This Way Jewel

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CD - Enhanced

  • Release Date: 11/13/2001
  • Sales Rank: 31,313
  • Label: ATLANTIC / WEA
  • UPC: 075678351921

Listener Rating: (37 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Essential" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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This Way

1LISTENStanding Still 4:30
2LISTENJesus Loves You 3:20
3LISTENEverybody Needs Someone Sometime 4:08
4LISTENBreak Me 4:04
5LISTENDo You Want to Play? 2:55
6LISTENTill We Run Out of Road 4:45
7LISTENServe the Ego 4:57
8LISTENThis Way 4:16
9LISTENCleveland 4:09
10LISTENI Won't Walk Away 4:45
11LISTENLove Me, Just Leave Me Alone 3:47
12LISTENThe New Wild West 4:47
13LISTENGrey Matter Live / Bonus Track 4:35
14LISTENSometimes It Be That Way Live / Bonus Track 4:10

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Though Jewel trekked to Nashville to record her third album with producer Dan Huff, This Way is not the Alaska native's bid to become the next Faith Hill. Instead, it's the best record of her career, short on precious lyrics and long on muscular twang 'n' roll. This Way displays Jewel's keen observational skills in heartfelt songs about the spiritual price of materialism ("Jesus Loves You"), the uncertain path our society is taking ("The New Wild West"), or just flat-out romantic yearning ("Standing Still"). Despite these weighty concerns, Jewel avoids excessive hand wringing, and she uses the rockin' arrangements to cut loose. The exotic "Serve the Ego" employs finger cymbals, Middle Eastern-flavored vocal phrasing, and racy lyrics about dominance and subservience. And the torchy "I Won't Walk Away" recalls her yearning hit "Foolish Games." Elsewhere, Jewel gives Joan Osborne a run for her money as she howls over the slide-guitar-driven rock of "Love Me, Just Leave Me Alone." If it seems that the precocious poet has forgotten her past, a pair of bonus live tracks, "Grey Matter" and "Sometimes It Be That Way," with their simple vocal-guitar arrangements, neatly recall the solid folk roots at the heart of this gem of a singer-songwriter. Dave Gil de Rubio, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

ANOTHER "JEWEL" OF A CD!!by DarcyNJ

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May 31, 2009: LOVE, LOVE THIS CD. PLAY IT ALL THE TIME>

another great one from jewelby Anonymous

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November 06, 2007: so, this album was released after jewel started dating a rodeo star and all of a sudden, she's a country singer. well, not completely. but this album is very country influenced, with the use of steel guitar in "cleveland" and "love me just leave me alone," as well as the country-tinged sound of "til we run out of road." this influence came out of left-feild, as neither "pieces of you" nor "spirit" contained any kind of country sound in them. i personally am not a fan of country, but it actually works on this album. actually, i would consider this album her second best behind "spirit." it has, once again, a group of well-written songs, including "jesus loves you," a politically charged song with lyrics disecting religious extremists, which also has a very catchy melody, and "do you want to play?" the lyrics of which still have me wondering if jewel had a lesbian fling. it's hard to explain why, but this album is just really, really catchy.


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