FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 21, 2004
TONY JOE WHITE COMPLETES THE HEROINES CD...
LOUISIANA LEGEND ENLISTS LUCINDA WILLIAMS, SHELBY LYNNE,
EMMYLOU HARRIS, JESSI COLTER AND MICHELLE WHITE
FOR SANCTUARY RECORDS DEBUT, DUE OUT SEPTEMBER 28
NEW YORK, N.Y. – Tony Joe White, best known for his swamp
pop smash hit “Polk Salad Annie,” is putting the finishing
touches on his first new recording in six years. The album, titled
The Heroines, features several of White’s favorite female
artists who are the heroines to which the title refers -- Lucinda
Williams, Shelby Lynne, Emmylou Harris, Jessi Colter and Tony Joe’s
daughter Michelle White.
The Heroines (86366) is White’s first new U.S. recording
in six years and is his first for Sanctuary Records. Street date
is September 28, 2004.
For the new album, White wrote three of the 10 songs (not counting
the framing solo acoustic instrumentals “Gabriella”
and “Gabriella’s Affair”) with his wife Leann,
who also took the cover portrait, and he sings the balmy “Playa
Del Carmen Nights” with his daughter Michelle. Additionally,
four lady friends duet with Tony Joe on the LP, their presence evidencing
his impeccable taste in quality women and female artists both. One
by one, Lucinda Williams, Emmylou Harris, Shelby Lynne and his old
friend Jessi Colter intertwine their voices with White’s gritty,
ultra-laid-back baritone, and the results of these down-home dalliances
are captivating.
Southern gentleman that he is, Tony Joe steps aside to permit Lynne
to sing the opening verse of “Can’t Go Back Home,”
which they wrote together, so that hers is the first voice you hear
on the album. His duet with Williams on the smoldering “Closing
In on the Fire” packs such an erotic charge that a mate less
secure than Leann would’ve never permitted it. Harris joins
White on the timeless country-folk piece “Wild Wolf Calling
Me,” one of the conjugal co-writes, while Colter adds her
knowing vocal to Tony Joe and Leann’s “Fireflies in
the Storm.”
“I had known these women for a long time,” says White,
“and they’ve all been like heroes to me through the
years. They’d recorded my songs, and we were all good friends.
Not only that, but I had loved their voices and the way they played.
And all of ’em are soulful. Even though a lot of ’em
do country, it’s still a soul thing to me, Emmylou especially.
And Jessi Colter gave it totally up for Waylon [Jennings, her late
husband] and stayed with him through the years. But she’s
still got that unbelievable soulfulness in her voice.”
White came steaming out of Louisiana with the red-hot hit “Polk
Salad Annie” in 1969. Influenced by Elvis Presley and Lightnin’
Hopkins, White’s music merged into a style all his own. He
recorded nine albums in the ‘70s, and as a songwriter his
tunes have been recorded by some of the biggest artists in the world
including Ray Charles and Brook Benton scoring #1 hits with White’s
classic “Rainy Night In Georgia.” He’s also written
for Elvis, Tina Turner, Dusty Springfield, Joe Cocker, Waylon Jennings,
Kenny Chesney and more.
In the ‘80s, White focused on Tina Turner and Joe Cocker,
contributing four songs to Tina’s multi-platinum Foreign Affair
on which he also played guitar and harmonica. He recorded three
successful European albums in the ‘90s before signing an American
deal in ’98 – only to see the label subsumed in the
Universal/PolyGram merger. Finally, with The Heroines in 2004, White
returns to the record shelf. Watch for touring later in the year.
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