Rickie Lee Jones, c/d?

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yep, i was *just* going to say that.

didn't she try and sue them or something.

piscesboy, Monday, 23 September 2002 13:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

three years pass...
this morning, for the first time in four or five years, i had an overwhelming desire to listen to RLJ's first album. i've always been a casual fan of hers, and i own and enjoy the s/t and a couple others, but i don't ever play them that much.

but holy shit! this record is so much more perfect than i remembered it. and it has that very "1979 singer-songwriter trying to get on FM rock radio" production quality.

what strikes me most of all is how GOOD -- how completely and totally OTM -- her waits impression is.

like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel (Jody Beth Rosen), Friday, 2 December 2005 20:33 (eighteen years ago) link

I've always loved that record, and I love about 3/4 of Pirates, too; "So Long Lonely Avenue" especially just gets me every time. Her "Walk Away Renee" on Girl At Her Volcano is fantastic, too. And for that matter The Magazine has "It Must Be Love," which is just lush & gorgeous...she overdoes it fairly often throughout her career, but I think her best stuff doesn't just hold up: it gets better with age.

Banana Nutrament (ghostface), Friday, 2 December 2005 22:20 (eighteen years ago) link

The Magazine is completely underrated, and the first and second records are great. After that we went our separate ways.

The Obligatory Sourpuss (Begs2Differ), Friday, 2 December 2005 22:24 (eighteen years ago) link

i wanted to steal the s/t record from my mom a few months ago and noticed it had been recently signed by jones. i felt bad and left the record at home. i really do want it and should scour the dollar bins.

also, what's up w/the fact that my mom won't let me steal her records anymore. she doesn't EVER listen to them. and what i listen to almost exactly mimics what she was listening to at my age

jaxon (jaxon), Friday, 2 December 2005 22:34 (eighteen years ago) link

i really do want it and should scour the dollar bins.

ANY dollar bin should have it. i'm assuming you don't have it on CD or mp3s?

like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel (Jody Beth Rosen), Friday, 2 December 2005 22:37 (eighteen years ago) link

Rickie lee Jones, S/D?

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Friday, 2 December 2005 22:38 (eighteen years ago) link

xpost to jody. nah, never actually picked it up. i've listened to it numerous times but only own Pirates

jaxon (jaxon), Friday, 2 December 2005 22:49 (eighteen years ago) link

The 3 CD anthology Duchess of Coolsville out this year makes a pretty good argument for her talent -- and for her flakiness: Alphabetical sequencing is not brilliant.

Roy Kasten, Friday, 2 December 2005 23:42 (eighteen years ago) link

That first album is great -- "Easy Money," "Danny's All-Star Joint," "Coolsville". But I'm not sure I need anything else. When I want to hear Rickie Lee, that album is what I want to hear.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 3 December 2005 00:41 (eighteen years ago) link

I saw her in 1983, when I was in high school, at a show on some west side (NY) pier. She was wonderful. She seemed really high, but in a sweet way. At some point, after a song, some guy in the audience shouted "You're the greatest!" And she said:

"Naw...naw...I'm not the greatest. I don't think there is a 'greatest.' Maybe we're living in a time of No Greatest. There's no 'greatest' anymore. I dunno...maybe one of -you- is the greatest. [pause] Hey...if anybody here thinks they're the greatest, come on up onstage. [pause] Naw...never mind...one of you assholes would probably do it."

Still the best stage patter I've ever heard.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:32 (eighteen years ago) link

Also: In a just world, "Company" would be as much a standard as "Body and Soul."

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:37 (eighteen years ago) link

Also: at some point, just to amuse myself, I decided that "Coolsville" was about anal sex. I never really belived it, but I've never been able to get it out of my mind.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:40 (eighteen years ago) link

"Naw...naw...I'm not the greatest. I don't think there is a 'greatest.' Maybe we're living in a time of No Greatest. There's no 'greatest' anymore. I dunno...maybe one of -you- is the greatest. [pause] Hey...if anybody here thinks they're the greatest, come on up onstage. [pause] Naw...never mind...one of you assholes would probably do it."

http://www.matadorrecords.com/images/minis/ole-626.jpg

xpost: i figured it was one of the other kinds.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:41 (eighteen years ago) link

There are other kinds?

