Those walking bass lines, swinging rhythms and hipster vocalizing. No wonder Time magazine dubbed Rickie Lee Jones "The Duchess of Coolsville."
One of pop music's true originals, Jones has always been jazz-adjacent.
Her 1979 eponymous debut had shades of bohemian jazz. In 1991, on her "Pop Pop" covers album, she offered a couple of jazz standards like "I'll Be Seeing You." And she's since dropped other classics like "My Funny Valentine" into her recorded and concert repertoire.
This spring, Jones delivered her first collection of standards, the remarkably intimate, late-night "Pieces of Treasure," featuring mostly songs she learned as a kid from her father. For the project, she reunited with producer Russ Titelman, who helmed her debut, which led to her winning a Grammy for best new artist, and her splendid sophomore effort, "Pirates."
Before Jones, 68, returns to the Dakota this week for a program of standards, she Zoomed in from her New Orleans house.
Q: Two years ago when we talked about your terrific memoir "Last Chance Texaco," you said you were ready to record an album of original material. What happened?
A: I went to talk to Russ Titelman about doing it and he said, "No, let's make a jazz record." Those songs are there and they're waiting. When we're done working on this, I'll make a decision to make a piece of theater or I'll put out a record. It really depends on other people's interests because they bring the money for me to do the bigger things.
Q: What was it like working with Titelman again?