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  • Music Jar – week 23

    This week I have been listening to Tracy Chapman. Now we all know Chapman right? It a god-given right that we are born with some awareness there but each person has their own story.

    I believe I first got into Tracy Chapman when I was at university because someone I fancied who had been on a gap year gave me a copy of her greatest hits. They’re married now, not to me, and the whole album had pretty much been wiped from my mind until I listened through this week and returned to those days, half a lifetime ago now and was lost in the luxury of her voice.

    There’s a lot to be said for Fast Car and Talkin’ but there’s so much more to discover in Tracy Chapman’s back catalog too and this was my opportunity to dig in.

    While I may not find myself listening to this every week, there’s something so powerful and joyous in the music she makes that I can’t help but love.

  • Music Jar – week 22

    This week, I have been listening to singer/songwriter/actress, Ingrid Michaelson. While I am now very interested in tracking down her romcom, Humor Me, it’s more a case of rumour me when it comes to the stories that she has started working on a musical adaptation of The Notebook.

    While it’s clear from her background that Michaelson is very much a twirley, there is a MPD element to her music that means it wasn’t too much of a surprise to discover she had worked with Zooey Deschanel – chief kook.

    It’s on songs like The Lotto, Be OK and To Begin Again that her voice shines through, and obviously, that is what we are here for. There is something incredibly charming in her songwriting and that’s a rare thing.

    A playlist of my Music Jar 2022 is available here

  • Music Jar – week 21

    This week, I have been listening to Yebba – an artist I hadn’t heard of and was unlikely to if it wasn’t for Becca’s recommendation. She’s a lot better at

    identifying these new trends in music and knowing about what is cool. 

    Yebba is a singer/songwriter from West Memphi who has worked with Sam Smith, Stormzy and Mark Ronson (amongst many others) but it wasn’t until now that I had the chance to listen to her. 

    Her debut album, Dawn, was released in 2021 and is a beautifully composed and eclectic mix of songs including Love Came Down, All I Ever Wanted and my personal favourite, October Sky. She worked alongside everyone’s favourite DJ, Zane Lowe, on the project which speaks volumes about the calibre of her performances and general skill. It’s fair to say that her voice is amazing.

    Yebba is definitely one to watch and I’m glad to have been introduced to what she does. 

  • Music Jar – week 20

    This week has been my triumphant joy to listen to nothing but Paramore.
    Now listen, due to me being so indie that it hurt at the time, I wasn’t allowed to listen to Paramore at the time although I do remember “Barry the Castle” (Brick By Boring Brick) as a colleague called it being played on Radio One on repeat in 2009. It turns out, that like now listening to Fall Out Boy, My Chemical Romance and the like, I missed out on some fun and heartfelt music that was only a hop away from what I was into anyway.

    It definitely benefits us all that the lines in the sand have been washed away when it comes to music tastes. It’s never been as fine to listen to whatever you want as it is now and that is a wonderful thing.

    For those of you who still have questions, Paramore are originally from Tennessee and formed in the mid-2000s to change hair forever. Their style and sound has changed over the years but there is no mistaking a Hayley Williams vocal. While my limited Google searching shows there have been some personnel changes over the years, something beautiful and consistent remains, and that is a dedication to great hooks, pogo ready pop punk and bright colours.

  • Music Jar – week 19

    This week, I have been enjoying the music of Brandi Carlile. Carlile, from Washington, Seattle is a legend in the field of Grey’s Anatomy as well as being a gay icon. Whatever you do, don’t get her mixed up with Belinda Carlisle, who performed Heaven Is A Place On Earth and is probably also a gay icon.

    She’s one of those artists that I knew the name of but never took the opportunity to listen to. That’s what the Music Jar is all about though – finding out more about artists that I should know more about and expanding my knowledge on music away from my go-tos.
    While this might not necessarily be a bit of me, I can appreciate the space that Brandi has formed in the world and how admired she is as a result.

    Songs like You and Me On The Rock and The Joke do a fine job of setting the tone on a legacy of music that sits behind Carlile but it isn’t immediately for me. That’s absolutely fine. I’m glad I learnt something this week and that’s the very least I can hope for.

  • Music Jar – week 18

    This week, I have been lost in my very own indie movie with the help of the bird and the bee – stylised in lowercase for hipster cool emphasis. I would like to take this opportunity to thank my boyfriend, Scott Rose, for making me aware of this group.

