Search - jones norah :: not too late

not too late
jones norah
not too late
Genre: Jazz
 
Album Details 1. "Wish I Could" (Norah Jones-Lee Alexander): Norah Jones: vocals; Jesse Harris: acoustic guitars; Julia Kent: pizzicato cello; Jeffery Ziegler: bowed cello 2. "Sinkin' Soon" (Lee Alex...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: jones norah
Title: not too late
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Genre: Jazz
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
Other Editions: Not Too Late, Not Too Late, Not Too Late, Deluxe Edition
UPC: 094638203520

Synopsis

From Blue Note
Album Details 1. "Wish I Could" (Norah Jones-Lee Alexander): Norah Jones: vocals; Jesse Harris: acoustic guitars; Julia Kent: pizzicato cello; Jeffery Ziegler: bowed cello 2. "Sinkin' Soon" (Lee Alexander-Norah Jones): Norah: vocals, piano; Daru Oda: vocals; M. Ward: vocals; Jesse Harris: guitjo; Kevin Breit: mandolin; J. Walter Hawkes: trombone; Lee Alexander: bass; Andy Borger: drums, slit drum, pots and pans 3. "The Sun Doesn't Like You" (Norah Jones-Lee Alexander): Norah Jones: vocals, piano; Jesse Harris: acoustic guitar; Adam Levy: electric guitar; Lee Alexander: bass; Andy Borger: drums; Paul Bryan: Chamberlain keyboards 4. "Until The End" (Norah Jones-Lee Alexander): Norah Jones: vocals, Wurlitzer, piano; Jesse Harris: acoustic guitar; Adam Levy: electric guitar; Lee Alexander: bass; Andy Borger: drums; Larry Goldings: Hammond B-3 organ 5. "Not My Friend" (Norah Jones): Norah Jones: vocals; Jesse Harris: acoustic guitars; Adam Levy: backwards electric guitars; Lee Alexander: bass; Andy Borger: marimba, cymbals 6. "Thinking About You" (Norah Jones-Ilhan Ersahin): Norah Jones: vocals, Wurlitzer; Chuck Mackinnon: trumpet; Rob Suddith: tenor sax; Lee Alexander: bass; Tony Mason: drums; Devin Greenwood: Hammond B-3 organ 7. "Broken" (Norah Jones-Lee Alexander): Norah Jones: vocals, electric guitar; Julia Kent: outro cellos; Lee Alexander: pizzicato, bowed basses 8. "My Dear Country" (Norah Jones): Norah Jones: vocals, piano; J. Walter Hawkes: trombones; Jose Davilla: tuba; Bill McHenry: tenor sax; Larry Goldings: Hammond B-3 organ 9. "Wake Me Up" (Norah Jones-Lee Alexander): Norah Jones: vocals, acoustic guitars; Lee Alexander: bass, lap steel; Andy Borger: drums 10. "Be My Somebody" (Norah Jones): Norah Jones: vocals, Wurlitzer; Richard Julian: vocals; Tony Scherr: electric guitar; Lee Alexander: bass; Andy Borger: drums; Larry Goldings: Hammond B-3 organ 11. "Little Room" (Norah Jones): Norah Jones: vocals, acoustic guitar; Lee Alexander: bass; Daru Oda: whistle 12. "Rosie's Lullaby" (Norah Jones-Daru Oda): Norah Jones: vocals, Wurlizter; Daru Oda: vocals; Adam Levy: electric guitar, vocal; Robbie McIntosh: electric guitar; Lee Alexander: bass; Andy Borger: drums 13. "Not Too Late" (Norah Jones-Lee Alexander): Norah Jones: vocals, piano, Mellotron; Lee Alexander: bass; Andy Borger: drums Produced by Lee Alexander Norah Jones Photos (images by Danny Clinch)         More from Norah Jones

Come Away with Me
Feels Like Home
The Little Willies

Similar CDs


Similarly Requested CDs

 

CD Reviews

Languid and dreamy, a dash of smoky, sultry cabaret....
Amskeating | 03/05/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"While the first two albums were dominated by covers, "Not Too Late" is all solo or co-written original material.



