Thursday, May 28, 2009

eye_present on 'black & white': mp3jackpot winner

Black and White

by Vanessa Daou
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eye_present says: Vitaminsexia, what a stupendous MP3. Vanessa Daou is soo cool. Everyone knows how famous Ms. Daou is. I saw her when she appeared with Jamiroquai. A free song from her new CD "Joe Sent Me" is really great. This song is a collage of slow-burning smoky jazz, hazy Delta Blues, radiant electronic pop, and sultry soul you hope you'd find in a lounge in Paris.

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vitaminsexia on 'joe sent me'

Black and White
by Vanessa Daou
, ,

vitaminsexia says: Vanessa Daou's breathy whisper-singing is so perfectly suited to this sultry after-hours serenade. Joe Sent Me is her new album, in which she is backed by some super sophisticated acoustic jazz sounds with subtle and precise digital treatments that couldn't be more contemporary if they were made next week. Buy at iTunes Music Store.


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GΞИT on 'Joe Sent Me'

The artist who started electronica while still a student and received excellent critics from the New York Times , who reached number one on the billboard charts with Danny Tenaglia’s remix of “ Surrender yourself”, who was subsequently sexually charged with her album “Zipless”, released in 2008 "Joe sent me", reflecting her desire to focus on the words of the album (http://www.myspace.com/vanessadaoumusic). Making the songs connect with the real world experience, and jazz history, Vanessa says. The album which was born as a project of music , poetry and related graphic content and which ultimately would undergo a name change and be called "Joe sent me" a nod to the popular US Prohibition era password to enter the red light district, is a real world of music and poetry to a new dimension of electronica: electroerotica. This album was so powerfully erotic that made me replace Sade’s "Love is stronger then pride" and discard all the mediocre lazy Sunday afternoon lovers."

Love, Words, Music

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Joe Sent MDE: after the show with The Mercer Dance Ensemble (M.D.E.)


With the Mercer Dance Ensemble (M.D.E.) after their absolutely stunning, scintillating performance of Joe Sent MDE... video footage of the performance on these pages coming soon...

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Joe Sent M.D.E.: New York Times Calendar Events in New Jersey

WEST WINDSOR Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College “Joe Sent MDE,” a dance performance featuring the music of Vanessa Daou. May 16 and 17. $10 to $14. Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road
kelseyatmccc.org (609) 570-3333



New York Times

Friday, May 08, 2009

VARIOUS ARTISTS: Moods: You, The Night, And The Music

The first in a series of sophisticated, mood-enhancing soundtracks for modern living. From the worlds of dance, electronic rock, nu-soul, future jazz and beyond.

Recommended if you like Vanessa Daou, Osunlade, Fat Freddy's Drop.

CD price: $12.97

CD Baby

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Invisibility cloak edges closer

"Scientists have rendered objects invisible under near-infrared light.
Unlike previous such "cloaks", the new work does not employ metals, which introduce losses of light and result in imperfect cloaking. Because the approach can be scaled down further in size, researchers say this is a major step towards a cloak that would work for visible light." BBC

Monday, May 04, 2009

Just say that Joe sent you: The backroom aural sex of Vanessa Daou (Inside Entertainment, Canada)








Just say that Joe sent you

The backroom aural sex of Vanessa Daou

Electro-beat poetess Vanessa Daou made a name for herself back in 1995 with the release of her debut solo album Zipless. The jazztronic curio was a white hot fusion of sultry beats, cool jazz and the lovelorn eroticism of Erica Jong's poetry. On subsequent albums, Daou earns a reputation as a downtempo queen, whose seductive musical exotica could be affectionately dubbed "aural sex."

Inspired in part by a backroom tour of New York's 21 Club (a one-time speakeasy during the Prohibition days), Daou's self-produced new album, Joe Sent Me, is a rediscovery of Prohibition-era jazz. The album draws upon the era's sound as well as the shady goings-on perpetuated by speakeasies and the underhanded dealings with the laws of both the land and the heart.

"What strikes me the most about the Prohibition era," Daou told Inside E, "is how the music broke through racial, gender, legal and ethical barriers, and how it continued to cut its radical path through the '40's and '50's and into the '60's when Beat poets began to merge words with Jazz."

On an album where grime and elegance rub shoulders, Daou fosters a musical space where her electro-grooves and acoustic set-ups coalesce. Daou's ghostly vocals billow and swirl like a thick, phosphorous dream; they don't so much inhabit the songs as haunt them, spilling over into sonic atmospherics.

Proving she can still sway the masses on a dancefloor, Daou showcases her knack for serious beats. Replete with a horn section sounding from beyond the grave of some red-light district of yore, the track Black & White throbs like a palpitating heart, cellophane-wrapped in a punchy synth-glam sheen. It also sports one of the spikiest f*ck-off lines to ever grace a pop song. "Here's the pen you gave me to write my poetry; I said I'd give it back to you the day you stopped inspiring me."

On Hurricanes (a track indebted to the avant-garde poetry of Anne Waldman), the cut-up phrasings of Daou's mosaic poem languidly plays catch-up with the percussive loop of a hand slapping the thigh. It's a album of jazz, for sure, but the aesthetic at work here is almost punk; sound and poetry are layered like graffiti.

"What interested me," Daou explains, "was, in an inverse way, freeing poetry and language from music. This approach was inspired by my web meanderings where I would be listening online to spoken poetry in one window and music on YouTube in another. When I began to conceive the sound of Joe Sent Me, I was hearing a new kind of sonic landscape where the words merged with the music without being locked into it or too syncopated with the beat, the way an overheard conversation sounds when music is playing."

Daou also tackles R&B, offering an alien twist to an often tired genre. Many of the songs depict love at a haunted crossroad where sex and death intersect, and Daou explores the anachronisms of desire, role-playing the aggressor in a relationship in which she has been victimized. The approach is always understated and a sense of mystery fills every space on the canvas. Joe Sent Me is an album shrouded in the blue haze of a back-alley nightclub where its lonely patrons rove the city nights in unrest.




- Written by Imran Khan
- Inside Entertainment, Canada, April 2009