cedric and i both got e-mails on our reposts yesterday to our mirror sites. we were asked to do it again sometime and since sherry e-mailed me saying that her favorite review by
kat was ___, we're doing it today. this is
kat's review of rickie lee jones and norah jones' cds from 2007.
"Those Jones girls."
Kat: That was always accompanied with a heavy sigh and said by my grandmother.
I'm not really sure what year it started but the illegal war in Vietnam was going on and my grandfather was "resting."
He'd had a heart attack and retired or been retired, they never tell kids anything, and my grandparents had moved in with us.
The Jones family lived on our street, four houses down. They were a mother, a father, a son in Vietnam and two daughters.
The
blonde daughter was the older of the two and the first hippie on our
street. This was apparently a big deal to my grandparents. My
grandfather appeared to miss the sight of her long legs in a miniskirt
while my grandmother fretted over why "that Jones girl" didn't do
anything with her hair.
The other sister was two years younger,
dark haired and always reminded me of Marlo Thomas but everyone else
always said Mary Tyler Moore. Actually, when I was a kid, they said
"Laura Petrie." It was only when I was a teenager, and MTM had her own
show, that they said Mary Tyler Moore.
Among the neighborhood
kids, there was huge split about who you liked. The fault line usually
left those trying to figure out life on one side and those who still
believed their parents were infallible and All Mighty on the other.
One
day, the big news was that the Jones boy had been injured in Vietnam
and would be coming home. As wounds went, it either wasn't very bad or
they were sugar coating it for the kids.
Concern replaced
curiosity when my mother and grandmother were trying to round up a kid
or two to drag along as they took food over to the Joneses. My sisters
weren't home and my brothers weren't interested. You better believe I
grabbed the dangling invite.
We were all in the Jones kitchen,
with the mother. The adults were drinking coffee. My mother was
listening to what little was known at this point. But my grandmother
had a look in her eye I knew well.
Suddenly she was standing and
announcing that I needed to go to the bathroom, but keep talking, she'd
take me. I don't remember how old I was at the time, 9? 13?, but I was
too old to need someone "taking" me to the bathroom. But that's not
what this was about. This was about snooping and you couldn't know my
grandmother without knowing that hours spent watching the neighborhood
from the front window was just a warm up.
The first thing my
grandmother did on any visit to fresh territory was start opening
cabinets. She didn't hide this. She'd be in the middle of talking and
just get up, go to someone's kitchen cabinets and start looking
through. She must have been restraining herself on this visit out of
'respect' for the wounded Jones boy.
The Jones house was
interesting to the whole neighborhood for a number of reasons.
Primarily because the family really didn't 'mix.' The two oldest kids
did, the Jones boy and the Jones girl. Before he was sent to Vietnam,
he'd hang out with the other guys, fixing cars in the drive way. Or
trying to fix cars in the drive way. They spent hours on those cars.
He'd smile at the kids younger than 16, maybe give a wave. His sister
also stuck to the older kids and I must have spent at least one entire
summer hearing my oldest sister discuss how she was "mature" but
because she was one grade behind, she might as well not exist. Once a
year, the entire family would turn out, at 4th of July, for the big
backyard b-b-q. That was at our house and adult women were always
pestering my mother with questions about what was the Jones mother like
and how did she get her to come to the b-b-q when she wouldn't do
anything else with the neighborhood? Another point of interest was
their house which, unlike the rest, was set back from the street and
had these huge bushes. Added to the mystery of the family.
For
me, personally, there was also the fact that I was one of eight
children, living in cramped quarters with two parents and a set of a
grandparents.
We were the largest family on the block but there
were others with six and five children. The smallest family on our
block, outside of the occasional set of newlyweds just moving in, was
the Jones family with just three kids.
What must that be like?