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:43 (eighteen years ago) link

Somewhere I still have a button from that concert on the pier. It was sponsored by WPLJ, I think.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:45 (eighteen years ago) link

awesome!

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:46 (eighteen years ago) link

Did anyone see her this summer in Prospect Park? I totally forgot about it, but the person I went to that concert with in high went, and called me with her cell in the middle of it. I came home to several minutes of "So Long, Lonely Avenue" on my answering machine and got absolutely weepy.

(Sorry, I've been drinking Pernod, and am sentimental and nostalgic.)

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:54 (eighteen years ago) link

"...concert in high -school-..."

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:55 (eighteen years ago) link

Also: I don't think Waits ever did anything as good as her first album. (But then, neither did she, again.)

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:03 (eighteen years ago) link

Also: I don't think Waits ever did anything as good as her first album.

not even small change? i'll grant that he could be excessively maudlin and prone to the worst elements of beat-cliche, but the sadness is sad and the jokes are roffletastic and the cocktail-schmaltz piano playing is just godly.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:09 (eighteen years ago) link

dream cover: rickie doing "burma shave"

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:15 (eighteen years ago) link

There's this lovely unforced giddiness in "Chuck E." and "Danny's All-Star Joint." Like she can't believe she's getting to do this. Despite the standard 70s singer-songwriterness-ness of the sound, I have this sense that she really wasn't sure if she would ever make another record again. It doesn't sound like someone beginning a "recording career." And despite all she's done since, it still sounds like a weird, one-off artifact.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:15 (eighteen years ago) link

some of the best first albums have that feeling.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:18 (eighteen years ago) link

Maybe the reason I remember that 1983 stage patter is that it echoes what I think of as the appeal of her work: that coy "come here-go away" thing that's made all the more powerful by my belief that she really, really doesn't give a fuck. Waits is brilliant, but he always acts like he wants people to know that. She seems not to care, really.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:19 (eighteen years ago) link

but don't forget, when an artist "really, really doesn't give a fuck" then there's usually very little quality control.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:26 (eighteen years ago) link

Exactly....which is why I think the limited sonic universe of the 1970s singer-songwriter album worked best for her. She didn't give a fuck, but her context was still FM radio...and that was a pretty tight context. Once she could do whatever she wanted, she became less interesting.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:32 (eighteen years ago) link

That first album is more interesting than Waits because its both more formulaic and less self-assured/self-conscious. People scratching at constraints always tugs at my heart more than full-on "expression."

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:36 (eighteen years ago) link

i agree with you there. i LOVE rules; they force people to think creatively, whereas "free" expression can all too often make an artist lazy, bereft of new ideas, prone to relying on whatever crutch they have.

otoh, i'd hate to think of where we'd be if our favorite wackos had never been allowed to free-express.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:42 (eighteen years ago) link

It's like both she and Waits are working with the same material: that Brill Building/hepcat nexus. But she treats her influences lightly, and dives into like a drunken karaoke performance. This is her chance on the stage, and damn, its fun. Waits acts like all that stuff is an inheritance he has to live up to.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:46 (eighteen years ago) link

xpost on that last one...

But yeah, of course, total rulelessness can be pretty fab.

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:49 (eighteen years ago) link

Waits acts like all that stuff is an inheritance he has to live up to

i think if anything waits has gotten more like that over the years -- it's a shame his frank's wild years/black rider phase had to turn into stuffy elderstatesmanship rather than the full-on nihilism it should have progressed into. he's had a similar career arc as neil young (who shouldn't be doing that grandfatherly folksy twaddle either).

the early tom waits records were fun innocent L.A. hedonism. dirty jokes. good times.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:52 (eighteen years ago) link

Hmm. I think y'all are right about the genius and context of the first 3 records and the 10" ("Walk Away Renee" enthusiastically seconded). However, I think there are more riches and rewards in her later work as well. That Jimi Hendrix cover on Pop, for example, and also all of "Ghostyhead", which I think is my favorite (and most underrated) of her albums.

