Showing posts with label Joss Stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joss Stone. Show all posts

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Jools Holland - The Golden Age Of Song

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:16
Size: 133.4 MB
Styles: Jazz/Pop/Rock vocals
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:15] 1. Something's Got A Hold On Me (With Paloma Faith)
[3:40] 2. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
[2:36] 3. Lovin' Machine
[4:17] 4. Bei Mir Bist Du Schön (With Joss Stone)
[3:01] 5. Get Here (With Jessie J.)
[3:53] 6. A Place In The Sun (With James Morrison)
[4:07] 7. Don't Go To Strangers (With Amy Winehouse, Paul Weller)
[3:34] 8. And That Ain't Good (With Mick Hucknall)
[3:37] 9. My Baby Just Cares For Me (With Florence Welch)
[3:13] 10. Mad About The Boy (With Caro Emerald)
[3:35] 11. I'll Sail My Ship Alone (With Tom Jones)
[2:56] 12. Reet Petite (With Cee Lo Green)
[3:11] 13. Sweet Country Love Song (With Gregory Porter)
[3:09] 14. September In The Rain (With Paul Weller)
[2:54] 15. The Lady Is A Tramp (With Lily Rose Cooper)
[3:30] 16. Get Away Jordan (With Ruby Turner)
[3:41] 17. When You're Smiling The Whole World Smiles With You

2012 release from the musician and entertainment personality. It's true to say that Jools Holland has become a national treasure, and The Golden Age Of Song is the perfect way to celebrate not only Jools' on-going musical odyssey but also an amazing 20 years of Later. The album features a who's who of contemporary artists, with everyone from Cee Lo Green and James Morrison to Paloma Faith and Lily Rose Cooper (nee Allen). The songs are instantly recognisable and have become staples of any discerning music lover from the last 50 years. Tracks include Nina Simone's 'My Baby Just Cares For Me' as performed by Florence Welch, as well as Lily Rose Cooper's take on The Lady Is A Tramp, and Get Here originally by Oleta Adam as sung by Jessie J. The tracks are a combination of brand new exclusive tracks recorded specifically for this album, along with a smattering of re-mixed tracks from Jools' New Year's Eve favourite, 'The Hootenanny'.

The Golden Age Of Song mc
The Golden Age Of Song zippy

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Joss Stone - The Best Of Joss Stone 2003-2009

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:27
Size: 140,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:39)  1. Fell In Love With A Boy
(4:20)  2. Super Duper Love
(4:00)  3. You Had Me
(4:41)  4. Right To Be Wrong
(3:33)  5. Don't Cha Wanna Ride
(4:03)  6. Spoiled
(2:51)  7. Tell Me 'Bout It
(4:36)  8. Baby Baby Baby
(4:24)  9. Tell Me What We're Gonna Do Now (feat. Common)
(4:17) 10. Bruised But Not Broken
(2:49) 11. L-O-V-E
(3:53) 12. Free Me
(4:17) 13. Stalemate (feat. Jamie Hartman)

Before she’s truly freed from the shackles of EMI, Joss Stone must endure one final indignity: that standard end-of-contract ploy, a greatest-hits album, covering her six years with the label. Every one of her 12 singles for the label is here, with the Jamie Hartman duet “Stalemate” originally released on Ben’s Brother’s 2009 album added as a concluding track. If this doesn’t dig deep, it nevertheless hits all the highlights her White Stripes cover “Fell in Love with a Boy,” her Top Ten U.K. hit “You Had Me,” “Don’t Cha Wanna Ride,” her only charting U.S. single “Tell Me 'Bout It,” the Common duet “Tell Me What We’re Gonna Do Now”drawing a picture of the decade when Stone was always on the cusp of stardom yet never quite truly there. As introductions go, it’s a solid one, capturing her potential and promise, alternating between singles frustrating and fun. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-best-of-joss-stone-2003-2009-mw0002095249

The Best Of Joss Stone 2003-2009

Thursday, April 12, 2018

Joss Stone - Mind Body & Soul

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:29
Size: 192,1 MB
Art: Front

( 4:43)  1. Right To Be Wrong
( 4:03)  2. Jet Lag
( 4:01)  3. You Had Me
( 4:05)  4. Spoiled
( 3:33)  5. Don't Cha Wanna Ride
( 4:19)  6. Less Is More
( 4:32)  7. Security
( 4:12)  8. Young At Heart
( 3:37)  9. Snakes & Ladders
( 3:49) 10. Understand
( 4:03) 11. Don't Know How
( 4:00) 12. Torn & Tattered
( 5:14) 13. Killing Time
(15:29) 14. Sleep Like A Child
( 2:44) 15. Untitled Track