The
daughters had their own bedrooms and, as my grandmother and I found
out, the youngest had a white canopy bed (sheets and canopy were pink)
that matched a tidy as a pin desk and bureau. The curtains were also
pink. There was nothing on the white walls but this really bad framed
pastel of a line of ballerinas. Pinned inside the closet, we found a
magazine poster of someone and I'll say now it was Tony DiFranco just
to keep the story moving. It may have been someone like him, but I
really don't remember now. I remember thinking, whatever age I was, how
uncool the guy was. I also remember my grandmother whispering "little
rebel" and realizing how truly out of it my grandmother was.
The
two shared a bathroom and I was especially knocked out or jealous over
this. It was between their bedrooms and they could enter it from the
door in the hall, if they wanted, or from either of their bedrooms.
It
was more than the vast array of makeup, pimple cream, nail polish
bottles, et al that stood out. Oh to be able to stumble out of bed --
in a room I shared with no sister -- walk straight to a door, open it
and have a bathroom. Instead, in my family, the kids were always lined
down the hall waiting our turn in the designated children's bathroom.
My
oldest sister had ruined it for all of us when she left the iron on in
my parent's bathroom, face down on the vanity, when she stopped in the
midst of straightening her long hair, to take a phone call. In those
pre-cordless phone days, "lucky" was having a phone with a really long
cord.
The Jones girls' bathroom was just a little too fussed
over. Like a mother had picked out everything, the way the youngest
daughter's bedroom looked. We were at the door leading into the other
daughter's room and we opened it and oh my God.
Now the way my
grandmother was carrying on, you would have thought we found a room
full of teens fixing on heroin in one corner, having an orgy in the
center of the room and off in another corner putting together a bomb
they were planning to use on the Statue of Liberty or at least the
local Carl Jr.'s.
I didn't go for the drama but, no argument, it
was impressive. The ceiling had a painting of Jimi Hendrix. It wasn't
'artistically pure,' but there was no mistaking the man was Hendrix.
(For any wondering, my grandmother's shock had nothing to do with
Hendrix' skin color. She could surprise you for an old woman. On the
issue of civil rights, she was 100% for it and was fond of saying "we
Irish" knew all about discrimination and had an obligation to fight it
everywhere.)
My own thoughts were, and I'd already started drawing
and painting at this point, "Eh, a little too Sunday comics." But I
could tell it was Hendrix and mainly concerned with how she was
physically able to paint the entire ceiling. The curtains were heavy
and we just had the light from the bathroom so my grandmother flipped
the switch, a red glow bathed the room, and then I was knocked out. The
Hendrix ceiling was like one of those blue light posters. Very creative.
On
the desk next to the bed, my grandmother had lost interest in the
ceiling, were a couple of lava lamps, a clock radio and a square device
that my grandmother couldn't figure out. I was about to tell her it was
a strobe light but she'd already turned it on and spent a few second
blinking before declaring "Drugs" and switching it off.
If
tomorrow I was put under oath, I couldn't tell you what color the walls
were. I could guess that they were white since that was the color of
all the walls in the house. But you couldn't see any wall. Everything
was covered with clippings and photos torn out of magazines. These
weren't the glossies from
16. When there was a break from
this, it was only to make room for something drawn or painted on a
piece of paper. Sometimes it was just a slogan on a piece of a paper
like: "LET'S TRY LIVING TOGETHER." I was looking at as much as I could,
a compiled rock history that was actually then current, but my
grandmother was fretting about all the holes in the wall from so many
thumb tacks. She was at the closet door now but hesitating as if she
was too afraid of what she would find. This from the woman who, again,
eagerly rifled through your cabinets while she was standing before you.
So
I did the mature thing and stepped around her. I opened the closet and
there were a ton of groovy clothes, not all hanging. There were also a
ton of maps and travel books. (My grandmother's comment was "I bet her
mother has no idea.") I think it was all too much for my grandmother
but she covered that by saying we'd been gone too long and we headed
back to the kitchen.