It's not startling, as these songs continue her pop-meets-country with a dash of smoky cabaret style. Nor is it exactly revelatory. Firstly her life, apart from the fame, has been remarkably normal and uneventful and lyrically the new material is mostly observational. ("I have a wonderful boyfriend. So how am I going to write a tortured break-up song? My life is really good and I don't want to ruin it just for a good song.").



Still, there are a few pointed lines about misplaced love and even some mild political commentary in "My Dear Country".



The album has its share of strong tracks, like the Dylanesque "Wish I Could", with its unexpected half-note elisions, or the trad-jazzy Tom Waits-like "Sinkin' Soon", or the haunting, whimsical, cello-darkened "Broken".



The mood is mostly dreamy, lazy country-rockers, quirky waltzes, a little earthy bluesiness and bits of laid-back funk, and there's even a demurely delivered anti-Bush song.



Jones's voice, always more characterful than the easy-listening tag ever implied, sometimes shifts to a strange place between Madeleine Peyroux's or Diane Krall's jazzy smokiness and the sultry, jazz/soul balladry a la Billie Holiday..



But Norah's and partner Lee Alexander's tunes need to improve if the singer isn't to retreat to covering classics again, as she almost certainly will. It's pretty music (though the sugary " Little Room" gets to tooth-twinge point), beautifully performed.

But Norah Jones has more to offer than this, and the needs of the EMI boardroom probably won't help her find it.

"
Lovingly crafted and sweetly sung.
gizgoogmai | London, England UK | 03/11/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Norah Jones's first two albums sold some 17 million and 10 million copies respectively, the kind of diminishing returns that even the flintiest of record company accountants can accept.



Whether that level can be sustained with "Not Too Late" remains to be seen, but the subtle changes to her style here seem like a shrewd attempt to expand artistically without disturbing her core audience, most of whom will still be in the long, deep sleep triggered by her previous albums, anyway.



That lullaby effect continues here - there's even a song called "Rosie's Lullaby" - but it's what's happening at the fringes of the record that's most interesting: things like the unusually intimate string arrangement created by The Kronos Quartet for "Broken", and the New Orleans rumba-rock undercarriage to "Be My Somebody", and its snaking slide-guitar break with the faintest of scorched edges.



There are still plenty of languid cabaret shuffles, piano ballads and neutered blues, but few are as effective as "Sinkin' Soon", where Norah's joined by the simpatico M Ward on a stalking cakewalk of banjo, piano and sleazy muted trumpet.





The highlights of this album, in my opinion , are: "Sinkin' Soon", "Be My Somebody", "Broken".



"
Less is more.
Esthero | 03/01/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Grammy Award-winning 2002 debut "Come Away With Me" (20 million copies sold worldwide and still counting), and the follow-up "Feels Like Home".

This (her third) album offers us basically more of the same - 13 songs about wistful love, sunsets and daydreaming, aimed squarely at the middle-of-the-road Jazz-lite listener..

It's another collection of intimate, languorous songs which shocase Norah's seductive vocal talent.

Jones wrote all of the songs on this album, apparently, including the recently released single "Thinking About You".

As with previous records, Norah's famed voice (variously described as "sultry" and "sleep-inducing") is the main draw on this album, as she plods away at the keyboard until it's all over.

She and her stripped vocal and musical style hearken back to a past time - back when music was allowed to emote and when instruments were played by actual, real, live humans with blood and guts and stuff.

The Grammy connoisseur's third album continues her exploration of pop, jazz, soul, folk and country in a manner that hasn't been done since Nina Simone was rightfully cursing out audiences who dared to talk during any one of her rapt performances.

Like her predecessor -- with whom she shares a plaintive, smoky vocal style -- Jones' music is without pretension or any hints of overt experimentation. Her lyrics are earnest expressions of everyday life -- "Annie is standing in the door / With a look on her face I can't ignore / She tells me that her heart is sore / And pulls me in" ("Wish I Could") - and they hover over simple arrangements that comprise nothing more than a piano, bass, guitar, occasional horns and strings, and a percussion section.

The effect as a whole is an equable meditation on life and love and a testament to the enduring allure of music without ornamentation.

Under the sparse arrangements and understated delivery - something of a Norah trademark - there's a lot of musicality in play, even though deceptively subdued.

Less is more.Indeed."