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Jennifer Kimball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American singer-songwriter
Jennifer Kimball
GenresFolk rock
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar
Years active1980s–present
LabelsMCA,Elektra,Green Linnet, Epoisse,Philips, Imaginary Road
Websitewww.jenniferkimball.com
Musical artist

Jennifer Kimball is a singer and songwriter who formed the folk duoThe Story withJonatha Brooke.[1][2]

Career

[edit]

Jennifer Kimball andAmherst College friendJonatha Brooke began playing music together in the 1980s. They performed regularly during their college years.[3] Their folk songs were marked by "witty wordplay and sumptuous pop harmonies," according to one music critic.[4] Critics noted a resemblance between their music and earlier artists such asJoni Mitchell andPaul Simon in terms of excellent musicianship, singing, and writing.[5][6] Kimball graduated from Amherst in 1986.[7]

They called themselves The Story. One critic wrote "Jennifer Kimball played theArt Garfunkel role in The Story" and contributed "high ethereal harmonies."[8] In 1989, the duo played the coffeehouse folk circuit and radio which exemplified the "folk-rock singer-songwriter aesthetic," according to one account.[3] Kimball and Brooke "burst to fame" with this combination.[9] They created a demo calledOver Oceans and were promptly signed to the independent labelGreen Linnet which, in 1991, issued the duo's debut full-length album,Grace in Gravity. LaterElektra Records signed The Story and reissued their debut.

Their second album,The Angel in the House, was released in 1993.[10] One critic raved about the "exquisite arrangements and tricky, pitch-perfect harmonies by Ms. Brooke and her vocal partner, Jennifer Kimball," and added they "are the last word in elegant folk-pop refinement."[10] The album featured "moody jazz and Brazilian-flavored arrangements" and "the duo's harmonies, which usually begin in a comfortably folkish vein, frequently stray into precise chromaticdissonance" and had a "sophisticated international flavor."[10] Their song "Over Oceans" was used as a background for dance by choreographer Kristen Caputo.[11] The songs contemplate a woman's conflicting desires for love and achievement and the need to shake off the romantic myth of a male rescuer.[6]

Another critic discussed the contrast between the patter between songs and the songs themselves, noting the duo's "levity" between heavy songs about "God, church, death, female oppression, self-suppression, mothers and daughters."[12] Their songs adroitly avoided "heavy-handedness" with a certain "winning buoyancy of tune and/or spirit" with "sophisticated harmonic changes whose intriguing hooks come at you cockeyed and sideways more often than they swoop down from the heavens."[12] The duo were compared with artists such asSuzanne Vega andIndigo Girls.[13] Another reviewer gave the duo mixed reviews: "intriguingly distorted harmonies and interesting turns of phrase" but some "attempts at cleverness overreached" and there was "a painfully obvious unrecorded song about dieting and a silly, albeit self-consciously so, stab at voguing a la Madonna."[13] Another wrote their "music can alternate between heart-rending poetry and infectious flights of fancy."[14]

Solo albums

[edit]

Kimball and Brooke dissolved their musical partnership in 1994, while Kimball performed her songs in a variety of venues and continued to write music.

In 1998, Kimball released the albumVeering from the Wave. A Washington Post critic applauded the singing as "handsome" and the songwriting as excellent.[4] In 1999, Kimball opened for folk artists such asTom Rush.[15] In 2000, she was a featured performer at the Eli Whitney Folk Festival inNew Haven.[16] Her song "Meet Me in the Twilight" received radio airplay, including onSan Francisco stationKPFA.[17] She's recorded with other artists including Wayfaring Strangers,Session Americana andTony Trischka.[9][18] Kimball's music has been described as "quirky and oh-so-urban suburban" and a "sultry roots singer" with the "aching breath of a mezzo."[9]

Kimball released her CDOh Hear Us in 2006.[19] One critic wrote "her songs still ripple with eccentric surprise, sudden twists, and "A-ha!" moments."[9]

In 2007 she worked part-time as ahorticulturalist and studiedlandscape design atHarvard.[1] She commented: "It's a lovely way to keep the head 'free' while working outside and dreaming up songs, designs, novels." She sang and played at Boston's Lizard Lounge with musicians including guitaristDuke Levine, lap steel player Kevin Barry, drummer Bill Beard, bassist Richard Gates, and guest artists including Dennis Brennan,Kris Delmhorst,Rose Polenzani,Anne Heaton, andRose Cousins.[1]

Since 2009, Kimball has performed with Wintery Songs in Eleventy Part Harmony, a loose collective ofBoston-area female musicians she initiated with Rose Polenzani to perform eclectic seasonal music. The group has featured core members such as Rose Cousins andLaura Cortese[20] along with a revolving cast of collaborators that has includedCatie Curtis,Sarah Jarosz andAoife O'Donovan. The group released an eponymous EP in 2014 and a full-length album of original, traditional and modern seasonal songs,Hark, in 2015, with contributions from Kris Delmhorst andAnais Mitchell. The group continues to perform annual holiday shows each December.[21]The Boston Globe described them as "a veritable supergroup of some of the finest local singer-songwriters."[22]

Personal

[edit]

At the beginning of her career, Kimball also worked as a children's book designer forLittle, Brown and she has also studied landscape design and ecology atBoston Architectural College.[23] Kimball has performed to raise money for charitable organizations such as Massachusetts Families in Need[24] and she supports the cause of helping women's shelters.[25] She is a mother with one son and lives in theBoston, Massachusetts area.

Discography

[edit]
Jennifer Kimball
AlbumYearLabelNotesReferences
Grace in Gravity1991part ofThe Story[3]
Angel in the House1993Elektrapart ofThe Story[3]
Veering from the Wave1998Philips; Imaginary Roadsolo debut album[17]
Oh Hear Us2006Epoisse Records
Avocet2017Epoisse Records

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcLozaw, Tristram (8 November 2007)."Jennifer Kimball - The Boston Globe".archive.boston.com. Retrieved29 April 2017.
  2. ^Ankeny, Jason."Jennifer Kimball".AllMusic. Retrieved29 April 2017.
  3. ^abcdDerk Richardson (March 29, 2001)."A Label Of Her Own -- Jonatha Brooke takes back her music with Steady Pull". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved2009-09-18.
  4. ^abHimes, Geoffrey (November 7, 1997)."Jonatha Brooke: "10 Cent Wings" Refuge/MCA".The Washington Post. Retrieved2009-09-18.
  5. ^Tracy Collins (January 2, 2000)."On the Arts: They are chicks, hear them roar as a musical influence". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived fromthe original on 2007-08-14. Retrieved2009-09-18.
  6. ^abSTEPHEN HOLDEN (September 24, 1993)."Critic's Notebook; Adult Sounds From (Way) Off the Charts".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  7. ^"Who has attended Amherst College?". Amherst College website. 2009-11-11. Archived fromthe original on 2009-06-20. Retrieved2009-11-11.Musicians Jonatha Brooke Mallet 1985 and Jennifer Kimball 1986, both formerly of the Sabrinas and The Story.
  8. ^Geoffrey Himes (September 4, 1998)."JENNIFER KIMBALL: "Veering From the Wave"; Imaginary Road".The Washington Post. Archived fromthe original on October 26, 2012. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  9. ^abcdAlarik, Scott (May 4, 2006)."Jennifer Kimball". The Boston Globe. Archived fromthe original on February 20, 2016. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  10. ^abcSTEPHEN HOLDEN (July 25, 1993)."RECORDINGS VIEW; Arrangements And Harmonies For a Folk Cuisine".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  11. ^JACK ANDERSON (June 18, 1992)."Review/Dance; An Old Friendship Fraying".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  12. ^abWillman, Chris (October 26, 1993)."POP MUSIC REVIEWS - Vocal Precision From the Story".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved2009-09-18.
  13. ^abJEAN ROSENBLUTH (June 27, 1992)."Pop Reviews - Uneven Set by Pair of Boston Singers".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved2009-09-18.
  14. ^Robert Sherman (March 21, 1993)."MUSIC; Manhattan Quartet in Season Finale".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  15. ^Robert Sherman (January 10, 1999)."MUSIC; Trying Out for Conductor".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  16. ^MELINDA TUHUS (September 10, 2000)."MUSIC; Where 60's Values Still Hold Sway".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  17. ^abDerk Richardson (1 March 2001)."The Hear and Now: KPFA Playlist". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  18. ^Scott Alarik (2003-11-14)."Wayfaring Strangers find common ground". The Boston Globe. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  19. ^"Riverwide music - The Boston Globe".www.boston.com. Retrieved2015-12-27.
  20. ^"Critic's Picks: Pop Music - The Boston Globe".BostonGlobe.com. Retrieved2015-12-27.
  21. ^"Who We Are and What We Do".Wintery Songs in Eleventy Part Harmony. RetrievedNovember 5, 2023.
  22. ^"Critics' picks - music -- FOLK, WORLD & COUNTRY -- JENNIFER KIMBALL, ROSE POLENZANI, ROSE COUSINS". The Boston Globe. December 4, 2008. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  23. ^"Jennifer Kimball : Newsletters : tomorrow at Johnny Ds and other news".Jennifer Kimball. Archived fromthe original on 2016-01-05. Retrieved2015-12-27.
  24. ^Jonathan Perry (January 9, 2009)."His roots are deep in social issues". The Boston Globe. Retrieved2009-09-19.
  25. ^Steve Morse (September 12, 1999)."At theaters and arenas, the season is busier than ever for pop". The Boston Globe. Retrieved2009-09-19.

External links

[edit]
International
Artists
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