The Exotic Sounds of Courtney Jaye - Courtney Jaye

The Exotic Sounds of Courtney Jaye

Courtney Jaye

  • Genre: Rock
  • Release Date: 2010-01-12
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 10

  • ℗ 2010 Tropicali Records

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
I Need Love 3:07 USD 0.99
2
Don't Tell a Girl 3:31 USD 0.99
3
Sweet Ride 3:39 USD 0.99
4
Tiger's Eye 3:02 USD 0.99
5
Sometimes Always (featuring Be 3:17 USD 0.99
6
Maru Maru 3:48 USD 0.99
7
Sunlight 2:59 USD 0.99
8
Box Wine 4:01 USD 0.99
9
Queen of Sabotage 3:32 USD 0.99
10
It's the Checks You Write 4:32 USD 0.99
The Exotic Sounds of Courtney Jaye - Courtney Jaye
Cover Album The Exotic Sounds of Courtney Jaye - Courtney Jaye

Reviews

  • Awesome that people still make this music.
    5
    By AtomicTony
    I am more into exotica / tropical music (Martin Denny, Les baxter) so based on the album name and album cover, decided to buy a few tracks off this album. By the end of the week, I bought them all, and have been rockin it for about a half year now. One of my top 5 albums of the year.
  • A singular vision of Hawaiian-tinged Canyon Country
    4
    By hyperbolium
    Those who know Courtney Jaye from her 2005 release on Island, Traveling Light, don’t really know Courtney Jaye. A pleasant album with glossy production, an airbrushed cover and some memorable pop hooks, it propelled her into the pop mainstream, culminating with some film and television placements (including a cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Who’ll Stop the Rain”), and a performance on Jay Leno’s Tonight Show. Not Conan or Letterman or Kimmel, but Leno, which tells you where her label was headed. She could see the direction the machine was taking her career, but unlike many talented young artists who sell their dreams short, Jaye shucked off the industry’s plans, took stock and reinvest in her own artist visions. She relocated to Northern California, Austin and eventually Nashville, and gathered into one set of songs the wide variety of sounds that had excited her ear. The result is this independently recorded and released second album, with a cover that teases with the allure of Sandy Warner, and pays off with an alchemy of musical styles that bounce from girl-group to Topanga Canyon singer-songwriter to country twang to Hawaiian slack-key and exotica to classic Brill Building pop. Her knack for writing killer pop hooks is not only intact, but amplified by productions that have the spontaneous DIY charms of 1960s singles that weren’t belabored into aural numbness. Stripped of the debut album’s production gloss, Jaye’s voice is freed to launch emotional barbs into your heart. If you listen to only one song on this album, check out the video below for “Don’t Tell a Girl.” The melody and chorus hook are so necessarily repeatable as to make the track’s 3:30 about ten minutes too short. Somebody needs to spring Phil Spector from prison so he can produce a Wall of Sound version of this song. The album opens with a lo-fi count-off and the drippy slide guitar that George Harrison played in the 1970s, but the rhythm has a Latin tinge and Jaye’s double-tracked vocal tumbles out with both need and doubt. It’s the sort of idiosyncratic mix of sounds that could only spring from an artist’s singular history of influences, giving the pained lyrics the bounce of false hope and the ache of unfulfilled longing. Jaye manages to suggest both the adolescent heartache of girl-groups and the more seasoned sorrow of grown women. She evokes Brenda Lee, Connie Francis, Kelly Willis and Rosanne Cash, but also, on the dreamily harmonized “Sweet Ride,” the mid-70s Fleetwood Mac sound of Buckingham and Nicks. There’s bending steel, acoustic and electric guitars, drums, ukuleles and baion beats that trace Jaye’s travels between Hawaii, California, Texas, and Tennessee. There are even some Arthur Lyman-styled bird calls on the instrumental “Maru Maru.” A few of the tracks may remind you of Sheryl Crow’s summery singles, but just as you warm sound of “Sunlight,” Jaye cranks up the Gram Parsons-styled honky-tonk of “Box Wine.” And again, it all fits together into what Jaye’s dubbed “Tropicalicountry”: a blend of Hawaiian and country roots with the indie freedom of Austin and the mid-70s buzz of Los Angeles. Jaye began her journey to this amalgam with the Gary Louris-produced EP ‘Til it Bleeds, but here, co-producing with Seth Kauffmann (who also plays most of the instruments), she’s gotten the full symphony of sounds out of her head and onto tape. And just when you think you’ve hard all the album’s surprises, Jaye duets with Band of Horses’ Ben Bridwell for a twanging back-porch country cover of The Jesus and Mary Chain’s “Sometimes Always.” And just like the rest of the album, it works perfectly and without compromise. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]
  • Amazing retro-coolness
    4
    By Theven
    Courtney Jaye has a great retro-pop/country/tropicalia sensibility. The harmonies on this album are seamless and the melodies are ridiculously catchy. I always keep this cd in my truck and listen to it all the time. Great album! Please support this artist so she can bring us more great music. Don't know if it's been mentioned or not, but she's also absolutely gorgeous.
  • if it's good enough for neal casal
    5
    By eugeneVD
    it's good enough for me! great album. glad i found this one in time for spring.
  • A new alt country queen
    5
    By hawkey god
    Amazing record. Unique, yet comforting. Best new artist I have heard in many years.
  • Exotic Sounds...
    5
    By lionhearted01
    This record is just as good, if not better, than any Jenny Lewis or Neko Case record. Love the Hawaiian flavor and vibe. It's completely original and is definitely one of my stand-out records of 2010 thus far.
  • THE EXOTIC SOUNDS OF COURTNEY JAYE
    5
    By J OF IQ
    Courtney my friend, you have created something truly exciting and fresh! I LOVE this album. My absolute favorites are Maru Maru, Sunlight and Box of Wine. Girl, this will be a staple in my basket of spring and summer must haves. Can't ya just see it now...Sun sinking down in the beautiful blue green Gulf of Mexico, great breeze blowing , a glass of wine in my hand and your voice creating the ultimate soundtrack to a perfectly beautiful moment in time. Namaste friend and all love and light for all your dreams to come true! Love ya, J.
  • Great album
    5
    By ferrism
    Every song is well-crafted and enoyable from start to finish. Very well done with a good variety.
  • Sweet Ride
    5
    By Mark loves Courtney
    I heard Sweet Ride about 3 months ago and it has been my favorite song ever since. Then today I got an alert from ITunes and just downloaded the whole album. I haven't listened to it yet but if the other songs are anywhere close to Sweet Ride then it will probably be my favorite album. She has such a great unique voice. Now I own every single song she has on ITunes and I can't wait for more!
  • This record is totally amazing
    5
    By Neal Casal
    Every single song, right on the money. Songs, vocals, playing, and production. It's deep and mystical, catchy and whimsical, stays with you for a long time after listening. Gotta have it. Pointing out the musical path for 2010.