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Norah Jones



Post script from cannes


Norah to act in Wong Kar Wai's next


Uma Da Cunha, From Cannes


With the hustle and hassle of the Cannes festival just over, its streets now empty of rushing crowds and vehicles, one could see the city details and its landscape better. At the time of leaving, one particular huge hoarding stood out at key points. It showed leading US-based singer Norah Jones, her dark eyes looking searchingly out of a lovely innocent young face. The hoardings, as one would expect, were not about a music event. They announced a film, hence its significance at Cannes. They made just one statement: that Norah Jones was to star in the new film to be directed by the top-line Chinese director, Wong Kar Wai (also jury chairman at Cannes this year) in his new film, My Blueberry Nights.

Wong Kar Wai had said when he saw Norah Jones recently he knew straightaway she was right for the lead role. He made a special trip to the US to meet her, and was delighted when she agreed to star in the film. It was only after he signed her that he began his search for her co-stars. "Ed Harris will be in the film", confirmed Wong Kar Wai, "And we are talking to Kevin Spacey."

My Blueberry Nights will be Chinese director Wong Kar Wai's first English language film and also his first to be shot in the United States. Norah Jones leads the cast as a young woman journeying across the US in her attempt to discover the meaning of love. The director has been spotlighted in Cannes in recent years, winning acclaim and awards for his films. In 1997 his film Happy Together won the Best Director prize in Cannes, and in 2000 his film In The Mood Of Love was a Cannes highlight, with actor Tony Leung winning best actor award.

Starring in a Wong Kar Wai film is a unique marque spot for the Grammy award-winning Geetali Norah Jones Shankar. Brought up in the United States, she was raised entirely by her single mother, former nurse and singer Sue Jones, with no contact at all of her Indian side and father until much later in her life.

My Blueberry Nights will be Norah's first big movie. She has one screen role to her name, acting as herself in Two Weeks Notice made in 2002. This was the year that Norah Jones shot overnight to international fame, when her song Come Away With Me suddenly became one of the year's big-seller, climbing to the top of both the jazz and mainstream charts, and scoring eight Grammy awards (including those for Record Of The Year and Best New Artist). Suddenly a world name, the young Norah found every aspect of her life being scrutinized by the media, including her relationship with her estranged father. She later was reunited with him and her half-sister Anoushka. In 2004, Norah came out with yet another huge success with her song, Feels Like Home.

Wong Kar Wai intends to begin his shoot with Norah Jones in July, adding ruefully, "I regret not spending the summer holidays with my family — and missing seeing the World Cup being held in July in Germany with my son."

And for Norah Jones, the challenge is immense. The league she is now in can be measured by the next film Lady from Shanghai that Wong Kar Wai already has planned for 2007. It stars Nicole Kidman no less.

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2006-03-03 - It's Competition Time Again!

Posted


Thanks to the guys at specialopsmedia.com we have two copies of The Little Willies to give away!

All you have to do to be in with a chance of winning is answer the following questions and send your answers to: Give Me The Willies!.

There are three questions about each band member, together with three questions about the band. That's a mere 18 questions! Is it worth the effort? You betcha!

The competition closes at midnight, March 31st. All entries with 18 correct answers (or 17, 16, ... if there are none) will go into a draw. The first two people selected after the closing date will each receive a copy of The Little Willies.

Administrators and moderators of norahjones.info are not eligible to enter.

My thanks to Joe and most especially to Giancarlo for the questions.

2006-02-27 - The Little Willies at SXSW in Austin TX....March 17

Posted by Nightingale03.


Friday, March 17 @ 7:00 PM
Town Lake Stage at Auditorium Shores (Auditorium Shores)

2006-02-14 - Little Willies Debut Album

Posted by admin.


On March 7, 2006, Milking Bull Records will release the self-titled debut by The Little Willies, an album that perfectly distills the fun, down-to-earth spirit of this New York band's club shows. The group – Lee Alexander (bass), Jim Campilongo (electric guitar), Norah Jones (piano, vocals), Richard Julian (guitar, vocals) and Dan Rieser (drums) – tears through a mix of covers and originals, from the revved-up western swing of Fred Rose's "Roly Poly" and Willie Nelson's "I Gotta Get Drunk" to the cutting wit of Kris Kristofferson's "Best Of All Possible Worlds"; from the poignancy of Townes Van Zandt's "No Place To Fall" to the cosmic absurdity of their own "Lou Reed." ...

