Author Topic: Joss Stone  (Read 3761 times)

Joss Stone
« on: September 29, 2003, 10:04:00 am »
Anybody heard this chick? Isn't she supposed to be playing some in-store soon? The hipsters will appreciate that she covers the White Stripes...
 
 
 Q: She's 16 and British, what can she possibly know about singing vintage American soul music? A: Enough to make you squirm, get off your ass, and dance close with anybody who'll have you. Joss Stone is a young woman who, if you believe the story, was about to record her wannabe pop smash debut and then be well on her way to becoming the next Britney/Christina. Then she heard some vintage American Miami soul made by the likes of Latimore, Little Beaver, Betty Wright, Timmy Thomas, and the like, and genuine inspiration took hold. The result of all this career changing (or diva postponement) is The Soul Sessions, a collection of ten badass soul classics recorded with all of the above folks â?? soul princess Betty Wright and S-Curve's Steve Greenberg produced almost all of it in Miami, though a pair of tracks were recorded in New York with R&B wunderkind Mike Mangini and a souled-out cover of the White Stripes "Fell in Love With a Boy," guided by the Roots' ?uestlove (Ahmir Thompson) on the modern tip, was cut in Philly. These jams drip honey sweet and hard with tough, sexy soul, and Stone's voice is larger than life. It's true she's been tutored and mentored by Wright and her musical collaborators in the science of groove, but she keeps it raw enough to be real. Her reading of Harlan Howard's "The Chokin' Kind" reveals that it should have been an R&B tune all along â?? check out Little Beaver's (Willie Hale) guitar solo. Her reading of Bobby Miller's "Dirty Man," a track associated with Wright, is gutsy and completely believable, and the interplay between Latimore's piano and Beaver's funky, shimmering guitaristry brings Stone's vocal down to street level.
 For a woman as young as Stone to tackle Carla Thomas' "I've Fallen in Love With You" and Aretha Franklin's "All the King's Horses," not to mention John Ellison's nugget "Some Kind of Wonderful," takes guts, chops, or a genuine delusional personality to pull off. Stone has the former two. She has unique phrasing and a huge voice that accents, dips, and slips, never overworking a song or trying to bring attention to itself via hollow acrobatics. The strings and funky backbeat provided by Thompson on "I've Fallen in Love With You" are chilling in the way they prod Stone to just spill a need out of her heart that one would believe would be beyond her years. And speaking of Thompson, his production of the Stripes tune is more than remarkable; it conveys Jack White's intent but in an entirely new language. The set closes with Stone's radical reread of the Isleys' "For the Love of You," a daunting and audacious task. The way she tackles this song, prodded only by Angelo Morris' keyboard whispering alongside her, is far from reverential, but it is true, accurate, moving, and stunningly â?? even heartbreakingly â?? beautiful. This is a debut that, along with those fine practitioners in the nu-soul underground such as Peven Everett, Julie Dexter, Yas-rah, Fertile Ground, and a few others, is solid proof that soul is alive and well. And perhaps, given her youth and stunning looks, the perverse star-making machinery will use this unusual entry into the marketplace to reinvestigate the wonders of timeless depth and vision inherent in soul and R&B that are far from exhausted, as this record so convincingly proves.

kosmo vinyl

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #1 on: September 29, 2003, 10:07:00 am »
there was an article in entertainment weekly about her... she's therefore an mainstream act.
T.Rex

Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #2 on: September 29, 2003, 10:21:00 am »
Well thanks, that's a big help.  :)

ggw

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #3 on: September 29, 2003, 10:22:00 am »
She's the new Charlotte Church.

Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #4 on: September 29, 2003, 10:25:00 am »
I thought Charlotte Church was sort of an opera/classical singer?

Joymonster

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #5 on: September 29, 2003, 10:31:00 am »
I've seen her video on BET a few times before. She's okay...
 
 http://www.s-curverecords.com/joss/

Jaguär

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #6 on: September 29, 2003, 10:43:00 am »
She was on one of the late night talk shows about 2 weeks ago. Great Blues voice with that smooth Zero 7 coolness yet with lots of soul. But smoother Soul as oppossed to the Bellrays kind of new Soul. My real problem with her is that I can see her going mainstream (ala Norah Jones) immediately. She pulls in a lot from American White and Black Blues from maybe the early 70s but just a bit over produced. Just my opinion. Never-the-less, the woman sings very well. Nic Harcourt has played a few of her songs already. I kind of think you'd like her Rhett. At least, for now.

ggw

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #7 on: September 29, 2003, 10:45:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by Rhett Miller:
  I thought Charlotte Church was sort of an opera/classical singer?
In the cultural sense, not specifically the musical sense.

