While listening to Herbie Hancock in early April, his birth month, I was reminded by two albums almost abandoned by their owners to me. Another one actually WAS given to me.
Around 1995, a choir friend was complaining about the new Emmylou Harris album, Wrecking Ball, that she’d just purchased. She was a huge Emmylou fan, but Wrecking Ball was not her cuppa.
It was produced by Daniel Lanois, who had produced or co-produced albums for U2, Peter Gabriel, and Bob Dylan, among others. Additionally, Lanois was also a solo artist; I’m quite fond of his Acadie album.
My choir buddy decided that maybe she’d get rid of Wrecking Ball. I said, “Give it to me!” But she decided to keep it. I wonder if she ever warmed up to it.
Emmylou, also born in April, shows up on so many of my albums. In addition to her solo stuff, she’s a background singer for Lyle Lovett, Neil Young, and so many more. She’s on albums with Mark Knopfler, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Linda Ronstadt, and of course the Trio albums with Dolly Parton and Linda, the complete set of which I bought in 2020.
Joni and Herbie
Back in 1975, Sue, the girlfriend of my friend Jon – who I’ve lost track of – picked up The Hissing of Summer Lawns, the new Joni Mitchell album. She did not know if she’d keep it because it was too different from what she had expected. I said, “Give it to me!” But she decided to keep it. I wonder if she ever warmed up to it.
The album is transitional to a more experimental sound (Hejira, Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter et al.) I liked it. BTW, her birthday is in November.
My late friend Donna was kvetching about the 1996 Herbie Hancock album The New Standard. It was a jazz cover album of pop songs by Peter Gabriel, the Beatles, Babyface, Sade, Prince, and Simon and Garfunkel. She was a jazz fan, but she did not like this. She said, “Do you want this?” I said, “Heck, yeah.”
Hancock’s 1998 album, Gershwin’s World features Joni on vocals for two songs, The Man I Love and Summertime. His 2007 album River: The Joni Letters is a tribute album featuring cover songs written by Joni, with an eclectic group of singers
Connections
The songs
Though they are very different, because these three artists have been so eclectic, I think of them fondly in the same way.
From Wrecking Ball
Where Will I Be? with the songwriter, Daniel Lanois
Wrecking Ball, written by Neil Young
Orphan Girl, written by Gillian Welch
From The Hissing of Summer Lawns, the first three songs
In France They Kiss On Main Street, which could have fit on her previous studio album, Court and Spark
The Jungle Line, which would not
Edith and the Kingpin – I heard Rebecca Jade do a great cover of this recently
From The New Standard
New York Minute – co-written and originally performed by Don Henley
You’ve Got It Bad Girl – co-written and originally performed by Stevie Wonder
All Apologies – written by Kurt Cobain, originally performed by Nirvana
Big fan of Herbie and The New Standard, I love how they interpret all the songs you mentioned, as well as Mercy Street (Peter Gabriel), When Can I See You (which I think is a Babyface song) and…well, just about everything on it. When you get the late Michael Brecker, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Holland and players of that calibre together, the results are magic. But great arrangements also, done by Bob Belden, if I’m not mistaken.
Daniel Lanois is an amazing producer, he’s a Canadian (specifically from what was called Acadia) who has been in New Orleans running his own studio for years. Bob Dylan’s Blood on the Tracks was produced there. I saw Lanois with drummer Brian Blade in NOLA 3-4 years ago – Lanois plays pedal steel like no one else….
The long Orphan Girl turned up on a Christmas compilation CD called “Lifted: Songs of the
Spirit.” I do believe I bought it at a Starbucks! But it was sung by Gillian Welch, and that song resonates with me all year long.
Emmylou Harris Bonnie Raitt, Dolly Parton, MaryChapin Carpenter, Rosanne Cash, and a handful of others, are national treasures. Dolly’s recording of Jolene with the a capella group Pentatonix takes my breath away. https://youtu.be/oYCoyUxY2HY