Jackson Browne has written
and performed some of the most literate and moving songs in popular music
and has defined a genre of songwriting charged with honesty, emotion and
personal politics. He's been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
(2004) and the Songwriter's Hall of Fame (2007).
His latest release, 2010's
Love Is Strange, produced by Browne and Paul Dieter, features longtime
friend and musical co-conspirator David Lindley. The two-CD live album-on
Browne's label, Inside Recordings-presents highlights from a tour of Spain
that he and Lindley played in 2006, in grand concert halls, rock venues, and
intimate clubs.
The recordings are "en
vivo"-live "con Tino"-with celebrated Spanish percussionist Tino di Geraldo,
and guest players and vocalists from Spain. "En vivo con Tino" is somewhat
of a play on words; it also means to do something cleverly. The track-list
spotlights songs from throughout Browne's career including "I'm Alive,"
"Take It Easy," "For Everyman," and "Running On Empty." Also featured are
two of stringed-instrument virtuoso Lindley's best-known songs, "Mercury
Blues" and "El Rayo-X" from the acclaimed 1981 Browne-produced LP of that
name.
In liner notes for Love Is
Strange, Browne writes of the charmed tour it captures, "It was a flash, as
we sometimes used to say in California. A flash in time that went by so
effortlessly, and with such pleasure, that I must ask myself if it really
happened. But here it is-a CD of some recorded moments, or perhaps a bridge,
or a small door, between a life lived mostly in America and time spent with
some really good friends in Spain."
This release follows his
2008 studio album Time The Conqueror, also produced by Browne and Paul
Dieter. Introducing ten original songs including "Off Of Wonderland," "Just
Say Yeah," "The Drums Of War," and "Going Down To Cuba," the album features
his longtime band: Kevin McCormick (bass), Mark Goldenberg (guitars),
Mauricio Lewak (drums), Jeff Young (keyboards, backing vocals), and newest
members, Chavonne Stewart and Alethea Mills, young vocalists he met in 2001
when they were attending Washington Preparatory High School in South Los
Angeles, singing in the school choir.
Previously, Browne released
two live albums recorded at dates on solo acoustic tours in the U.S., the
U.K. and Australia. The GRAMMY®-nominated Jackson Browne - Solo Acoustic,
Vol. 1 ('05) and Jackson Browne - Solo Acoustic, Vol. 2 ('08), both on
Inside Recordings, feature Browne alternately on piano and guitar,
performing a career spanning selection of songs. Both volumes also capture
lively exchanges between Jackson and his fans. In his four-star review of
Vol. 2 for Rolling Stone, Anthony DeCurtis wrote, "This is Browne at his
best, engaging his audience, his own experiences and the world around him,
all in songs that will not lose their resonance any time soon."
That feeling radiates
through Vol. 2 and songs including "Something Fine" and "Redneck Friend,"
(from Browne's '72 self-titled debut), The Naked Ride Home's "Casino Nation"
(for which Browne recently produced a video) and the 1982 Top 10 hit
"Somebody's Baby," originally featured on the Fast Times At Ridgemont High
soundtrack. Highlights from Vol. 1 include the recording debut of "The Birds
Of St. Marks," a previously unrecorded song dating back to the 1960s.
Tracing the roots of
Browne's career leads back to the mid-60s and Los Angeles and Orange County
folk clubs. Born in Germany to American parents, Jackson's family returned
to Los Angeles when he was three. Except for a brief period in NYC in the
late 1960s - when he was an integral presence in the coffeehouse scene there
- he has always lived in Southern California.
Jackson Browne, his debut
album, came out on David Geffen's Asylum Records in 1972. Rolling Stone
wrote in its original review that, "Jackson Browne's sensibility is romantic
in the best sense of the term: his songs are capable of generating a highly
charged, compelling atmosphere throughout, and - just as important - of
sustaining that pitch in the listener's mind long after they've ended." The
now-classic LP introduced ten original songs, including "Rock Me On The
Water" and "Jamaica Say You Will," featuring David Crosby on harmony vocals.
Crosby and Graham Nash sang on "Doctor My Eyes," the album's first single,
which became a #8 hit on Billboard's pop singles chart.
Browne's 1973 follow-up, For
Everyman, included "These Days" and "Take It Easy," co-written with Glenn
Frey (it been The Eagles' debut single and breakthrough hit the year
before). 1974's Late For The Sky - cited by Rolling Stone that year as one
of the "100 Best Albums," again in 1997 as one of the "200 Essential Rock
Collection Albums" and in 2003 as one of the "500 Greatest Albums Of All
Time" - was Browne's masterpiece of lyrical introspection, with classic
songs including "Fountain Of Sorrow," "The Late Show" and the title track.
