Borders was giving away her sample CD...I've had it for a weeks, I'm gonna have 
to give a listen now for sure.  She's getting rave reviews all over...

Robin aka CherryMoon

And Mama's Gun is on my Top 10 - Non-Prince CDs....

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2006 9:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: NPNY: [thebumpsquad] Tamar's CD postponed/cancelled...AGAIN!/ 
Corinne commen

We went to see Corinne Bailey Rae at The Bowery Ballroom a few  weeks back...I 
definitely dig her voice...VERY Norah Jones if you like that  style of singer.  
She just needs to have chairs for her  performances...anyone remember Norah 
Jones at The 2002 Celebration?  Good  stuff just laid back and mellow.

Also, her last choice of soundtrack for life...Erykah Badu's  Mama's Gun...that 
is in my top 10 and has definitely been a part of my life  soundtrack.
Anyone who hasn't heard it...go!  now!!  Get  it!!  And  don't sleep on Green 
Eyes.
-Portia


In a message dated 7/20/2006 8:57:22 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] writes:

I'm not  counting out Tamar just yet until I hear the album, (I'm sure if it 
wont be  released a bootleg or two will float around somewhere lol), I liked 
Red  Head Stepchild. However for those looking for some good music check out  
Corrine Bailey Rae, her voice is smooth and velvety and her songs deserve  
attention. Here is a Q&A session from Netscape Entertainment  News.
Q&A With Corinne Bailey Rae
With her self-titled debut album  already a Number 1 hit in her native England, 
Corinne Bailey Rae is set for  similar success in North America.
Her single 'Put Your Records On' is  quickly becoming one of the songs of the 
summer and the buzz surrounding  26-year old Bailey Rae is earning the 
singer-songwriter comparisons to  Norah Jones and even the legendary Billie 
Holiday. She took some time out  from her hectic schedule to speak with AOL and 
answer a few questions about  her music.

You are a new artist to many people, but the reality  is you've been doing this 
a while haven't you?


I feel like I'm a  new artist to everybody really because I've been making 
music for a really  long time but in the most underground level possible. I've 
been doing about  a gig every month for the last ten years. I've never played 
like every  night for two weeks like what I'm doing at the moment. It's a 
different  experience totally. I was in a band since I was 15 and I did that 
until a  couple of years ago and also during that time I sang in these soul and 
jazz  clubs and bars at university and a little bit part-time when I finished 
my  degree. I feel like I've done a lot of gigs and I've written a lot of  
music. I feel like I'm just coming into my own now. I was really lucky that  
someone picked up on what I was doing. It's just new, it's really new, it's  
kind of hard to believe it's all happening. It's only been about 5 or  six 
months.

You say you've been lucky. Were you always looking for a  deal?


I was always looking for a deal even when I was 16 I was in a  band, we just 
wanted to get signed. If we could have got signed and not  gone to university 
we would have done it. I think it was the culture at  the time, that grunge 
thing, that indie thing. You know you don't have to  be a really talented 
virtuoso guitarist. It's just about simple  songs, rawness and emotion. It was 
all about being able to hold the  attention of a crowd. Everybody wanted to be 
in the band and everybody  wanted to make it in the industry tour and have 
albums out

In your  music there's a particularly strong visual element. Can you expand on 
why  that is?


I feel that like 'I'd Like To' [from my album] is a song I  can always sing 
with a smile on my face because I can remember all those  summers. I remember 
what the blanket looked like, I remember what our old  barbeque used to look 
like and what our old garage used to look like. It  puts me back in that place. 
I do like to make my songs visual and  evocative. I try to use all the senses 
in all the songs 'cos I just think  it helps to stay in your mind more. I just 
like describing  things.

You have an indie rock background and you've also played in  many jazz clubs. 
How have you managed to avoid being put in a specific  genre box?


I think nowadays there's less of a thing about genre  'cos of the iPod thing 
and also because of hip-hop sampling. You can get a  sound from the dawn of 
time up until yesterday in all different styles of  music. You're not defined 
by what you like. I personally love seeing all  connections between different 
types of music. I like hearing the funk in  Carole King and the rock in what 
Jimi Hendrix does or Led Zeppelin. When  you think of the drummer you think it 
could be Sly and the Family  Stone.
Everything's crossed over. All musical styles and all musical  cultures have 
always communicated and have always talked to each other.  Nothing develops in 
a vacuum.

That's what I love about music. I'd  feel like my arm was being twisted to have 
to choose between one or the  other. Some people appreciate that and other 
people don't really get it and  think sometimes it waters it down for people. 
People would rather you make  an obvious guitar album or a very obvious R&B 
album with slick beats.  For some people they might see this music as soft 
because they don't see it  maybe the same way that I do.

Your latest single is 'Put Your  Records On.' What five records would you put 
on as a soundtrack to your  life so far?


Veruca Salt - American Thighs

I used to love  this record and I'd still love it if I heard it now. I haven't 
heard it for  ages. But that was a template for me of how you write songs being 
a woman  and how to write with an electric guitar. So many songs [my band] made 
 sounded like they wanted to be on that record.
That was my  fault.

Isley Brothers - 3 + 3

A beautiful record.

Roberta  Flack- First Take

I think that's really heavy, really spiritual, really  soulful but also very 
dark as well.

Bjork - Debut

I'd never  heard a voice like that. I remember seeing her on a television 
program and  it felt connected to me. I'd never heard that kind of voice that 
was just  so unusual. I thought my voice isn't that weird then  by comparison.

Erykah Badu - Mama's Gun

Beautiful. I love the  soundscapes of it all. The mood the Rhodes, the 
Wurlitzer, the bass,  electric guitar and the acoustic guitar, those are the 
sounds that I like.  I like detail, I love it.

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