To read the full text of the press release and to hear a couple of tracks, click here.

2006-01-15 - The 48th Annual Grammy Awards Feb. 8, 2006

Posted by Nightingale03.

Norah has received 2 Grammy nominations for the following:

Country Collaboration With Vocals: "Dreams Come True" Willie Nelson & Norah Jones.

Edited by Qwest - 19 years ago
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#3
Norah Jones - vocals, piano
Lee Alexander - bass
Jesse Harris - acoustic guitar, electric guitar
Dan Rieser - drums



I waited 'til I saw the sun
I don't know why I didn't come
I left you by the house of fun
I don't know why I didn't come
I don't know why I didn't come

When I saw the break of day
I wished that I could fly away
Instead of kneeling in the sand
Catching teardrops in my hand

My heart is drenched in wine
But you'll be on my mind
Forever

Out across the endless sea
I would die in ecstacy
But I'll be a bag of bones
Driving down the road alone

My heart is drenched in wine
But you'll be on my mind
Forever

Something has to make you run
I don't know why I didn't come
I feel as empty as a drum
I don't know why I didn't come
I don't know why I didn't come
I don't know why I didn't come

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Norah Jones swept the Grammys' major awards, including album, song and record of the year.

Jones sweeps major Grammys

Newcomer wins album, song, record of year

By Todd Leopold
CNN

(CNN) --All Norah Jones asked was to "Come Away With Me." Now, she's coming away with Grammy.

Despite competition from Bruce Springsteen's September 11-inspired album "The Rising" and Eminem's best-selling "The Eminem Show," the 23-year-old newcomer swept the major Grammy Awards on Sunday night, winning album of the year for her record "Come Away With Me," record of the year and song of the year for "Don't Know Why" (an award that went to songwriter Jesse Harris) and best new artist.

Jones went five-for-five, also winning best pop vocal album and best female pop vocal performance. "Come Away With Me" producer Arif Mardin won producer of the year.

Overall, the album won eight awards. Jones tied Lauryn Hill and Alicia Keys for most wins by a female artist in a single night.

"I just want to say in a time when this world is really weird, I feel really blessed and really lucky to have had the year I've had," Jones said as she accepted the album of the year prize, the last one presented on the show.

Springsteen, Eminem, and others receiving multiple nominations didn't come away empty-handed.

Edited by Qwest - 19 years ago
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#5
Two Norah Jones products reviewed
CD - Come Away With Me DVD - Live In New Orleans



Norah Jones Come Away With Me
EMI Capital

I can't help but think of Janis Joplin while listening to Norah Jones. Like Joplin she has a piercing yet subtle quality to her voice, it's a quality that stops you in your tracks and changes your idea on what really is good in your CD collection. On first listen I found myself rethinking what that special ingredient really was that makes tremendous singer. Whatever it is you will find it on Come Away With Me. This is the album to give to anyone lamenting the stagnant state of the record biz, consider this one your rescue disc. Norah Jones sings these songs with the ease, focus, depth, and perspective of someone who should be a thousand years old. If there's one performer who's comfortable in her skin its Norah Jones. Her delectably lazy delivery is well served on the albums opening track 'Don't Know Why' penned by her guitarist Jesse Harris who wrotefive songs on the album. On first listen I was hard pressed to tag it to a specific genre, is it Jazz, Smooth jazz, Folk, Blues or Pop? Maybe none of the above but rather an amalgamation of so many different styles. Norah Jones could carve a respectable place in music history with just the strength of 'Don't know Why' but there is much more to this album. 'Seven Years' touches an early Buckingham/Nicks/folk feel with bassist Lee Alexander's quiet tale of a singing free spirit with no one by her side. Jones salutes Hank Williams with a stripped down bluesy Jazz cover of 'Cold Cold Heart' and when she gets behind the Wurlitzer piano on 'Feeling the Same Way' you may be asking yourself how could this album get any better? It does. The title track stands out as a hypnotic lover's serenade that's peaceful, honest and sung with Norah Jones wonderful haunting vulnerability. Jones has been compared to Diana Krall which is understandable in tempo considering the quiet introspective feel of this album but their voices sound nothing alike. Krall's orchestration is noticeably absent here replaced by Jones' more pronounced almost Floyd Crammer Americana Piano chops. The guitar playing from Jesse Harris and Adam Levy is also worth mentioning, expect styles that range from acoustic straight folk and breezy Jazz kind of like a Pat Metheny/Bill Frisell/Will Ackerman love-in. Jazz and Smooth Jazz radio is playing Norah Jones but there's also airplay on Country radio so maybe the mainstream boys will take the hint. I could write ten pages on this album. It's easily the best album released so far this year.
- by John Beaudin

