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Jewel

Jewel Album: “0304 [Australia Bonus CD]”

Jewel Album: “0304 [Australia Bonus CD]”
Album Information :
Title: 0304 [Australia Bonus CD]
Release Date:2004-03-02
Type:Unknown
Genre:Folk, Pop, Soft Pop
Label:
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:667344034124
Track Listing :
1 - 1 Stand Video
1 - 2 Run 2 U Video
1 - 3 Intuition Video
1 - 4 Leave The Lights On Video
1 - 5 2 Find U Video
1 - 6 Fragile Heart Video
1 - 7 Doin' Fine Video
1 - 8 2 Become 1 Video
1 - 9 Haunted Video
1 - 10 Sweet Temptation Video
1 - 11 Yes U Can Video
1 - 12 U & Me=Love Video
1 - 13 America Video
1 - 14 Becoming Video
1 - 15 Intuition (Ford's Radio Mix)
1 - 16 (Untitled Track)
2 - 17 Intuition Video
2 - 18 Standing Still Video
2 - 19 Leave The Light On
2 - 20 Stand Video
2 - 21 2 Become 1 Video
2 - 22 (Untitled Track)
Review - :
Within the liner notes to her fourth album, {^0304}, {$Jewel} includes a note to her fans, explaining, "This album may seem different to you," which is putting it mildly. For a singer who has been making low-key {\singer/songwriter} albums so unassuming that on her debut the two singles had to be re-recorded for mass consumption, it is a big shock to put on {^0304} and hear that she has abandoned folksiness and {\adult pop} to make a {\dance-pop} album, of all things. A move that's even more shocking when you consider that when this was released in June of 2003, the teen-driven {\dance-pop} boom of the late '90s/early 2000s was over, so it doesn't necessarily even sound like part of the mainstream of the time, suggesting that this isn't a calculated effort to ride the latest hip trends. No, the music on {^0304} is the wild, weird result of {$Jewel}'s desire to create a "modern interpretation of {\big band} music. A record that (is) lyric-driven, like {$Cole Porter} stuff, that also has a lot of {\swing}...that combined dance, {\urban}, and {\folk} music." While the {\big band} and {$Cole Porter} allusions are a stretch -- although it is true that this is as lyric-driven as her previous three records -- with the assistance of producer {$Lester Mendez}, she has managed to blend dance, {\urban}, and {\folk} -- complete with {\pop} overtones, of course -- in previously unimaginable ways. Like {$Sheryl Crow}'s eponymous second album, this picks up familiar strands of contemporary {\pop} music and familiar themes in {$Jewel}'s own work, but the way they're assembled is disarmingly idiosyncratic -- it has a polished, commercial sheen, but the songs take weird twists and turns in their arrangements, structure, and lyrics (another thing this shares with {$Sheryl Crow} is a predilection for odd pop culture references and name-dropping). More than anything, it's the weird juxtapositions in the production -- the accordions and dance beats on {&"Intuition,"} the way her protest tune, {&"America,"} ends in an {\electro}-crash, the muted {\jazz} trumpets on her {$Nelly Furtado}-styled {&"Leave the Lights On,"} to name just a few -- that make this an original-sounding album, something with more imagination than the average {\dance-pop} record. Better still, it sounds more authentic (and boasts a better set of songs) than her previous records, which were either too ramshackle or too self-serious and doggedly somber to really reveal much character. Here, even if it's under the veneer of commercial {\pop}, she puts herself out on the line more than she ever has, and she's come up with her best record, with her best set of songs and best music yet. As she notes in her message to fans, "It's the first record I enjoy listening to. It's fun!" She's completely right on that note -- it's the first album of hers that's a sheer pleasure to hear. [This Australian version of the album includes an additional CD of bonus material.] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide