MP3 Lea Jones - Contact Information
''Self-help folk music'' from Lea''s salad days in Eugene, Oregon. Songs of love, codependency, recovery, discovery, and body piercing. Glorious studio recordings with all the trimmings, plus a handful of ''live in concert'' cuts.
19 MP3 Songs in this album (75:24) !
Related styles: Folk: Folk-Rock, New Age: Self-Help, Featuring Guitar
People who are interested in Guy Clark John Sebastian Ray Benson should consider this download.
Details:
Self-Help Folk Music: CONTACT INFORMATION consists of my oldest (and best) recordings. It''s what used to be called a double album, combining "Against the Wall: Songs of Recovery" and "Feels Like Love to Me" into one CD. The first half dozen songs parallel my early years as a seeker who found himself in a less than fully actualized relationship.... Euphoria dissipated & dysfunction grew (slowly slowly) from those early days, before my personal recovery began. By way of group work and meditation I began to rediscover personal integrity, spirit, openness, joy and trust... Most of this process was touched upon in the later recordings..... Both albums received strong reviews and coverage from radio stations and periodicals across the country, including Sober Times, Willamette Week, the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, KLCC, WYPR, WTMD & others. Against the Wall, in particular, sold thousands of copies, mainly at my live performances. These recordings have been used in films and have received airplay, on NPR stations primarily. Since then, I’ve shared the stage with Robin & Linda Williams and Tom Prasado-Rao, among others, and once played David Wilcox’s guitar. { About Contact Information: "The band plays great and the vocals are strong.... Best of all, Lea sings great!" Ken Croes, KLCC-FM and "...a behavioral counselor who also happens to be a singer-songwriter. What''ll they think of next? Jones sings songs about his private life and how damn hard it''s been. So, if you want to feel sorry for someone other than yourself, well, Jones does it in public." Willamette Week, Portland, Oregon }