Grace Jones
Idioma disponible: inglésGrace Jones was one of the more unforgettable artists to emerge from New York City's hedonistic Studio 54 disco scene of the late '70s. Born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, Jones was raised in a strict and devoutly Pentecostal household by her parents, who eventually moved to the U.S. and left Jones and her siblings in the care of their grandmother and an abusive step-grandfather. At the age of 13, the Jones children joined their parents in the States. Jones studied theater at Syracuse University before launching a career as a model, notably evident on the 1973 Philadelphia International reissue of Billy Paul's second album. Her statuesque and flamboyant look eventually proved to be a hit in Paris and subsequently New York, which led to a recording contract with Island Records. While the disco-based, Tom Moulton-produced albums Portfolio (1977), Fame (1978), and Muse (1979) didn't break the singer into the mainstream, Jones scored several Billboard club hits and amassed a substantial following with her sexually charged live show, which led to her title of "Queen of the Gay Discos." During the early '80s, Jones switched from straightforward, R&B-rooted disco to a post-disco fusion of reggae and rock driven by Sly & Robbie and a team of studio associates dubbed the Compass Point All-Stars. The shrewd change resulted in three of her best-known and strongest releases, all of which -- Warm Leatherette (1980), Nightclubbing (1981), and Living My Life (1982) -- were recorded at Compass Point Studios in Nassau. These albums contained her strongest original material, including the provocative "Pull Up to the Bumper" and defiant "Living My Life," as well as imaginative covers of songs recorded first by the Pretenders, Roxy Music, and Iggy Pop. Jones' also adopted a singular vocal approach that sounded somewhat detached and all-powerful at once, and she had a scowling, prowling, rather inhuman stage presence to match. The singer then took a break from recording to focus on film work and landed roles in such movies as Conan the Destroyer and the James Bond flick A View to a Kill, but she returned to her recording career and enlisted super-producer Trevor Horn (Yes, Frankie Goes to Hollywood) to oversee the lavish Slave to the Rhythm (1985), which turned out to be a somewhat autobiographical work. A ten-track compilation of highlights from her first six albums, Island Life, was issued the same year. Jones' penchant for working with big names continued on Inside Story (1986). Its production chores handled by Chic's Nile Rodgers, the album spawned one of Jones' last big singles, "I'm Not Perfect (But I'm Perfect for You)." After the release of Bulletproof Heart (1989), Jones recorded less frequently and focused primarily on acting, including a role in Eddie Murphy's hit 1992 comedy Boomerang. Although there were anthologies, such as the double-disc set Private Life: The Compass Point Sessions (1998), Jones went nearly 20 years without recording a new album. She didn't make a full return to music until the late 2000s, when she released Hurricane (2008), a set that featured contributions from Brian Eno, Wendy & Lisa, Tricky, and others. During the 2010s, Jones' 1977-1981 studio recordings were expanded and reissued, and she published an autobiography, I'll Never Write My Memoirs.
© Greg Prato & Andy Kellman /TiVo Leer más
Grace Jones was one of the more unforgettable artists to emerge from New York City's hedonistic Studio 54 disco scene of the late '70s. Born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, Jones was raised in a strict and devoutly Pentecostal household by her parents, who eventually moved to the U.S. and left Jones and her siblings in the care of their grandmother and an abusive step-grandfather. At the age of 13, the Jones children joined their parents in the States. Jones studied theater at Syracuse University before launching a career as a model, notably evident on the 1973 Philadelphia International reissue of Billy Paul's second album. Her statuesque and flamboyant look eventually proved to be a hit in Paris and subsequently New York, which led to a recording contract with Island Records. While the disco-based, Tom Moulton-produced albums Portfolio (1977), Fame (1978), and Muse (1979) didn't break the singer into the mainstream, Jones scored several Billboard club hits and amassed a substantial following with her sexually charged live show, which led to her title of "Queen of the Gay Discos."
During the early '80s, Jones switched from straightforward, R&B-rooted disco to a post-disco fusion of reggae and rock driven by Sly & Robbie and a team of studio associates dubbed the Compass Point All-Stars. The shrewd change resulted in three of her best-known and strongest releases, all of which -- Warm Leatherette (1980), Nightclubbing (1981), and Living My Life (1982) -- were recorded at Compass Point Studios in Nassau. These albums contained her strongest original material, including the provocative "Pull Up to the Bumper" and defiant "Living My Life," as well as imaginative covers of songs recorded first by the Pretenders, Roxy Music, and Iggy Pop. Jones' also adopted a singular vocal approach that sounded somewhat detached and all-powerful at once, and she had a scowling, prowling, rather inhuman stage presence to match.
