Jewel Credit: Photo by Dana Trippe
Singer-songwriter Jewel Kilcher grew up listening to a wide range of music.

โ€œIโ€™m a music fan,โ€ she says in a recent phone interview. Jewel hits the road with pop rockers Train next month, and their tour comes to Tampa on Saturday, June 25. โ€œI grew up listening to Johnny Cash and Loretta Lynn and Marvin Gaye and Bill Withers and Joni Mitchell. I think thatโ€™s really normal. I found it confusing when I got into the industry to see how rigid everything is. There is a country label and a pop label. There are stations that are only this and that. I think thatโ€™s really weird. Every music fan Iโ€™ve ever talked to listens to multiple things depending on their mood.”

Over the decades, Kilcher has embraced everything from country to electronica.

“I was very confused by peopleโ€™s reactions that my writing style would be influenced by my listening,” she says. “[The musical styles] all feel authentic to me. Thatโ€™s the key. It has to be authentic to you, or it smells bad. I look at it like my closet. I have sweat pants and yoga pants and business suits and dresses. No one looks at me and says, โ€˜Jewel is no longer Jewel because sheโ€™s wearing yoga pants or a business suit.โ€™ The music is a natural extension of that. Do I want to dress this up in a banjo or programmed drum loop? Who cares. To me, there is a natural consistency because Iโ€™m a singer-songwriter.โ€

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Though she started out in the folk-pop genre, the singer-songwriter that Jewel has become certainly can’t be pigeonholed. Last year, as a contestant on “The Masked Singer,” she sang a bit of everything, including ร‰dith Piafโ€™s โ€œLa Vie En Rose,โ€ Lady Gagaโ€™s โ€œBorn This Wayโ€ and Bishop Briggsโ€™ โ€œRiver.โ€ And she pulled it all off with ease.

โ€œ’Masked Singer’ was two things,โ€ she says when asked about the show. โ€œI thought it would let me do something artistically, which Iโ€™ve never done, which is to just focus on my technical ability as a singer, which was really fun for me. These songs are the ones that taught me to sing. I got to pick them and arrange them. I love the songs. I think theyโ€™re heroic. And the other reason was pure strategy. I had an album coming out, and Iโ€™m a mom. I canโ€™t go on the road for a year and do two months of promo like I used to. You just make different choices. Itโ€™s such a silly show, but I had a really authentic experience. It was nice being stripped of my identity, and as dumb as it sounds, showing my heart.โ€

For her new album, Freewheelinโ€™ Woman, Kilcher assembled close to 200 songs before whittling things down to the 12 that made the album.

โ€œI always have songs in my back catalog, but I didnโ€™t want to do that for this album because I wanted to see who I was now and come up with something new and fresh and interesting to me creatively,โ€ she says. โ€œI donโ€™t like repeating myself, but the album also incorporates all my styles. Thereโ€™s pop and country and Americana and folk and an R&B or Muscle Shoals feel to the album as well.โ€

She basically recorded the album live in Santa Monica with producer Butch Walker, a talented  singer-songwriter in his own right who works out of his home studio.

โ€œI love Butch,โ€ she says when asked about Walker. โ€œHeโ€™s such a talent. Heโ€™s really diverse in his abilities. Iโ€™ve worked with producers who are so worried about hits; heโ€™s not like that at all. I feel lucky that he decided to do the record with me.โ€
Driven by spirited horns, the opening track, โ€œLong Way โ€™Round,โ€ starts the album off with a real bang. Jewel croons evocatively during the album’s soulful intro and sounds sultry as she muses, “Oh I went down the other day/See what the gypsy had to say.”

โ€œIt started out as a folk or bluegrass song and morphed with time into this version [on the album],โ€ says Kilcher when asked about the track. โ€œThat song just happened in the studio. We werenโ€™t ready for a take yet. We were just getting our sound down. I think it was a bassline that started, and I really liked it. I started humming. The drummer came in during a funny place, and I made up that whole first verse on the spot. I hadnโ€™t cracked the code on the first verse yet. I was still writing it, and it just came together all of a sudden. Thank God that the engineer had pressed โ€˜record.โ€™โ€

The character studies found in fiction by writers such as Flannery Oโ€™Connor and John Steinbeck inspired the folk-narrative โ€œHalf Life,โ€ and the album features collaborations with Train and with singer-songwriter Darius Rucker.

โ€œI just thought it would be fun to have some collaborations on the album,โ€ Kilcher says. โ€œ[The collaboration with Rucker] was the first song I wrote for the album. It was one of my favorites, and I thought I would see how it would go with Darius. I was pretty blown away. He gave an incredible performance.โ€

This post originally appeared in our sibling publication, Cleveland Scene.

Jeff has been covering the Cleveland local music scene for nearly 15 years now. On a weekly basis, he tries to interview at least one local band and review at least one local CD. And he tries to talk to...