Edited by Qwest - 19 years ago
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#6


Norah Jones Live in New Orleans DVD
EMI

With the eight time Grammy winning album 'Come Away with Me' (she individually won 5) everyone is hungry for anything Norah. I wouldn't be surprised if the handle topped the baby naming list next year. All the hoopla aside Norah Jones is one of the most talented, unique singers to emerge in this crazy existence of Diva's in the last 25 years. Interestingly she became fodder for water cooler gab long before the trophies came. Everyone seems to say the same thing about Norah Jones - that she sounds like she's been around a thousand years - there is a wisdom behind that voice that I doubt she's even aware of. Last week while on the phone with Gerry Beckley of the band America he switched the interview over to Jones and how on first listen he was stopped in his tracks in awe. The same happened with Marc Jordan and Faith Hill recently said that Jones was "just an amazing talent" and that her debut is played constantly in home and car. They're preaching to the choir! Even though Jones sounded a little nervous performing at the Grammy expect an artist in her element on the DVD 'Live in New Orleans.' Jones proves that we may have tired of the Whitney/Mariah/Celine crescendos and that the magic here lies in her brilliant subtlety. At times the concert seems like a rehearsal not in the quality of the playing but in the laid back understated delivery. When she's playing Jones is truly hypnotic but in between the tunes she seems a little shy almost girlish. So her intro chatter is kept to a minimum something that's bound to change as she becomes more comfortable with the intimacy of an audience. Most of the songs from the first album are on this DVD plus a few extra gems previously available on Japanese pressings or her first EP. Highlights include the haunting, tranquil 'Nightingale' and of course the hits 'Come Away With Me' and 'Don't Know Why.' Not many artist can cross-pollenize the genre's like Norah Jones. Is she a little Country, Rock'n' Roll, Jazz or Blues? And does it even matter in her case. This DVD fortifies what the album did last year It's another stripped down, honest recording from a young lady who could very well change radios musical recipe. -
by John Beaudin

Edited by Qwest - 19 years ago
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"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, youre 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. Were 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 songsby herself and with songwriting partner Lee Alexandergathered other songs from her band mates and friends, and delivers three covers: Townes Van Zandts Be Here To Love Me, Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennans The Long Way Home and Duke Ellingtons Melancholia, which she wrote lyrics to and retitled Dont Miss You At All.

Feels Like Home 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. Its about Norah being au natural. She doesnt need pitch correction. Shes 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. Im very proud of my first record, but I was ready for something a little different, she says, then jokes, This time its not quite as mellow. But its 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. Weve 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. Im glad Jay taped it!

Levys contribution, In the Morning, features Jones pushing beyond the mellow zone with a bluesy wail and a Wurlitzer solo. Well, thats rockin out for us, she says with a smile. Actually, that was one of the first new songs that we played when we started.

Alexanders hoedown, Creepin In, another Jones and Co. upbeat in-concert highlight, almost didnt make it onto the record because the group wasnt 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 shed 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. Weve 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 theyre so nice.

There are several other band originals in the collection, including two slow-tempo beauties with Harris guesting on guitar: Jones and Alexanders melancholic Carnival Town and Alexander and singer-songwriter friend Richard Julians 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.