On the cover of her debut, The Soul Sessions, Joss Stone's face is obscured by a vintage microphone, a deliberate move that emphasized the retro-soul vibe of the LP while hiding the youthful face that would have given away that Stone was a mere 16 years old at the time of the album's release. The point was to put the music before the image and it worked, selling the album to an older audience that might have stayed away, thinking that the teenager sang teen pop. If the debut was designed to give Stone credibility, her second album, Mind, Body & Soul, delivered almost exactly a year after its predecessor, is designed to make her a superstar, broadening her appeal without losing sight of the smooth, funky, stylish soul at the core of her sound. There's no radical revision here she still works with many of the same musicians she did on The Soul Sessions, including Betty Wright and Little Beaver but there are some subtle shifts in tone scattered throughout the record. Certain songs are a little brighter and a little more radio-ready than before, there's a more pronounced hip-hop vibe to some beats, and she sounds a little more like a diva this time around  not enough to alienate older fans, but enough to win some new ones. The album has a seductive, sultry feel; there's some genuine grit to the rhythms, yet it's all wrapped up in a production that's smooth as silk. By and large, the songs are good, too, sturdily written and hooky, growing in stature with each play. While Stone has developed a tendency to over-sing ever so slightly she doesn't grandstand like the post-Mariah divas, but she'll fit more notes than necessary into the simplest phrases she nevertheless possesses a rich, resonant voice that's a joy to hear. She may not yet have the set of skills, or the experience, to give a nuanced, textured performance one that feels truly lived-in, not just sung but she's a compelling singer and Mind, Body & Soul lives up to her promise. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/mind-body-soul-mw0000150070               

Mind Body & Soul

Saturday, April 22, 2017

Joss Stone - 2 albums: Soul Sessions / Soul Sessions Vol. 2

Album: Soul Sessions
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:00
Size: 96.2 MB
Styles: Neo-soul
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:34] 1. The Chokin' Kind
[4:19] 2. Super Duper Love
[3:37] 3. Fell In Love With A Boy
[5:31] 4. Victim Of A Foolish Heart
[2:59] 5. Dirty Man
[3:54] 6. Some Kind Of Wonderful
[4:27] 7. I've Fallen In Love With You
[2:59] 8. I Had A Dream
[3:02] 9. All The King's Horses
[7:33] 10. For The Love Of You

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 -- 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 -- 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 -- even heartbreakingly -- 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. ~Thom Jurek

Soul Sessions

Album: The Soul Sessions Vol. 2 (Deluxe Edition)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:22
Size: 142.8 MB
Styles: Neo-soul
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:58] 1. I Got The..
[3:45] 2. (For God's Sake) Give More Power To The People
[3:26] 3. While You're Out Looking For Sugar
[3:37] 4. Sideway Shuffle
[5:01] 5. I Don't Want To Be With Nobody But You
[5:54] 6. Teardrops
[3:11] 7. Stoned Out Of My Mind
[4:43] 8. The Love We Had (Stays On My Mind)
[4:38] 9. The High Road
[4:41] 10. Pillow Talk
[3:50] 11. Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye
[3:37] 12. First Taste Of Hurt
[3:47] 13. One Love In My Lifetime
[3:23] 14. Nothing Takes The Place Of You
[3:44] 15. (1-2-3-4-5-6-7) Count The Days

Joss Stone launched her career by singing soul standards so when it came time for a reboot she went back to the beginning, dusting off the old blueprint for The Soul Sessions and following it to a T, right down to replicating its title and giving a contemporary alt-rock hit a soul makeover. First time around, the intent was to prove that teenage Joss had soul bona fides, but in 2012 the purpose of The Soul Sessions, Vol. 2 is to signal how she's done messing around with fleeting fashions and is getting back down to the real business. Stone doesn't dig deep into the crates this time around, nor does she stick to deep soul; she chooses to mine hits from the early '70s, favoring songs by the Dells, the Chi-Lites, and Sylvia, giving these smooth tunes a bit of a polished Southern spin. And "professional" is the operative word here: this is the work of seasoned veterans who play with every note falling neatly into place, stretching just enough to show off their chops but never enough to alter the DNA of a song. The exception to the rule is, of course, "The High Road," a Broken Bells song refashioned to sound old, thereby occupying the same space as Joss' White Stripes "Fell in Love with a Boy" cover did on the first Soul Sessions. This is the song to prove that Stone isn't living in the past but rather she's seeing the future through a retro prism that turns everything into something that feels classic. That Stone remains a bit too theatrical a singer, overemphasizing every phrase, is almost besides the point, as she's a diva and is expected to sing with more gusto than the song requires just as long as the overall package feels right. And, for the most part, The Soul Sessions, Vol. 2 does feel right: it has the form and sound of classic soul while never acknowledging that R&B continued to develop past, say, 1972. For an audience that agrees with that thesis, this is fun. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