1976's The Pretender also made Rolling Stone's list of the "500 Greatest
Albums Of All Time," and was Browne's first to chart in Billboard's Top 10,
peaking at #5. On the heels of that success came what stands as Jackson's
top-selling album, 1977's 7X platinum, life-on-the-road concept opus,
Running On Empty.
Browne's next project was
the all-star series of concerts organized by Bonnie Raitt, Graham Nash, John
Hall and Jackson in 1979 to benefit MUSE (Musicians United for Safe Energy).
In addition to serving on the board of MUSE, Jackson helped edit and compile
1980's 3-LP live album from those shows. No Nukes/The MUSE Concerts for a
Non-Nuclear Future featured a line-up including Bruce Springsteen, The
Doobie Brothers, Carly Simon, James Taylor, Ry Cooder, Chaka Khan, Peter
Tosh, and Tom Petty, among others. The album, which includes Jackson's
"Before The Deluge," climbed to #23 on Billboard's pop chart, a major feat
for a triple album. Currently, Browne, Raitt and Nash are mobilizing behind
Nukefree.org, opposing federal bail-out of the nuclear industry.
Jackson's studio discography
continued with 1980's Hold Out, a #1 album, featuring the hits "Boulevard"
and "That Girl Could Sing." In 1982, Browne scored a #7 hit with the single
"Somebody's Baby," from the Soundtrack for Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
1983's Lawyers In Love also delivered several popular singles, including
"Tender Is The Night" and "For A Rocker."
In 1986, Jackson continued
to develop his social focus with Lives In The Balance. This topical disc was
included in Rolling Stone's 1986 list of 'Best 100 Albums,' and again in
their 1990 special issue of '100 Greatest Albums of the 1980s. '1989's World
In Motion was a call to action even more explicitly political than its
predecessor. Music journalist David Fricke defined the set as, "one of
universal truths bound together by a highly personal focus."
I'm Alive evidenced a
striking return to the personal and romantic subject matter that
characterized Jackson's earlier work. Released in 1993, and widely
considered a career highlight, the disc found Jackson revisiting matters of
the heart and soul on tracks including "My Problem Is You" and "Sky Blue and
Black." On 1996's Looking East, he addresses various aspects of personal
growth and social struggle, and their interconnectedness in the world around
him.
2002 marked the release of
The Naked Ride Home, Jackson's first suite of all new songs since Looking
East. When it came out, MOJO wrote, "For those who still think it's possible
that love might be the answer to at least some of our problems, this could
be the album of the year."
Jackson Browne's overall
body of work was celebrated in 2004 with the release of Elektra-Rhino's 2CD
compilation The Very Best of Jackson Browne, featuring 32 songs selected
from throughout his career. The one earlier compilation of Jackson's work is
Elektra's 1997 single-disc overview The Next Voice You Hear: The Best of
Jackson Browne.
As influential and enduring
as his music is Browne's legacy as an advocate for social and environmental
justice. In 2008, he received the NARM Harry Chapin Humanitarian Award; and,
in 2007, he received the Chapin-World Hunger Year Harry Chapin Humanitarian
Award. In 2004, Jackson was named an honorary Doctorate of Music by
Occidental College in Los Angeles, for "a remarkable musical career that has
successfully combined an intensely personal artistry with a broader vision
of social justice." In 2002, he was the fourth recipient of the John
Steinbeck Award, given to artists whose works exemplify the environmental
and social values that were essential to the great California-born author.
On March 14, 2004, Browne
was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by Bruce Springsteen, and
on June 7, 2007 Jackson Browne was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of
Fame. In 2004, Jackson was named an honorary Doctorate of Music by
Occidental College in Los Angeles, for "a remarkable musical career that has
successfully combined an intensely personal artistry with a broader vision
of social justice." For "promoting peace and justice through his music and
his unrelenting support for that which promotes nonviolent solutions to
problems both nationally and internationally", Browne received the Courage
of Conscience Awards from The Peace Abbey in Sherborn, Massachusetts.
In 2007, he was awarded the Chapin-World Hunger Year Harry Chapin
Humanitarian Award.
In 2008, Browne received
the NARM Harry Chapin Humanitarian Award.
In 2002, Browne was given
the John Steinbeck Award, given to artists who are an example of the
environmental and social values that Steinbeck believed in.
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