As for covers, Jones renders Townes Van Zandts Be Here To Love Me, which she points out has my favorite Adam Levy guitar moment on the album. Originally she chose the tune to help pick up the tempo on the CD. But we ended up slowing it down, she says. Garth sounds great on the accordion, and Kevin, Adam and Daru sang background vocals. She hastens to add, Its a great song. I love Townes.

Jones is also an admirer of Tom Waits, whose song The Long Way Home (co-written by Waits wife Kathleen Brennan), driven by an upbeat Johnny Cash-like guitar bass line, appears on the album. I met Tom and Kathleen at a concert he was doing. Tom asked me if I had listened to the demos he sent me, Jones says. I didnt even know he had sent me anything, but I assured him I would track them down. She did and she liked what she heard, but was reluctant at first to record it. Weve covered a couple of his tunes in concert, but its hard to do because I like his versions so much. Im a huge fan. We pretty much recorded it like he did.

Feels Like Home also features a song Jones developed four years ago. She wrote lyrics to the Duke Ellington instrumental Melancholia, recorded a demo of it and has been performing it regularly in concert. She decided to record it for the new disc (as Dont Miss You At All) especially because Blue Note President Bruce Lundvall loves it so much. I didnt set out to write lyrics to this song, she says. Just the thought of touching an Ellington composition scares me. But I was so inspired by it.

Inspiration is at the heart of Feels Like Home. While Jones approached recording her follow-up to Come Away With Me with the same sense of musical integrity, she maintains that she did not set out to duplicate its achievement. Im glad that people liked the last album. It was where I was at the time, musically. This is where I am now. Thats what a recording is for me, like a snapshot. We had so much fun making this record."
~Blue Note Records



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CHECK OUT THE LITTLE WILLIES FEATURING NORAH JONES!!
RELEASE DATE: MARCH 7TH
Edited by Qwest - 19 years ago
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Norah Jones
With her history-making Grammy wins in 2003, Norah Jones became an artist the world fell in love with. She's the "girl next door" with a voice as powerful as some of music's finest. And, Norah knows the stage. Beginning her career at the tender age of 5 in her church choir, growing into a teen sensation in North Texas State and becoming a recording artist by age 22, Norah's talent is fueled by desire. She writes, arranges and produces her own music as well as jazz standards on her Yamaha Concert Grand Piano.
Biography:
There are certain singers whom we feel that we know, from the very first time we hear them. As the intimacy of their delivery and the subtle shading of their interpretation draw us in, a whole personality seems to take shape in our imagination. Norah Jones is that kind of singer. Her Blue Note debut album, Come Away With Me, offers a musicality and depth of feeling that would be uncommon in any era. In the present day, in a performer just 22 years of age, these qualities are truly remarkable. The Brooklyn-based artist has sung and played piano professionally since her teens; Come Away With Me reveals her estimable skills as a songwriter and arranger. Norah composed the unforgettable title song "Come Away With Me," "Nightingale," and she co-wrote "The Long Day Is Over." She puts a sophisticated Western-swing spin on Hank Williams' "Cold, Cold Heart" and utterly transforms the John D. Loudermilk blues ballad 'Turn Me On" (with thanks to Nina Simone, from whose recording Norah learned the song). Come Away With Me blends elements of jazz, soul, country, and folk-pop in a warm, unself conscious amalgam-and erases musical boundaries in the process. One could imagine fans of Sade, Charlie Rich, and Nick Drake all deriving equal enjoyment from this record.

Norah, on vocals, piano and Wurlitzer electric piano, is backed seamlessly by a skilled supporting cast. Bassist Lee Alexander, drummer Dan Rieser, and guitarists Jesse Harris and Adam Levy are among the New York musicians with whom Norah has been playing live since the autumn of 2000. Her special guests on Come Away With Me include Bill Frisell (guitar), Kevin Breit (guitar), Brian Blade (drums), Jenny Scheinman (violin), Rob Burger (accordion), Sam Yahel (Hammond B-3 organ) and Kenny Wollesen (drums). The adroit and understated production is by Arif Mardin – the veteran producer/arranger of landmark recordings by Aretha Franklin, Dusty Springfield, Laura Nyro, Roberta Flack, and Willie Nelson, to name a few.