The singer then took a break from recording to focus on film work and landed roles in such movies as Conan the Destroyer and the James Bond flick A View to a Kill, but she returned to her recording career and enlisted super-producer Trevor Horn (Yes, Frankie Goes to Hollywood) to oversee the lavish Slave to the Rhythm (1985), which turned out to be a somewhat autobiographical work. A ten-track compilation of highlights from her first six albums, Island Life, was issued the same year. Jones' penchant for working with big names continued on Inside Story (1986). Its production chores handled by Chic's Nile Rodgers, the album spawned one of Jones' last big singles, "I'm Not Perfect (But I'm Perfect for You)."
After the release of Bulletproof Heart (1989), Jones recorded less frequently and focused primarily on acting, including a role in Eddie Murphy's hit 1992 comedy Boomerang. Although there were anthologies, such as the double-disc set Private Life: The Compass Point Sessions (1998), Jones went nearly 20 years without recording a new album. She didn't make a full return to music until the late 2000s, when she released Hurricane (2008), a set that featured contributions from Brian Eno, Wendy & Lisa, Tricky, and others. During the 2010s, Jones' 1977-1981 studio recordings were expanded and reissued, and she published an autobiography, I'll Never Write My Memoirs.
© Greg Prato & Andy Kellman /TiVo
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Nightclubbing
Disco - Editado por Island Records (The Island Def Jam Music Group / Universal Music) el 1/05/1981
By all means a phenomenal pop album that hit number nine on the black albums chart and crossed over to penetrate the pop charts at number 32, Nightclu ...
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Slave To The Rhythm
Disco - Editado por Island Records (The Island Def Jam Music Group / Universal Music) el 1/01/1985
An audio biography of Grace Jones, produced by Trevor Horn, it's a sonic treat along the lines of Yes's 90125 or Frankie Goes to Hollywood's first alb ...
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Warm Leatherette
Pop - Editado por Island Records (The Island Def Jam Music Group / Universal Music) el 1/05/1980
Grace Jones teamed with the great reggae production duo of Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare on this 1980 album, and made the transition from straight ...
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Hurricane (version Dub, remixé par Ivor Guest)
Reggae - Editado por Wall of Sound el 11/11/2008
After 19 years, Grace Jones finally released a new studio album, and it's a weird one, nostalgic and timeless in equal measure. Her collaborators (inc ...
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Island Life
Disco - Editado por Island Records (The Island Def Jam Music Group / Universal Music) el 1/01/1985
Originally released in 1985, Island Life compiles highlights from Grace Jones' 1977 debut through 1985’s Slave to the Rhythm. It’s a concise overview ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Warm Leatherette (Deluxe)
Pop - Editado por Universal Music Group International el 30/06/1980
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Private Life: The Compass Point Sessions
R&B - Editado por Island Records (The Island Def Jam Music Group / Universal Music) el 1/01/1998
For anyone but die-hard fans, Private Life: The Compass Point Sessions will simply be too much Grace Jones in one place. Comprised entirely of recordi ...
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Disco
Disco - Editado por Universal Music Group International el 4/05/2015
The Island label reissued Grace Jones' first three albums as digital downloads in 2014, but The Disco Years, released the following year, brought the ...
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Nightclubbing
Disco - Editado por Island Records (The Island Def Jam Music Group / Universal Music) el 1/05/1981
By all means a phenomenal pop album that hit number nine on the black albums chart and crossed over to penetrate the pop charts at number 32, Nightclu ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Hurricane
Pop - Editado por Wall of Sound el 2/11/2008
After 19 years, Grace Jones finally released a new studio album, and it's a weird one, nostalgic and timeless in equal measure. Her collaborators (inc ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Inside Story
Dance - Editado por Capitol Records el 1/11/1986
Chic's Nile Rodgers produced this Grace Jones album as part of a new deal she signed in the late '80s with Manhattan. Unfortunately, she didn't remain ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Muse
Pop - Editado por Universal Music Group International el 1/01/1979
A fine dance and club album, Grace Jones was still essentially a disco act when she recorded this at the end of the '70s. The campy tendencies and fla ...
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Living My Life
Disco - Editado por Island Records (The Island Def Jam Music Group / Universal Music) el 1/01/1982
Grace Jones essentially retired from music after this album and became a film actress for three years. The album followed her definitive Nightclubbing ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Masters Collection
Pop - Editado por UMC (Universal Music Catalogue) el 1/01/2003
The contents of Star-Club Präsentiert Grace Jones, released in Germany through Universal, are the same as the more widely distributed Classic Grace Jo ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection: Best Of Grace Jones
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Basically, this Grace Jones entry in the Millennium Collection series is a one-disc version of Private Life: The Compass Point Sessions with "La Vie e ...
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Portfolio
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Portfolio
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Disco mix king Tom Moulton produced these tracks at Sigma Sound in Philadelphia using the same musicians Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff held hostage for t ...
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