New Bits
JOAN
OSBORNE RELEASES THE BLUES-INSPIRED BRING IT ON
HOME
Joan
Osborne recalls how Blues music rescued me
when I was in need of rescue.
On her newest album, Bring it on
Home, Joan returns the favor and it's the blues
that gets new life. Drawing from a voice the New
York Times called angelic ecstasy and
sexual abandon, Joan Osborne has at long
last made an album of vintage blues, R&B and
soul songs. Bring it on Home will be released on
March 27th (Saguaro Road Records).
A collection of some of her favorite classic
songs, Bring it on Home is Osborne's tribute to
the music she has long loved and drew inspiration
from. I knew that, someday, when the time
was right and my voice was ready, Osborne
says, I wanted to make a recording like the
one you're holding now. With vocals that
growl and soar, Osborne alternately cries out
with heart-wrenching soul and foot-stomping
grooves.
The voices of Otis Redding and Al Green
soothed a troubled soul, the power of Etta James
and Tina Turner gave me courage, and the depth of
feeling of Muddy Waters and so many other great
blues artists allowed me to find and express my
own depths, explains Osborne. When I
began to sing in New York City in my early 20's,
I wanted nothing more than to model myself on
these people, to inhabit the music as they did in
some small way.
She personally selected the obscure gem
Roll Like A Big Wheel from her own
record collection and added rock n' roll-fueled
urgency to it. She also dug deep into John
Mayall's work and came back with Broken
Wings, where her vocal performance draws
both goosebumps and tears. The often overlooked
Ike Turner-penned Game of Love was
another treasure Osborne chose to record, and
during the sessions an impromptu rendition of
Shake Your Hips made its way onto the
album. Shake Your Hips is the lead
track off of Bring it on Homeand will be shipped
to radio stations in January for airplay.
Bring it on Home also includes tracks originally
made famous by American blues masters such as
Sonny Boy Wil-liamson (Bring it on
Home), Muddy Waters (I Want to Be
Loved), as well as recordings originally
released by some of the greatest R&B singers
ever including Ray Charles (I Don't Need No
Doctor), Al Green (Rhymes) and
Otis Redding (Champagne and Wine).
Bring it on Home was produced by Joan and her
longtime music director/guitarist Jack
Petruzzelli. It was recorded live in the
Waterfront Studios in Hudson, NY by engineer
Henry Hirsch (Lenny Kravitz), who used an
original 24 track Studer tape machine to recreate
the warm and organic analogue sound of the era.
Guest musicians include Barbecue Bob Pomeroy
(harmonica), Allen Toussaint (piano on his own
Shoorah! Shoorah!) and vocalists the
Holmes Brothers and Rufus Thomas' daughter,
Vaneese Thomas. Jimmy Vivino, Conan O'Brien Show
Band musi-cal director, assembled all horn
arrangements and also played electric piano on
I Don't Need no Doctor.
Joan Osborne has sold millions of albums and
garnered multiple Grammy nominations throughout
her critically and commercially acclaimed career.
In addition to her own headlining tours, she has
sung lead vocals for The Dead (formerly the
Grateful Dead) and was featured in the
award-winning film Standing In The Shadows of
Motown.
New Album Due March 27th
WWW.JOANOSBORNE.COM
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