I would still rather listen to Small Change, it must be said.

sleeve (sleeve), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:53 (eighteen years ago) link

I must dig out Small Change. I think you're probably right, and I'm thinking about the early stuff through the lens of the later stuff. (But then, that's how I came to it, myself.)

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:58 (eighteen years ago) link

By the way: what's the deal with the Chuck E. Weiss album (or is there more than one?)? It's not really worth listening to, is it?

Marcel Post (Marcel Post), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:00 (eighteen years ago) link

her recent cover of "Show Biz Kids" was rather unfortunate tho

Banana Nutrament (ghostface), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:05 (eighteen years ago) link

there are two, but the first one is apparently impossible to get a hold of. the second one isn't by any means essential, but if you ever see it in a cutout bin for a dollar, pick it up. it's cute. (xpost)

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:07 (eighteen years ago) link

also I remember a show Rickie Lee did in Indianapolis where she stopped the song midway to yell at and/or abuse the audience for talking and being inattentive. For the purposes of this thread, that alone = TOTAL CLASSIC.

sleeve (sleeve), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:18 (eighteen years ago) link

i've seen other artists do that. ordinarily i'm all in favor of making an example out of rude jerkwads, but when a performer stops a show to do that to HER audience... kinda lame.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:42 (eighteen years ago) link

it's like throwing a party and then chewing your friends out because they're not fully mesmerized by every brilliant observation you make.

The Great Pagoda of Funn (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:46 (eighteen years ago) link

one year passes...
There was a more recently updated RLJ thread; I'm reviving this one because at least her name is spelled right.

New album Sermon On Exposition Boulevard is a big mess. She walks in the sandals of Jesus when there was nothing wrong with her boots; she also does this mewling speaking-in-tongues thing on a few songs. Not good. And yet, and yet--the first song, "Nobody Knows My Name" rocks harder than she ever has. Drone-mantra, post VU throw down. We don't need another song about Elvis (the Son of God, of course) and Cadillacs, but this one has a groove that gets her over the silly name dropping (I think it's available for download on her website somewhere). And her voice is really terrific, when she's not mewling, and some of the best tracks just about reach the Vanological gospel trance state she's always loved. I give it a solid B.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 02:02 (seventeen years ago) link

I like that she wrote a song about me once.

chuck e. (xhuck), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 02:40 (seventeen years ago) link

This is a good thread. The comparisons with Waits are spot-on. I actually like her cover of 'Show Biz Kids'.

is anyone anticipating the new Baaderonixx? (baaderonixx), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 09:13 (seventeen years ago) link

eleven months pass...

I'm really digging 'Magazine' right now.

baaderonixx, Friday, 11 January 2008 09:41 (sixteen years ago) link

That album has one of the most wtf reviews on AMG:

The reason The Magazine was such a disappointment was that Rickie Lee Jones had proven herself a major artist with her first two albums and turned into a self-conscious, pretentious, minor one on this, her third. Once, she made art by observing street people and describing them carefully; now she tried to make "Art" by navel-gazing. What a letdown.

baaderonixx, Friday, 11 January 2008 09:43 (sixteen years ago) link

"The Magazine" is one of the greatest albums of the 80's..."Deep Space" is just breathtaking

sonnyboy, Friday, 11 January 2008 12:29 (sixteen years ago) link

classic

Tracer Hand, Friday, 11 January 2008 12:31 (sixteen years ago) link

However the AMG review of her last album Sermon on Exposition Boulevard makes it sound amazing. Thom Jurek is so the best "I'll have what he's having" reviewer of AMG. He likes recent Maria McKee too though which makes me inclined to trust him.

Tim F, Friday, 11 January 2008 21:43 (sixteen years ago) link

two years pass...