    The pair from Los Angeles are notably successful in their own rights but it’s the coming together (right now, over me) that truly makes this project as special as it is. I got the sense that the project is intended to be un, ad that the pair of them take the work they do seriously, and are fantastic at it, but the joy they have for the music they create is clear. A part of this comes down to their Interpreting the Masters series, where they cover the works of unlikely other groups including Van Halen and Hall & Oates.

    Outside of their work together, Inara George ha recorded four albums – she’s the bird element of the collaboration by the way. Greg Kurstin – the bee – has worked as a producer and multi-instrumentalist with a range of artists including Sia, Kendrick Lamar and Foo Fighters.

    I could happily accept the bird and the bee into the league of music that I regularly keep going. It’s the sound of a beautiful day and a walk with someone you love. It’s ice cream and a coffee. There’s the sound of the holden hour and staying up into the early hours of the morning all at once.

    I would thoroughly recommend putting them into your rotation.

  • Music Jar – week 17

    This week, I corrected a twenty-five year error on my part by listening to Lauryn Hill. While I may have been exposed to The Fugees in the past, it’s not the same as the might of The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.

    Lauryn Hill is credited not just as breaking down barriers for women in music but also for being one of the greatest rappers of all time. Neither of those accolades are to be taken lightly and after listening to an album that hasn’t aged a day and reading up on her journey, I am inclined to agree. There’s something so natural to her flow and such beauty to her voice that there is no question that Lauryn Hill was destined for one thing.
    She was even able to recognise what was important and step away from the music industry when the time was right to her.

    To produce something so incredible and then choose to stand back is a true reflection of her, and like anyone with only a fraction of their ability at our disposal, is only ever going to leave us wanting more. What a talent.

  • Music Jar – week 16

    This week I have mostly been riding my skateboard and drinking orange and cranberry because it has been the turn of Stevie Nicks. We all know Stevie Nicks from Fleetwood Mac but she also wrote a league of stuff herself and in particular, her debut album, Bella Donna, deserves to be heralded as one of the greatest debuts of all time.
    Let’s forget about me listening through all of her discography waiting for Holiday Road to come on, only to discover that it’s by Lindsey Buckingham.

    Now Stevie Nicks is one of the coolest musicians in the world and has a voice that is so identifiable, and with such a sense of promise and nostalgia for me, that it was clear this was not going to be a tough listen or a tough week to indulge in. From the opening strains of Bella Donna, I knew I was in for a treat and the various feature performances she has made in more recent years are also not to be sniffed at. It speaks volumes that everyone wants to work with her, from Miley Cyrus to Shania Twain to Maroon 5 (but she can’t be held responsible for that last one).

    Her thrilling vocal takes, dreamy floating essence and power are not to be overestimated. It’s made me look at Fleetwood Mac in a new way, even if Rumours is always going to be better than Tusk (to me).

    It’s songs like Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around, Rooms On Fire and Leather and Lace that confirm to me that Stevie Nicks deserves the reverence to which she is held.

  • Music Jar – week 15

    This week, I got to listen to Billie Holiday, an artist that everyone knows but I couldn’t have told you much about.
    Billie was a jazz singer from Philadelphia who changed the landscape of music as well as what was considered possible as a black woman in the arts, performing in a time of segregation and high racial tension.

    What I have discovered is that there are more songs of hers that had cropped up elsewhere than I was aware of. Her version of Strange Fruit is the original – I came to the Nina Simone version via Jeff Buckley – alongside Blue Moon and I’ll Be Seeing You will change the way you hear anything else. There’s such a sumptuous tone to her voice which is why she continues to be celebrated nearly a hundred years after her first performances. It’s a wonderful thing to find something you should have been listening to for a long time and Billie Holiday is right up there for me.

    My Spotify playlist of artists for 2022 will be built up here.

  • Music Jar – week 14

    This week, I’ve had the joy of listening to Jorja Smith, thanks to Dani Keepings. I wasn’t familiar with Jorja, who is a full decade younger than me and infinitely more talented. Her jazz-club-in-the-early-hours albums have been a beautiful accompaniment to this week.

    There’s a lot to be said for artists who are off of my radar because they’re too cool, but elements of her world have crossed over into mine, namely her work with Kendrick on the Black Panther soundtrack as well as being signed by Maverick Sabre. These are both artists I admire and follow so it’s on me that I hadn’t bothered to listen.

    Songs like Nobody But You and Blue Lights hit home in a beautiful way and I found myself digging into not just Lost & Found but also the three EPs available.

    Go and listen to Jorja Smith!

    My Spotify playlist of artists for 2022 will be built up here.

Paul Schiernecker

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