Marti Jones biography
Date of birth : -
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Uniontown, Ohio,U.S.
Nationality : American
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2011-12-06
Credited as : Singer, painter, Color Me Gone band
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Marti Jones has a rich, clear voice that possesses both sultry siren tones and vulnerability, making her an ideally sensitive interpreter for such songwriters as John Hiatt, Graham Parker, Janis Ian, Marshall Crenshaw, Elvis Costello, and Loudon Wainwright III. Her warm vocal style has prompted some critics to compare her to Annie Lennox and Anne Murray, and her selection of top-shelf songs has led to comparisons to Linda Ronstadt and Bonnie Raitt.
Jones was raised near the industrial town of Akron, Ohio, an area that boasts a diverse and energetic pop music heritage that includes Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders, Rachel Sweet, Pere Ubu, Lene Lovich, and the Waitresses. Jones began performing with her sisters in a folk music group. She recorded as the singer for the Akron group Color Me Gone in 1984. That group's self-titled extended play single included six songs, about which Trouser Press scribe Ira Robbins noted: "Without really holding to any style, the Ohio quartet flirts with radio rock, neo-ethnic Americana, country (in that mode, the downcast 'Hurtin' You' is the best thing here) and '60s-ish folk-rock, winding up pleasant but unmemorable." Robbins favorably reviewed Jones's vocals, as well as the recording's "nice arrangements and clear production" that Robbins believed "allowed her to draw everything out of the six agreeable songs."
For her first solo effort Jones recruited Don Dixon. Dixon had begun his career as a bass player, songwriter, and singer in a North Carolina band called Arrogance. After performing in near obscurity with Arrogance for 14 years, Dixon rose to prominence as a producer of such acts as R.E.M., the Smithereens, and Let's Active. The partnership between Jones and Dixon yielded 1985's Unsophisticated Time. People critic Ralph Novak gave the release his highest mark, writing that Dixon "provided her with a lot of infectious, synthesized rhythms; yet there are cello and trombone solos and a string quartet too." Novak also had compliments for Jones, whom he described as "an exciting singer, with a rich, finely tuned voice and a sensibility (and sense of humor) to go with it." Songwriters represented on the album included Elvis Costello, whose "The Element Within Her" is a particular standout, as well as Richard Barone, the dBs, and Dixon.
Jones and Dixon followed up Unsophisticated Time with the 1986 release Match Game. On this release Jones covered the David Bowie song "Soul Love," Marshall Crenshaw's "Whenever You're on My Mind," Free's "Soon I Will Be Gone," Dwight Twilley's "Chance of a Lifetime," and Liam Sternberg's "Crusher," as well as songs by Costello, Barone, and Dixon. Among the supporting musicians on the album were Crenshaw, Mitch Easter, Barone, T-Bone Burnett, Darlene Love, and former Ace and Squeeze vocalist Paul Carrack. Novak noted that Jones "achieves a remarkable sound that's like a cross between a country ballad and something out of New Delhi." Despite his enthusiasm for the recording, Novak graded it one notch beneath Jones's debut.
By the time Jones's third album was released she and Dixon were married, and they continued as recording and songwriting partners. Used Guitars, released in 1988, features such songs as "You Can't Take Love for Granted" by Graham Parker, "The Real One" and "If I Can Love Somebody" by John Hiatt, "Ruby" by Janis Ian, another contribution from Marshall Crenshaw, and three collaborations between Dixon and Jones. Some feminist critics expressed concerns that perhaps Dixon was taking too much of an active role in Jones's selection of material, and perhaps was dominating her career at the expense of Jones's independence. Jones took the criticism in stride; joking that she had considered naming the album Good Golly Svengali.
In 1988 Jones also contributed one song to the anthology Number One with a Bullet, a cover of Liam Sternberg's "Walk Like an Egyptian," which had previously been a smash hit for the Bangles. According to People's Novak: "Marti Jones is a classy singer and her 'Walk Like an Egyptian' (by Liam Sternberg) uses the same approach as the Bangles', yet it's missing the quirky touches of the Bangles' novel success."
Used Guitars failed to find an audience, prompting Jones's label, A&M, to drop her. For her fourth album she secured a contract with RCA. Of the eleven songs on the 1990 release, Any Kind of Lie, all but three are written by Jones and Dixon: Loudon Wainwright III's "Old Friend," Clive Gregson's "Cliché," and Don Dixon as sole writer on "Second Choice." Robbins wrote that Dixon "loads the songs up with every time-tested trick in the pop-country-rock singer/songwriter manual, making for a carefully arranged record that tries to consolidate a wide range of successful stylistic referents." People critic Andrew Abrahams granted the album his highest grade, describing it as "Lovers' deceptions. Bitter memories. Cynical impressions of romance. Yes, love songs, songs of love lost and mourned, abound on Jones's fourth record. The gifted singer-songwriter conjures a darkly romantic mood."
Despite a generally positive critical reception, Any Kind of Lie also failed to find the audience it deserved, and it took Jones nearly six years to release another album. In 1996 she released two albums on the Sugar Hill Records label, including a live recording, Live from Spirit Square, and the studio recording My Long-Haired Life. In 2002 she released My Tidy Doily Dream, which featured her collaboration with astroPuppies' member Kelley Ryan, "Always."
Discography:
1985: Unsophisticated Time
1986: Match Game
1988: Used Guitars
1990: Any Kind Of Lie
1996: My Long Haired Life
1996: Live From Spirit Square
2002: My Tidy Doily Dream
2008: Lucky Stars: New Lullabies for Old Souls (with Don Dixon)