So I need to go back and read through whole thread, but I'm really curious: After her debut LP, did Rickie Lee ever do any tracks with anywhere near the bounce, energy, hooks, and humor of "Chuck E.'s In Love" and "Danny's All Star Joint" again? They're far and away the best things on that album (I'd take "Weasel And The White Boys Cool" third, then probably "Easy Money"), most of the rest being dull tasteful ballads (tasteful musically, anyway, even when asking you to stick it into coolsville.) I've never heard Pirates or Magazine, and I'm guessing they'd bore me (like her Girl At Her Volcano covers EP did), but maybe I'm wrong. (Also, if she didn't ever do anything as catchy as "Chuck E.'s" again, I'm wondering if she ever explained why not. Was she just embrassed about having an actual hit?)

Also starting to be convinced, though, that she was probably at least a somewhat relevant influence on Teena Marie's beatnik jive-talk side -- even ballads like "Company" on the debut sound kinda proto-Teena, and the lyric sheet looks a little like It Must Be The Magic's inner sleeve. They both even include photos of themselves as little girls. Teena's debut LP came out in 1979, too, but she didn't really reveal her beatnik side until later. Of course, it's possible they were both just channeling Joni Mitchell in vaugely similar ways.

xhuxk, Monday, 26 April 2010 02:11 (thirteen years ago) link

It seems like there's always been a mismatch between her singing voice and speaking voice. I remember being truly surprised that the voice sample in "Little Fluffy Clouds" by The Orb was her. But then her speaking voice now sounds way different from her speaking voice then.

Josefa, Sunday, 11 April 2021 23:33 (three years ago) link

I just compared two interviews from 2015 and 1989, and I guess she always had a drawl. That does make her speaking voice now sound like an older person's.

Halfway there but for you, Sunday, 11 April 2021 23:33 (three years ago) link

She sounds much better in that clip, this thing I heard on NPR sounded old and raspy.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 11 April 2021 23:37 (three years ago) link

I've seen a few excerpts from her new memoir, mostly re heroin use to deal w biz stress, which itself led to more biz probs, "Watch out for the junkie," yeah they're so rare in the music biz, but might have been more to it than that---anyway, she's glad she kicked it, loves her daughter---and from late 70s coverage in Rolling Stone, I gathered that she had a pretty interesting life before getting much involved in the biz. For instance she made a habit of singing to her brother while he was in a coma, until he finally woke up and said."Witch. Which reminds me that I liked Ghostyhead: her voice suited trip hop pretty well. Have also come across some good post-peak live sets on the 'Tube (one thing that still grosses me out: Tom Waits was her boyfriend, way back there now, but yuuuuuck she too cuet for him)

dow, Monday, 12 April 2021 01:01 (three years ago) link

This is what I heard, btw:

https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/tnyradiohour/segments/rickie-lee-joness-life-road

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 12 April 2021 01:03 (three years ago) link

She is an absolute magician.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uB89sotCQx4

edited for dog profanity (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 20 April 2021 03:39 (two years ago) link

Great song I haven’t heard in ages. Love when the other voices come in.

that's not my post, Wednesday, 21 April 2021 01:18 (two years ago) link

one month passes...

Finished the book last night and really enjoyed it. I was ~2/3 through it and realized, geez, she's only like 17yo to this point. She had a wild early life in all senses of the word. She saw the world, lived a lifetime before she was even 18. The last third goes by quick and is mostly her early career (which overlapped her relationship w/ Tom Waits), which took off fast. But everything that led up to that was in some ways more interesting. She's a great storyteller. Recommended!

I've listened a lot to Pirates and especially Flying Cowboys since starting the book. Beautiful albums and the production on both is fantastic.

j.o.h.n. in evanston (john. a resident of chicago.), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 18:22 (two years ago) link

listening to the magazine and flying cowboys for the first time today and while they're not quite as transcendent as pirates they're still really fantastic wow

"satellites"!

ufo, Saturday, 19 June 2021 07:24 (two years ago) link

The Magazine in particular is just brilliant (love Flying Cowboys as well) but yes unfair to compare it to one of the ten best albums of all time.