The Jones boy came home and nothing much
happened for awhile. My grandfather would tell us kids, when our
parents weren't around, that the Jones boy was mainly shell shocked and
my grandmother would tell him to stop, that kids didn't need to hear
about this. But one night he was out in the Jones family Buick,
apparently drunk, and creamed Ray's Barracuda.
That was a car
put out by Plymouth and I know that only because I was starting to get
heavily interested in guys. Guys like Mick Jagger and Keith Richards
and Jim Morrison. None of whom lived in my neighborhood. So I'd try to
find something in common those guys had with the older teenagers that
were on my block. Ray and his father had gotten the Barracuda at a
public auction. It had been pulled out of the Bay, or that's what
everyone said. When it first got hauled back to their drive, not only
could you not drive it, but it was an eyesore. And don't think my
grandmother didn't note that fact every day. But Ray and the other boys
worked on it and worked on it. I'd watch from my upstairs window
sometimes -- like when they covered the windows with newspapers and
spray painted it blue. And through weeks and weeks of work, they got
that car running and it looked brand new. It was Ray's car but every
guy on the block took pride in it.
Then came the Jones boy
creaming it and I swear there would have been a next day ass kicking if
everyone wasn't saying, "Well, he just got back from the war." I should
probably note that Ray's car wasn't parked on the street. The Jones boy
had jumped a curve, driven across the family's front yard and hit the
Barracuda full on in the passenger side.
All any of us
neighborhood kids cared about was the car but I know some of the
parents were talking about how the yard was torn up as well.
The
Jones parents had offered to pay to have it fixed but Ray's dad was all
about how he'd been to Korea and he understood as he refused the money.
The boys were back, pulling out whatever you call the inside of car
doors and using rubber hammers (which I'm sure have another name) to
try to bang out the dents. They did that over and over for a week
before they finally hit the wrecking yards and found a score.
But
that was really the beginning of the end of the mystery. The blonde
Jones girl was making it very clear she wasn't part of the family
anymore or even part of the neighborhood. It might have been as much as
six months later that she split for good or it might have only been two
weeks. Her exit was big drama as she stood in their drive way screaming
at her parents, who were trying to get her back in the house, that they
weren't helping her brother "and he needs help!" That was it and she
was out of there.
Maybe out of embarrassment over that or Ray's
car, they made an attempt to interact with the neighbors more. They'd
walk over in the evenings with their youngest daughter who looked put
out and talk to a neighbor, then talk to another. I remember once
coming home from school to find the Jones mother crying to my mother in
our kitchen and knowing to back my butt right back out before my mother
told me.
Then came the big moment. The moment everyone in the
neighborhood talked about. It was a summer day and after dinner, but
the sun was still out. The Jones boy was out on their front yard
screaming. We were hurried into the house and I ran straight to my
bedroom window because I had never seen a man nude except in statues
and paintings. He was hollering about the war being a crime, something
the older teenagers might whisper but most wouldn't say anything, it
was my age group that would say that full out, even in front of our
parents.
Whatever he was saying, I remember thinking, "You tell 'em!"
But
I was more interested in his body. He had a nasty wound on his chest,
left side, but other than that, forget the David, this was the body to
check out. Even though my other sisters were trying to nudge me out of
the way to get a better look, you know I wasn't giving up my perch. So
that's what one of those looked like on an adult male. Lot of hair
around the thing but interesting. His parents were trying to talk to
him and the father kept trying to put a blanket over him. He kept
tossing it to the ground. After about ten minutes, he finally stormed
off, down the street, still naked.
No one ever stopped talking
about that. Even two years later, we'd still mention it. The grown ups
tried to pretend like they didn't talk about it. But we'd catch the
silences when we entered a room. Sometimes, we'd catch a word or two
before they saw us.
The Jones boy was gone. He never came back.
The family put a "FOR SALE" sign up in the front yard. They stopped
trying to mingle and I remember when the father would get out of his
car at the end of the day, he'd make a point to look down at the ground
and avoid catching the eye of anyone out in their own yards. At least
one more time, the mother visited mine. The youngest Jones girl went
around looking sad and angry. I've actually got a picture, one of the
first ones I ever took, with her in it. I had my friends lined up in
the front yard to take a picture and she's walking past in the
background. She's glaring out of the corner of her eye.