The Soul Sessions Vol. 2 (Deluxe Edition)

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Jools Holland - Sirens Of Song

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:29
Size: 108.7 MB
Styles: Big band, Vocal jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:52] 1. Jumpin' In The Morning
[4:19] 2. Letting Me Down (With Joss Stone)
[3:05] 3. Love Me Or Leave Me (With Evie Sands)
[3:50] 4. A Vow (with Louise Marshall)
[2:45] 5. Monkey Man (With Amy Winehouse)
[3:26] 6. Should I Stay Or Should I Go
[3:32] 7. Sweet Bitter Love (With Mabel Ray)
[3:40] 8. See-Line Woman (With Laura Mvula)
[2:37] 9. Lost Mind (With Rumer)
[2:42] 10. Top To Bottom Boogie (With Imelda May)
[3:05] 11. Night And Day (With KT Tunstall)
[4:21] 12. I Wish
[3:54] 13. I Still Went Wrong
[3:17] 14. Ain't Misbehavin'

Jools Holland is back with an elite gathering of world-class female artists, with big band support from his Rhythm & Blues Orchestra. Sirens Of Song highlights Jools' talent for amazing collaborations and features duets with some of the most iconic female voices in contemporary and classic music. Jools Holland said: "It's a privilege and honour to celebrate and bring together, for the first time ever, some of the greatest female vocalists and writers of our time on this new record.

"I'm so grateful to have had the support of these incredibly gifted women in music who bring that magical female perspective to every track... Collaborating and working with this diverse and dazzling array of talent, who hail from all sorts of genres spanning from today and back to the jazz age, has been an inspiration and something rather special... Enjoy."

Sirens Of Song is a true showcase in musicianship and combines an array of wonderful performers with Jools' talent and big band support from his Rhythm & Blues Orchestra. The 14-track album features a
selection of originals and reworked classics.

Sirens Of Song

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Van Morrison - Duets: Reworking The Catalogue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:43
Size: 175.6 MB
Styles: R&B, Rock, Blues, Soul vocals
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[5:15] 1. Some Peace Of Mind (With Bobby Womack)
[3:50] 2. If I Ever Needed Someone (With Mavis Staples)
[3:49] 3. Higher Than The World (With George Benson)
[6:23] 4. Wild Honey (With Joss Stone)
[3:43] 5. Whatever Happened To P.J. Proby (With P.J. Proby)
[4:54] 6. Carrying A Torch (With Clare Teal)
[4:12] 7. The Eternal Kansas City (With Gregory Porter)
[4:58] 8. Streets Of Arklow (With Mick Hucknall)
[3:52] 9. These Are The Days (With Natalie Cole)
[4:42] 10. Get On With The Show (With Georgie Fame)
[4:24] 11. Rough God Goes Riding (With Shana Morrison)
[6:42] 12. Fire In The Belly (With Stevie Winwood)
[4:00] 13. Born To Sing (With Chris Farlowe)
[5:15] 14. Irish Heartbeat (With Mark Knopfler)
[4:02] 15. Real Real Gone (With Michael Buble)
[6:34] 16. How Can A Poor Boy (With Taj Mahal)

On DUETS: RE-WORKING THE CATALOGUE, Van Morrison and the guests selected and recorded some of his songs from the catalog of 360 songs across his career. Deliberately steering away from his more well-known classics, Van enlisted some of the artists he most respects to perform these songs with him to re-craft and re-imagine them. The album was recorded in his home town of Belfast and London in the United Kingdom over the last year, using a variety of musicians and fresh arrangements.

Produced by Van Morrison along with Don Was and Bob Rock, the album features duet performances with Bobby Womack, Steve Winwood, Mark Knopfler, Taj Mahal, Mavis Staples, Michael Bublé, Natalie Cole, George Benson, Gregory Porter, Clare Teal, P.J. Proby, Joss Stone, Georgie Fame, Mick Hucknall, Chris Farlowe, and Van's daughter Shana Morrison.

Van Morrison is considered one of the most prolific recording artists and extraordinary live performers of our time. He has received a multitude of awards and accolades including 6 Grammy Awards, a Brit Award, an OBE, an Ivor Novello, and has been inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. His visionary songwriting and mastery of many genres continues to shine on albums celebrating and re-exploring his blues, jazz, skiffle and country roots. With one of the most revered catalogues in music history, his talents as a composer, singer and performer are unmatched.

Duets: Reworking The Catalogue