Vaguely relatedly I lost my copy of Ghostyhead and it appears it is not on streaming services!?!?!

Tim F, Saturday, 19 June 2021 07:41 (two years ago) link

The Magazine is the one I had on tape as a teenager and yeah it's wonderful, still my favourite tbh.

A viking of frowns, (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Saturday, 19 June 2021 08:08 (two years ago) link

you can really hear her love of the blue nile on flying cowboys

ufo, Saturday, 19 June 2021 08:47 (two years ago) link

I feel like she perhaps recognised kindred spirits: smooth surfaces / excessive feeling

Tim F, Saturday, 19 June 2021 09:52 (two years ago) link

I would love to know what Rickie thinks of Sade.

Tim F, Saturday, 19 June 2021 09:53 (two years ago) link

there are just some very blue nile synth tones in places on flying cowboys

which albums after that are worth digging into

ufo, Sunday, 20 June 2021 06:50 (two years ago) link

I think Ghostyhead is really interesting: sort of a "belatedly ride the trip hop wave" effort on the surface but that dismissive take belies what's really going on which is that Rickie makes the obvious connection that these more rhythmic but still-guitar-driven soundtracks provide the perfect foil for her to really lean into her beatnik impulses - most of the album takes that kind of 'spill over the lines of the song' profusion aspect of her vocal approach to its logical conclusion. And musically I'm not sure what I'd compare it to: I imagine it was sold to Warner Bros as being in the vein of the first Beth Orton album but it's almost more like if New Kingdom decided to produce a folk artist.

Tim F, Sunday, 20 June 2021 10:12 (two years ago) link

I have Pop Pop too, it's nice enough but nothing ever really grabbed me about it.

A viking of frowns, (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Sunday, 20 June 2021 10:16 (two years ago) link

I like Pop Pop, which was the first RLJ album I ever listened to. "Dat Dere" and the Jefferson Airplane cover were the standout tracks I recall.

Josefa, Sunday, 20 June 2021 12:36 (two years ago) link

eleven months pass...

It looks like the cover of the first album was flipped, I wonder why?

https://www.morrisonhotelgallery.com/photographs/gWMf6i/Rickie-Lee-Jones-Malibu-CA-1978

Maresn3st, Monday, 30 May 2022 19:48 (one year ago) link

Was it? Most pics I see are oriented that way. Btw is she smoking a More cigarette there?

Josefa, Monday, 30 May 2022 19:54 (one year ago) link

It wasn't. Album's always looked like this.

https://i.imgur.com/IYiRBnv.jpg

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Monday, 30 May 2022 20:33 (one year ago) link

Weird, then I wonder what's happening here, and on some YouTube clips

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rickie-Lee-Jones/dp/B000002KK2

Maresn3st, Monday, 30 May 2022 22:43 (one year ago) link

My guess is Gracenote or some other metadata provider for all the streaming/mp3 store platforms fucked with the art and it ended up everywhere. They've let the cover of Tracy Chapman's debut go on for years looking like a scan of a cd cover that was left in the back seat of a car in direct sunlight.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 31 May 2022 03:04 (one year ago) link

Don't know if I'll get a substantive answer, but I happen to know someone who works at Gracenote and she's going to ask the guy who handles that stuff tomorrow, so stay tuned maybe.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 31 May 2022 03:49 (one year ago) link

Ok so it turns out that when WB reissued the RLJ album in 2010 as an "original artist series" they flipped the image for reasons unknown to anyone but themselves.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 31 May 2022 16:40 (one year ago) link

nine months pass...

