REVIEW

Music Review: Rickie Lee Jones - The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard

Written by Ray Ellis
Published February 11, 2007
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While Sermon does have some mystic overtones about it, it's unfair to compare it to Van Morrison's Astral Weeks, as some advance press has attempted to do. What Rickie Lee Jones and company have done here is infuse the words and ideals of Jesus with a punk sensibility. Most of the music here is much more akin to Lou Reed than Van Morrison. "Circle in the Sand" sounds as if it was channeled through Transformer, and has that same sense of ennui that's the signature of much of Reed's work. That's not to imply this is a derivative work — far from it. It alternates between the playful ("Falling Up") and the foreboding (Donkey Ride", with its chilling refrain "You rode in on a donkey tonight, but you'll be going out on a cross"), but mostly remains true to its vision of private spirituality.

The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard in some ways is a departure for Rickie Lee Jones. Gone are the bluesy, jazzy arrangements generally associated with her work, replaced with with the gritty, barebones instrumentation that speaks directly to gut instinct. Lyrically, it's her most provocative work yet, with words that can only be dragged from the soul. Yet, it is ultimately a work about the simple release of surrendering to the realms that lie beyond our logic. Never preachy, often amusing and always profound in a basic way, this may be her finest work to date. It's certainly the best album of 2007 thus far.

A side note: This album is available in two configurations. Go for the Limited Edition Release. It's limited to 35,000 numbered copies, and it's well worth the extra couple of bucks you have to spring for it. It includes a a 40 minute DVD featuring clips from the studio sessions, as well as a fourteen page booklet detailing the origins of the album. As a bonus, the DVD is embedded with an mp3 version of the full album for download to portable players.

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Ray Ellis is a freelance writer who has been dissecting pop culture and its effect on how we view ourselves for over twenty years, ruffling feathers and dragging unsuspecting pedestrians along for the ride whenever possible.
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Music Review: Rickie Lee Jones - The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard
Published: February 11, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Rock, Music: Folk, Music: Christian and Gospel, Music: Adult Alternative
Writer: Ray Ellis
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Comments

#1 — February 11, 2007 @ 22:19PM — Pico [URL]

"It's certainly the best album of 2007 thus far."

What is it about albums by female singers whose last names are Jones being declared the best of this young year? ;-)

Kidding aside, this and another review I read on this CD has gotten me very curious about it. It always seemed as if Rickie Lee has been holding back on every album after Pirates. Maybe she just needed the right vehicle for inspiration.

#2 — February 12, 2007 @ 10:04AM — Connie Phillips [URL]

Congrats! This article has been forwarded to the Advance.net websites.

#3 — March 22, 2007 @ 18:06PM — antonio righetti

this is an artist in an era that prefer emptyness to meaning. welcome back inspiration, welcome back Rickie Lee. maybe ...where this count.....the best of 2007

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