more clearly than you did before you started?

The birth of my son really inspired me to make sure I’m the kind of woman I want my son to know, and looking at the places I’ve been stagnant, looking for things that were lost and reclaiming them. The process of making this record and writing this book really helped facilitate that for me. It’s funny, most people go through a divorce and are like, why didn’t I just get drunk and have meaningless sex? And I write a memoir and a heartbreaking record, peel off every scab I’ve ever healed and stick my finger in them and write about it. That’s how I dealt with it. But I think it was the best thing I could have done.

jewelwiki

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #196 on: September 11, 2015, 03:53:36 PM »
Seems like she's getting a lot of great press for this. :)
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Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #197 on: September 11, 2015, 04:00:38 PM »
I hate the click bait headline on this story with a passion, so in protest, I'm not going to link to the source. One page view is enough and you've all likely already seen the story.


Quote
Multiplatinum and Grammy-nominated artist Jewel — the small-town horseback rider who got her start in biker bars and eventually racked up more than 27 million worldwide album sales — has come a long way since her childhood in Homer, Alaska.

With her 12th studio album, Picking Up the Pieces, being released Friday — 20 years after her debut effort, Pieces of You, hit shelves in 1995 — Jewel speaks to The Hollywood Reporter about the long, winding path that brought her this far and the sexual harassment she's had to endure since the very beginning.

"The music industry is a very male-dominated business," says Jewel. "I never slept my way to the top, ever. There was never one time I’ve ever compromised anything. I was always willing to walk away. ... And I think that type of spirit that you bring just informs everybody that’s around you. You know, I've heard plenty of stories that the opposite happens."

"I saw what women would give up for a compliment," she says. "I felt men were willing to take advantage if they saw something vulnerable."

"I’ve had men hitting on me, sadly, since I was really young. At 8, I had men putting dimes in my hands saying, 'Call me. It’d be so great to f— when you’re older.' And just horrible stuff."

Jewel says that traumatic experience early in life helped prepare her for the sexual harassment she'd have to endure in the wake of her big break at 18, when she signed with Atlantic Records.

"In the music business, it ended up serving me very well. I learned to keep my energy to myself, where there’s nothing about me that seemed approachable. And as men did approach me, I got very good at handling men in a way that sort of didn’t anger them. ... And at the same time using wit and usually humor to defuse the situation and to inform them, 'P.S. Not available that way.' "

Jewel was homeless at the time she got her record deal, and she says sexual harassment is what put her on the streets.

Back when she was just starting her career by singing in bars and coffee shops in San Diego, Jewel says her boss at the time fired her for refusing to have sex with him. She no longer could pay her rent and lived out of her car until it was stolen. She describes this chapter of her life as her most fragile state and says men around her continued attempting to exploit it.

"I’ve never been more propositioned by businessmen in my life. It was almost like they were sharks that could smell blood, like of vulnerability," says Jewel. "I’d go back to my car, writing songs, and men would literally come up and proposition me. They would be like, 'Hey, do you need rent money?' you know and things like that. It was pretty wild. I never took anybody up on it, but it was interesting to see this side of men that basically would prey on somebody vulnerable."

Jewel touches on these issues in her raw new memoir, Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Story, which will be released on Sept. 15.

Jessica

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #198 on: September 11, 2015, 04:02:05 PM »
Seems like she's getting a lot of great press for this. :)

Absolutely!  I'm miffed about the exclusion on Spotify's new release section because there are some views to be had there, but there's been some otherwise great press all over!  She was even on the Google News front page, albeit briefly, and only for the terrible clickbait headline referenced above, but w/e - there's no such thing as bad press, right?

Randy

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Re: Jewel Returns to Folk Roots on 'Picking Up the Pieces' Album
« Reply #199 on: September 11, 2015, 08:36:15 PM »

How did you see where your order is?
USPS tracking.

Speaking of...there's been no update on tracking, and I didn't get my CD today.  :(