Looks like she has a new album coming out - it's an American songbook album (all standards) produced by Russ Titelman. To promote it, she's doing an exclusive three-night residency at Birdland in NYC, which seems to have sold out, but there's a ticketed livestream. https://birdlandjazz.com/event/rickie-lee-jones/

birdistheword, Friday, 17 March 2023 03:36 (one year ago) link

Correction - she's doing two shows each night, and only the "early" shows have sold out. They still have tickets for the late shows:

https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/rickie-lee-jones-1623129

birdistheword, Friday, 17 March 2023 03:37 (one year ago) link

Pirates can bring me to tears.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Friday, 17 March 2023 03:43 (one year ago) link

I think Ghostyhead is really interesting: sort of a "belatedly ride the trip hop wave" effort on the surface but that dismissive take belies what's really going on which is that Rickie makes the obvious connection that these more rhythmic but still-guitar-driven soundtracks provide the perfect foil for her to really lean into her beatnik impulses - most of the album takes that kind of 'spill over the lines of the song' profusion aspect of her vocal approach to its logical conclusion. And musically I'm not sure what I'd compare it to: I imagine it was sold to Warner Bros as being in the vein of the first Beth Orton album but it's almost more like if New Kingdom decided to produce a folk artist.

― Tim F, Sunday, June 20, 2021 3:12 AM (one year ago)

so glad someone besides me loves this album

Pop Pop is great too, that Jimi cover is perfect

obsidian crocogolem (sleeve), Friday, 17 March 2023 03:54 (one year ago) link

one month passes...

yo sleeve! Sean and I both spoke for Ghostyhead, way upthread, so that makes four of us who Know. She understood how trip-hop can play well with words, for one thing.

dow, Tuesday, 18 April 2023 02:19 (one year ago) link

<3

Perverted By Linguiça (sleeve), Tuesday, 18 April 2023 02:20 (one year ago) link

(Counting her, that makes five who Know.)

dow, Tuesday, 18 April 2023 02:21 (one year ago) link

four weeks pass...

omgomg just lucked into a ticket to her chicago show! so so so excited

j.o.h.n. in evanston (john. a resident of chicago.), Wednesday, 17 May 2023 17:58 (eleven months ago) link

She put on a fantastic show last night. Opened w/ a solo piano version of "Living It Up" that she sang as though she'd written it last week. The set was mostly from her new album -- "There'll Never Be Another You" and "On the Sunny Side of the Street" were highlights -- but pulled from Pop Pop and the first album. She played guitar on a couple songs, incl "Weasel and the White Boys Cool" and was very obv having a blast. Her band is terrific, too.

j.o.h.n. in evanston (john. a resident of chicago.), Tuesday, 23 May 2023 18:00 (ten months ago) link

No Atlanta dates. :(

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 23 May 2023 18:07 (ten months ago) link

yeah, jealous

broken breakbeat (sleeve), Tuesday, 23 May 2023 18:11 (ten months ago) link

two months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ru_7YGRLoG8

MaresNest, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 09:20 (eight months ago) link

Aw crap, she did a free show in Brooklyn on Saturday and I totally missed it. (I was at another show anyway, but still, would've considered going to hers instead.)

birdistheword, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 18:45 (eight months ago) link

Xpost that video of Rickie Lee talking about movies was awesome. Great storytelling chops and humor but I guess that was evident in her songs.

that's not my post, Wednesday, 2 August 2023 14:29 (eight months ago) link

I kinda love that she took The Blob.

niall horanburger (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 2 August 2023 14:53 (eight months ago) link

No mention of that hefty Fellini box though, which was odd.

MaresNest, Wednesday, 2 August 2023 15:39 (eight months ago) link

The set was mostly from her new album -- "There'll Never Be Another You" and "On the Sunny Side of the Street" were highlights
Yeah, came here to say I've been hearing some wine-fine tracks from that on radio!

dow, Wednesday, 2 August 2023 17:35 (eight months ago) link

three months pass...

Happy birthday!

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 8 November 2023 15:54 (five months ago) link

two months pass...

well, I'm ugly too
no, no, no, you're not beautiful
no, you're ugly too
cause you've been traveling in so many universes and you manifest here

hogarth brooks (unregistered), Wednesday, 31 January 2024 02:59 (two months ago) link


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