Norah and album engneer Jay Newland produced "Don't Know Why" and "Turn Me On," with additional production by Arif. Craig Street is credited with original production of three tracks ("Seven Years," "Feelin' The Same Way," and "The Long Day Is Over"), with additional production by Jay and Norah.

The Story So Far
Norah Jones was born March 30, 1979 in New York City. When she was four years old, Norah and her mother Sue moved to the Dallas suburb of Grapevine, Texas. Norah's earliest musical influences came from her mother's extensive LP collection and from "oldies" radio. She began singing in church choirs at age five, commenced piano lessons two years later, and briefly played alto saxophone in junior high.

"My mom had this eight-album Billie Holiday set. I picked out one disc that I liked and played that over and over again. 'You Go To My Head,' that was my favorite..." When Jones was 15, she and her mother moved from Grapevine to Dallas' central city, where Norah enrolled in Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts. (Soul singer Erykah Badu and trumpeter Roy Hargrove are also Washington alumni.) Norah played her first gig on her 16th birthday, an open-mic night at a local coffeehouse, where she performed a version of "I'll Be Seeing You" that she'd learned from Etta James' treatment of this Billie Holiday favorite.

While still in high school, Norah won the Down Beat Student Music Awards for "Best Jazz Vocalist" and "Best Original Composition" in 1996, and earned a second SMA for "Best Jazz Vocalist" in 1997. After graduation, Jones entered the University of North Texas – nationally renowned for its music programs – where she majored in jazz piano. She also sang with a band called Laszlo, playing what she describes as "dark, jazzy rock." In the summer of 1999, Norah accepted a friend's offer of a summer sublet in Greenwich Village. She came to Manhattan... and never returned to North Texas State.

"The music kept me here. The music scene is so huge – I found it very exciting. I especially enjoyed hearing amazing songwriters at little places like The Living Room. Everything opened up for me." For about a year beginning in December 1999, Norah appeared regularly with the funk-fusion band Wax Poetic (now signed to Atlantic). But she soon assembled her own group with Jesse Harris, Lee Alexander, and Dan Rieser. In October 2000, this lineup recorded a selection of demos for Blue Note Records. On the strength of these recordings and a live showcase, Jones was signed to Blue Note in January 2001. Norah sang two songs (Roxy Music's "More Than This" and "Day Is Done" by Nick Drake) on guitarist Charlie Hunter's Blue Note album Songs from the Analog Playground, and has frequently performed live with Hunter's group.

Norah began recording the songs of Come Away With Me in May 2001, doing preliminary work with producer Craig Street at Bearsville Studio in Woodstock, New York In August 2001, the singer and her musicians went back to work – this time with Arif Mardin at Sorcerer Sound in Manhattan.

"I was nervous at first. I didn't want some amazing producer who'd done all these famous records to come in and have me be scared to tell him what I thought. But Arif is the nicest guy in the world, very easygoing. He was there to keep my act together and make sure I got a good record… Arif had great ideas."

"I never thought I'd have a record like this – I thought it would be at least five years before I'd reach that point. This is really the record I wanted to make."

Edited by Qwest - 19 years ago
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#9
  • Norah Jones has actor's "aura"

    Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai says Grammy-winning singer Norah Jones has an actor's "aura," and that their coming collaboration, the film 'My Blueberry Night,' was tailor-made for Norah Jonesher. "Of course everyone knows her because she's a singer, but I didn't pick her for this film because she's a very successful singer. I think she's suitable for acting," Wong said in an interview with Hong Kong's Cable TV from Cannes which aired yesterday.

    Wong heads the jury panel at the ongoing Cannes Film Festival. "This is instinct. It's like how I felt that Faye Wong could act when I first saw her a few years ago. There's a very special aura," Wong said, referring to the Chinese pop diva who appeared in his movies 'Chungking Express' and '2046.'

    Asked if 'My Blueberry Night' was written for Jones, Wong said "you could say that." Wong described the film as a love story and said he has also cast Jude Law, Natalie Portman and Rachel Weisz.

  • Edited by Qwest - 19 years ago

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