MaLo

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #8 on: September 29, 2003, 10:55:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by Jaguär:
  She was on one of the late night talk shows about 2 weeks ago.  
yeah, she was on conan..i fell asleep tho so i didn't see her

Jaguär

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #9 on: September 29, 2003, 10:57:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by MaLo:
   
Quote
Originally posted by Jaguär:
  She was on one of the late night talk shows about 2 weeks ago.  
yeah, she was on conan..i fell asleep tho so i didn't see her [/b]
;)  
 
 I did find that she came off much better live than recorded. Something was lost in the studio.

ggw

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #10 on: September 29, 2003, 10:59:00 am »
This review from the New York Times compares her original material to Mariah Carey and 9:30 Club Forum icon Mary J. Blige:
 _____________________________________________
 
 September 20, 2003, Saturday
 
 ARTS & IDEAS/CULTURAL DESK
 POP REVIEW; Miami Stars of Soul Pass Their Torch
 
 By JON PARELES
 It took a 16-year-old English girl to bring together Miami's soul-music aristocracy for shows on Wednesday night at Joe's Pub. The girl is Joss Stone, a singer and protégée of Betty Wright, who had the 1971 hit ''Clean Up Woman.'' Ms. Wright helped produce Ms. Stone's debut album, ''The Soul Sessions'' (S-Curve), and she and other 1970's Miami soul hitmakers -- Gwen McRae, Timmy Thomas and Latimore -- were the core of Ms. Stone's band on Wednesday night. They backed her up as if they were passing on their chart ambitions to a more marketable face.
 
 Ms. Stone has a husky, breathy voice that sounds more mature than she is, and she applied it to old-fashioned soul songs about jealousy, cheating and ''super-duper love.'' She didn't play Lolita; she just sang and gently swayed to the beat. Between songs, she reverted to giggling like a teenager.
 
 At her age, Ms. Stone could easily have turned to the reduced melodies and showy melismas of current rhythm-and-blues, but she had the taste to apprentice herself to the Miami musicians instead. Their leisurely, undulating grooves are a step closer to recent R & B than storytelling 1960's soul was, but they retain some gospel backbone.
 
 The one song of her own that Ms. Stone sang was a down-tempo tune that straddled current and past styles, with a singsong tune that left plenty of room to slide around; it would have suited Mariah Carey or Mary J. Blige. To recognize her generation, Ms. Stone made a few hip-hop references and sang a slow funk version of the White Stripes' ''Fell in Love With a Girl.''
 
 Ms. Stone has been well coached. She juxtaposed crisp declarations and gliding afterthoughts; she sharpened her tone, eased back and hinted at flirtation and tears. But the coaching still shows. Ms. Stone would have to be even more of a prodigy to sound as natural and experienced as the women who taught her.
 
 ''I should be backing them, right?'' she told the Joe's Pub audience. So she switched to backup vocals and the show took off. Ms. McRae sang ''Rockin' Chair'' with lusty assurance and an unabashed bump-and-grind. Ms. Wright no longer has the clear voice she had 32 years ago, but in ''Clean Up Woman'' she made up the difference with timing and double-entendres about brooms.
 
 Mr. Thomas made his ''Why Can't We Live Together,'' written during the Vietnam War, sound like a heartfelt plea for peace now, and Latimore stole the show with ''Let's Straighten It Out,'' playing cool electric-piano chords as he promised his full attention to an unhappy lover, with Ms. Stone singing comebacks. Instead of bemoaning a music business whose stars have to look good with bared navels, the Miami Soul All-Stars were getting their piece of the action.

Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #11 on: September 29, 2003, 11:10:00 am »
I heard that Latimore dude on WPFW a few weeks ago. He did a song callled "Jumpsuit Judy" with the line "Jumpsuit Judy got a big bootie", which fits Celeste's boss Judy perfectly.

kosmo vinyl

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #12 on: September 29, 2003, 11:25:00 am »
the music editor for entertainment weekly are doing a great job these days of highlighting bands not in the mainstream.  i.e. they gave a "A" review to British Sea Power.
 
 I was a bit skeptical about an article about a 16 year singer I never heard of before.  It appears hear story has changed as well, there is no mention of her changing from a pop record to a soul record.  instead how her first album was a Aretha Franklin greatest hits.
T.Rex

Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #13 on: September 29, 2003, 11:38:00 am »
Of course the liberal white press is going to slag a white teenager who is playing "black" music as not being as good as the real thing. What did you expect? The Beastie Boys were killed by the critics when they first started rapping.
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by ggwâ?¢:
 [QB] This review from the New York Times compares her original material to Mariah Carey and 9:30 Club Forum icon Mary J. Blige:
 _____________________________________________
 
 September 20, 2003, Saturday
 
 ARTS & IDEAS/CULTURAL DESK
 POP REVIEW; Miami Stars of Soul Pass Their Torch
 
 By JON PARELES

chknfngrs

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Re: Joss Stone
« Reply #14 on: September 29, 2003, 12:22:00 pm »
I heard her on NPR and would love to see a show/get a disc.