The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard [Deluxe Edition] Rickie Lee Jones

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CD - Special Edition

  • Release Date: 02/06/2007
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 65,445
  • Label: NEW WEST RECORDS
  • UPC: 607396611225
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CD - Digi-Pak$13.79

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Track List
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The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard [Deluxe Edition]

Disc 1
1LISTENNobody Knows My Name 3:27
2LISTENGethsemane 2:26
3LISTENFalling Up 4:41
4LISTENLamp of the Body 3:00
5LISTENIt Hurts 3:46
6LISTENWhere I Like It Best 5:46
7LISTENTried to Be a Man 3:45
8LISTENCircle in the Sand 3:29
9LISTENDonkey Ride 2:52
10LISTENSeventh Day 3:57
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Disc 2
1How It All Began DVD
2Turn It Down DVD
3Late Night Song DVD
4Threat of the Bomb DVD
5Tried to Be a Man DVD
6The Mystery Box DVD
7It Hurts DVD
8I Have Another One DVD
9Caught Me in It's Ray DVD
10Haven't Had Anything to Eat Today DVD
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Rickie Lee Jones has always been one of the more mercurial artists in -- or, perhaps more precisely, on the fringes of -- the pop-rock mainstream. That's borne out with stunning vividness on The Sermon on Exhibition Boulevard, a disc that's unflaggingly challenging -- and unfailingly rewarding -- even by Jones's standards. Awash in Christian imagery and cloaked in a lo-fi sound that's reminiscent of the third Velvet Underground album, The Sermon on Exhibition Boulevard goes a long way toward the singer's expressed goal -- reclaiming the Christian faith from fundamentalists -- but it also packs the sort of sonic dexterity needed to fascinate those with no ideological cards to play. As if to hammer home that point, Jones doesn't even bother with lyrics on the wild-as-the-wind folk exploration "Road to Emmaus," which uses an ethereal, Incredible String Band-styled melody as a bed for wordless vocals that range from sweet humming to siren-like cooing. She's every bit as audacious on "Donkey Ride," a purposefully disjointed piece that would be at home on a Joanna Newsom album -- particularly given Jones's dramatic, shaman-like delivery. Not everything on the disc is that demanding, of course. "Nobody Knows My Name" glides along on a hypnotic guitar drone that matches Jones's high-lonesome wail -- and her solitary-woman tale -- with a fascinatingly bleak beauty. She even rocks out here and there: "Seventh Day" carries a good bit of the finger-popping funkiness that characterized her earliest work, while "Blue Cadillac" offers a droll, swinging vision of heaven as a rock 'n' roll dream. Much of The Sermon on Exhibition Boulevard exists in the realm of the dream state, a dominion that Rickie Lee Jones knows as well as any performer out there -- making her the ideal guide to its innermost reaches. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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