• pop-music
  • rock-music
  • urban-music
  • music videos
  • upcoming songs
  • contests
  • pictures
  • members
  • forum
  • MusicRemedy.com
  • Sign In
  •   |
  • Register
  • Bookmark and Share Bookmark and Share  Bookmark and Share
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z
Menu
  • Rosey music
  • Biography
  • Photo Gallery
  • Songs & Video

Details

Title: Luckiest Girl
Release date: 8 April, 2008
Record label: Quango Music
Single: It's a Ruse
Official website: Rosey
Buy at: Amazon

Popular Songs

  • Disturbed - Inside The Fire
  • Mario - Music For Love
  • Ramzi - Love is Blind ft Ash King
  • Taylor Swift - Picture To Burn
  • VIC - Get Silly
  • Jaheim - I've Changed ft Keyshia Cole
  • Colby Odonis - What You Got ft Trazz & Fatman Scoop
  • Nicki Minaj - High As A Kite ft Lil Wayne
  • New Kids On The Block - Click Click Click ft Nasri
  • Foo Fighters - Let It Die
  • LMFAO - Girl Can't Help It
  • Skillet - Those Nights
  • Joshua Stevens - Rock n Roll And Pensacola
  • Ray J - I Like to Trick ft Lil Kim
  • Yung Ralph - I Work Hard
  • New Songs

  • Mary J Blige - I Am
  • BG - For A Minute ft TI
  • Jagged Edge - Tip Of My Tongue ft Gucci Mane Trina
  • Nelly - Long Gone
  • Ryan Leslie - Choose You
  • Yota - Baby Watch Me
  • Young Money - Bed Rock ft Lloyd
  • Gucci Mane - Spotlight ft Usher
  • Cupid - Do My Ladies Run This Party
  • Jay-Z - Real As It Gets ft Young Jeezy
  • David Guetta - One Love ft Estelle
  • Rhythms Del Mundo - Hotel California ft Killers
  • Ian Brown - Just Like You
  • Ben Montague - Rainy Day EPK
  • Owl City - Umbrella Beach
  • Tracklisting

    01. It's a Ruse
    02.     Who Am I
    03.     Love
    04.     I Remember
    05.     My Love
    06.     Those Eyes
    07.     Be Somebody Blues
    08.     Luckiest Girl
    09.     It's Easier On Me
    10.     Hand In Hand
    11.     First Time
    12.     The Old Fashioned Way

    Rosey - Luckiest Girl

    Home » r » Rosey » Album» Luckiest Girl

    • Show printer version of articlePrint this Page
    • Email this article to a friendSend to a Friend

    There's something undeniably seductive about jazz music- its glamour, sexuality and earnest, soulful roots all appeal to a comfortable, old-fashioned musical sensibility. Yet singer/songwriter Rosey is one of the select few who sees one step beyond the classic image and recognizes the genre as an entirely fresh form of pop music. A longtime jazz lover who began her eclectic career as a rock n' soul siren on Island/Def Jam, Rosey is unique in her ability to find the delicate balance between both eras on Luckiest Girl, her smoky, sensual, self-produced Quango debut.

    Rosey

    There’s something undeniably seductive about jazz music- its glamour, sexuality and earnest, soulful roots all appeal to a comfortable, old-fashioned musical sensibility. Yet singer/songwriter Rosey is one of the select few who sees one step beyond the classic image and recognizes the genre as an entirely fresh form of pop music. A longtime jazz lover who began her eclectic career as a rock n’ soul siren on Island/Def Jam, Rosey is unique in her ability to find the delicate balance between both eras on The Luckiest Girl, her smoky, sensual, self-produced Quango debut.

    Since we last heard from Rosey on that aforementioned 2002 freshman effort, her remarkable career has indeed taken many exciting twists and turns throughout several unconventional musical associations. Following instant national attention from her single “Love” landing on the Bridget Jones’s Diary soundtrack and “The Afterlife” scoring a slot in the Farrelly Brothers’ Shallow Hal, the tunesmith toured with the lauded likes of Melissa Etheridge and Morcheeba. Outside of her own interests, she’s also teamed up as a co-writer on many occasions, from hit maker Kelis to a number of burgeoning artists (with whom she doubles as a mentor) to writing jingles for commercials.

    “I always dreamed of making timeless music, plus people have always told me my voice was well-suited to jazz and that I should try it,” she shares. “So I hooked up with [longtime friend and legendary session player] Hugh McCracken to record a bunch of standards. A few days into those sessions, we starting writing a song I called ‘The Old Fashioned Way,’ which really set the pace for the record. With everybody and their mom putting out a standards album, I knew I had to go full steam and write my own jazzy repertoire. I am a songwriter after all, so it just made more sense to me to do it that way. I do enjoy a good challenge, and musically, this one was massive. ”

    With that, the idea of a covers collection was scrapped in favor of an entirely original collection that simultaneously tips its hat to Rosey’s heroes of yesteryear (which include Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald and Etta James), wrapped around an undeniably contemporary appeal. In perfectly balancing those delicate degrees, the project is poised to please longtime fans of the genre, while exposing the seductive sounds to Rosey’s pre-existing fan base and possibly even an entirely new generation.

    “It’s so daunting as a young person to follow behind all these greats that I had no choice but to create something different,” she ponders. “Who am I to record a song Billie made famous? I could never compete with that and I don’t want to. I hooked up with a few friends in Brooklyn, like John Chin and Mark Bordenet, who taught me a lot about the rules for writing jazz, but also how to break them. What I came up with was my own Rosey spin on the genre- always throwing in a touch of the blues for fun. We also recorded the record live to tape to give it that old, warm, silky sound.”

    The ensuing dozen selections vibrantly encapsulate those very goals, from the cocktail lounge grooves of “Who Am I” to the vintage throwback of “Those Eyes” to the sassy seduction of “My Love.” Thematically the tunes take on a diverse swath of topics, including the music industry assessment “It’s a Ruse” (which Rosey calls her word of “warning” to up and coming acts), the growth obtained from an amicable break-up throughout “I Remember,” and the wedding worthy “Hand In Hand.”

    The generally upbeat tones throughout these delightfully delicate tunes also relate to the disc’s Luckiest Girl title. Aside from her professional life soaring higher than it ever has before, Rosey’s in the midst of an incredibly personal peace stemming from a series of healthy relationships on all planes. As a result of that collective equilibrium, she’s also more artistically confident than ever before, while the enrapturing songs more than speak for themselves.

    “This CD was a wonderful evolution for me from Dirty Child, as those songs masked my growing pains so well,” she sums up, noting the sentiments of Luckiest Girl aren’t hiding a thing. “This music really helped me to come to life as an artist and a women and really be free to find my voice. And producing it was the icing on the cake. From the incredible musicians who blessed my songs to the amazing people who believed in me enough to help me make the record, I really feel like I am the Luckiest Girl.”

    Do you also would like to share your opinion? If so, please register or login here.

    • Music Archive:
    • Music News
    • Music Videos
    • Partnersites:
    • LetsSingIt Lyrics
    • Singersroom.com
    • BallerStatus
    • All Music
    • © 2000 - 2009 About Us
    • Blog
    • Legal
    • FAQ
    • Links
    • Sitemap