The Leaf Label - re-releasing Essie Jain's second album - 2009 Tour Dates!
Monday, September 14,2009 "We're very pleased to announce that we will be re-releasing Essie Jain's second album, The Inbetween, in North America this November. The album originally received a low-key release in early 2008, with the European Special Edition released by The Leaf Label late last year. Now we are able to bring this revised edition to North America, embellished with two superb new tracks and completely new digipak artwork." -The Leaf Label
Essie will be recording a Daytrotter session in Rock Island, IL on November 8, and has scheduled a handful of live dates around this time:

SEP 24, CAKE SHOP, New York, NY
SEP 30, UNION HALL, Brooklyn, NY
NOV 06, RUMBA CAFÉ, Columbus, OH
NOV 07, BISHOP BAR, Bloomington, IN
NOV 08, DAYTROTTER SESSION, Rock Island, IL
NOV 09, VENUE TBA, Chicago, IL
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artist: |
Essie Jain |
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title: |
The Inbetween (Special Edition) |
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label: |
The Leaf Label (distributed by Revolver) |
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formats: |
CD (BAY 66CD) & digital |
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release date: |
Tuesday, November 10, 2009 |
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websites: |
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"New York-based Londoner Essie Jain is set to re-release her second album, The Inbetween, the lush and more deeply embellished follow up to her fragile and tender debut, We Made This Ourselves. The album was originally released in spring 2008, and this Special Edition version includes two superb bonus tracks, previously unavailable in North America, and completely new artwork by British artist Luke Drozd.
“In the course of the year that separated the two records, I had started working with more musicians,” says Essie. “So a lot of them became involved in the process of arranging the music. There were a lot of strong characters and talent, so I let them bring their visions into it too.”
While the centerpiece of Essie Jain’s music continues to be the core duo of herself on piano and guitarist Patrick Glynn, the lively New York scene has offered up a revolving cast of additional players including French horn, clarinet, Rhodes, cello and trumpet plus bass and drums.
After the introspective solitude and tightly wound interior of the first album, these expansive subsequent live shows have shone a new light and breathed warmth into the music. Moving from the internal space of her own apartment, where We Made This Ourselves was recorded, Jain rallied her band for a formal recording session at The Buddy Project in Astoria, New York. Evidently a potent and charged recording atmosphere, with the album completed in just five days, a far wider palette of emotions and range of styles can be found, reflecting Jain’s talent for writing both sad and serious as well as much more playful, even mischievous songs. This growing confidence with polished arrangements and fuller instrumentation allows her assured voice to really shine, relying less on the quiet, layered vocals of the debut.
“The inbetween is a point in life where you’re sort of stuck,” explains Essie. “It’s a space where things aren’t ready to take their next shape yet - they can’t be forced, but you can see the opening into the next chapter and it can’t quite be reached. Basically you’re in the middle of two worlds - one behind, one in front. But it’s very beautiful in a way - magical almost, like some kind of suspension - being able to view the gap of light where you are heading.”
The Inbetween is indeed most aptly titled, with the album moving through the sparely lit songs, like yearning piano and cello opener ‘Eavesdrop’ and its bookend, the lonesome elegy of ‘Goodbye’, and the unfurling trumpet and textured brushes of languid, mid-afternoon musing ‘Stop’, to songs with a bold, heightened sense of drama.
‘Here We Go’ has an almost vampish piano set to a brisk backbeat and soaring brass motif. ‘The Rights’ conjures up the theatrical, while ‘Do It’ sees the full band take flight with a dynamic, rock & roll swing. Central to it all, of course, is Essie Jain’s expressive, hypnotic voice.
“They are songs which have more fight to them I think,” Jain considers, “they are defiant and more direct – less resigned to accepting and struggling with something, and more awake to speaking up about it - the arrangements reflect that - more boisterous and challenging.”
The album was first released in the US on home-of-Beirut label Ba Da Bing in 2008, shortly after the Leaf Label released a special edition of the album for the rest of the world. Leaf now has the rights to re-release the album worldwide. This edition of the album includes two newly recorded bonus tracks: ‘Not Yours’, which has a woozy gait and almost Spanish guitar melancholy, and the sombre hymnal ‘I Remember it Just Like This’, a tantalizing view of where Essie may be headed next. The album also features completely new artwork by British artist Luke Drozd.
The Special Edition was declared by the UK's Sunday Telegraph to be one of the Top 10 pop albums of 2008.
With such a significant leap – in songwriting, musical arrangements and the flowering of her personality between her two albums – Essie Jain is ready to bloom. With not one but two new albums pencilled for release (including a collection of lullabies that she has already road-tested to very positive reaction), 2010 is set to be her year, and this re-release is great opportunity to bring yourself up to speed."
2009,
Essie Jain,
November,
September,
The Leaf Label,
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folk,
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