Home » Jazz News » Performance / Tour

109

Norah Jones at the Orpheum Theatre

Source:

Sign in to view read count
It's hard to feel sorry for Norah Jones: At 31, she's already sold more records than most artists will over a lifetime, and despite her soccer-mom appeal, she's retained a kind of cool-musician cachet, collaborating in recent years with Bright Eyes, Beck and the Beastie Boys. In an unsteady music industry, hers is a success story with both commercial and creative dimensions.

Still, on Friday night at the Orpheum Theatre, where Jones played a sold-out date on her current U.S. tour, your heart went out to the singer a little bit when her promise to go back in time to her early work earned a more enthusiastic reaction than did the new songs that preceded it.

Jones opened the show with a long stretch of material from last year's The Fall moody, groove-based tunes such as Chasing Pirates and Even Though, in which she projected a soulfulness and a devotion to rhythm largely absent from her first three albums. The audience at the Orpheum, though, seemed respectfully uninterested; these were fans waiting for Don't Know Why, the mellow 2002 smash that turned Jones into an instant brunch-jazz brand.

And who could blame them? Written by Jones' frequent partner Jesse Harris, Don't Know Why is a perfectly realized pop song, as sure of its aesthetic character as its narrator is unsure of the reason she failed to meet her lover. If most acts go their entire careers without approaching Jones' sales figures, it might be because they also go their entire careers without her sense of self.

In contrast, The Fall reflects an unexpected identity crisis; Jones made the disc following a breakup with her longtime boyfriend and bassist, Lee Alexander, and the songs ponder loss and reinvention over dreamily diffuse arrangements smeared with organ and electric guitar. Backed by a new band that included two L.A.-based session pros guitarist Smokey Hormel and drummer Joey Waronker Jones was more interested Friday in exploring that fresh indecision than she was in asserting her old self-assurance.

Continue Reading...

Visit Website


Comments

Tags

Concerts

May 7 Tue
Norah Jones
Bardavon
Poughkeepsie, NY
May 7 Tue
Norah Jones
Bardavon
Poughkeepsie, NY
May 10 Fri
May 13 Mon

Near

News

Popular

Get more of a good thing!

Our weekly newsletter highlights our top stories, our special offers, and upcoming jazz events near you.