Now you're probably either saying "Go on" right now or asking what this has to do with music?
Two Jones women, different Jones women, have CDs out now. Rickie Lee Jones put out
The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard and Norah Jones put out
Not Too Late. When I listen, they remind me of those Jones girls.

Rickie
Lee Jones has a stripped down sound on this album. There's an electric
piano on one track and a keyboard on the other, but no "We Belong."
It's a guitar driven CD and she's exploring issues of
spirituality/state of the world throughout. It's a new tactic for her
but it works, it satisfies and reminds you of just how much RLJ has
always refused to sit still. It's really meaningless to say "Check out
track ___ and track ___" because she's offering a full album, an
artistic journey. I'm certain that "Lamp Of the Body," "It Hurts,"
"Circle In The Sand" or "Elvis Cadillac" will end up on a RLJ
collection at some point in the future, maybe more than one. But this
really works best as a full listen and you don't want to use "shuffle,"
you want to listen straight through and it's easy to do so when it
kicks off with something as strong as "Nobody Knows My Name."

Then
we've got Norah Jones known to too many as "Snorah Jones." See RLJ
reminds me of the blonde daughter from my street. She's always
exploring and on a journey. She's life itself. Norah Jones is the other
sister. She's the one everybody's parents like. And I wasn't thinking
I'd even enjoy this CD. But there's something about
Not Too Late
that reminds me of the photo I took that I was telling you about. I
don't know what's happened in Norah Jones' life, from press accounts,
not much and all is happy. But don't ever swear on press accounts.
Maybe
though Norah Jones hasn't suffered some tremendous loss, maybe she's
just realized that being beloved by parents everywhere isn't quite
where she wants to be? Maybe she doesn't see the height of art as
appearing in
Two Weeks Notice? She's actually worked her butt
off her to stretch. It's not the stretch RLJ regularly makes, but it's
a huge improvement over her past work.
Not Too Late
works as an album not because of art. There's no cohesive statement
here. Tracks seven, eight and nine demonstrate that might be a
possibility in the future. I don't know that Norah Jones' inner world
has fallen apart, maybe she didn't need it to move beyond the cloying
"Come Away With Me" or the did not come song that led to many jokes
about her. She was supposed to be stretching on the last album and that
was nothing but standing still. Here, she's going for something and
sometimes reaching it and sometimes failing. So you still get the
standard issue "Be My Somebody," for instance. A song no one needed
because there are about sixty similar ones being piped in at Starbucks
across the country as I type.
But there's enough here to
demonstrate that she realizes she needs to stretch and enough to
indicate that she's actually capable of art and not just pleasing
sounds. I'd say she's got half of an interesting album here. After
track nine, she's back to doing what she's always done. It plays like
somebody got scared. Like, in the middle of playing Red Light Green
Light on the school yard, she froze and you're waiting for the kid on
the swing to knock into her and send her sprawling to the ground. (The
whistle on "Little Room" may lead you to cheer that knocking down.) I
think the front and back cover of the standard CD (there's a deluxe
edition) capture the two sides of this album. On the front cover, she's
sitting with her dress spread out looking too dainty for this world,
like a doll a child's left behind (and outgrown). The back cover isn't
a photo, it's a painting. She doesn't look pretty with a pointy face
and too large eyes. Her knees are nobby, her elbows are pointy. She's
at a piano playing. That's the Norah coming through on the best tracks.
Miss Pretty comes through on the worst.
If she can lose the need to be pretty, she might actually someday have a shot at something like
The Sermon On Exposition Boulevard.
That'll require being freer with her emotions and her art and it will
mean more songs that aren't pretty. For now, she's put out a better CD
than most of us would have expected with moments of real art.
rickie lee jones
norah joneskats kornerthe common ills