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Jazz 13 May, 2020

Norah Jones Releases New Song "Were You Watching?"

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New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Norah Jones has released "Were You Watching?," another striking new single from her forthcoming album Pick Me Up Off The Floor, which will be released June 12 on Blue Note Records. The track features Jones' vocals and piano with bassist Christopher Thomas, drummer Brian Blade, and violinist Mazz Swift, who also contributes background vocals along with Ruby Amanfu and Sam Ashworth. Jones co-wrote the song's mysterious lyrics with poet Emily Fiskio, a friend whose work (along with all the Dr. Seuss and Shel Silverstein she's been reading to her kids) inspired Jones to write her own poetry apart from music for the first time. Several of those poems found their way back into songs on the new album, including the previous single "How I Weep." Pick Me Up Off The Floor is available for pre-order on vinyl, CD, or download.

Jones didn't mean to make another album. After she finished touring 2016's Day Breaks — her beloved return to piano-based jazz — she walked away from the well-worn album cycle grind and into an unfamiliar territory without boundaries: a series of short sessions with an ever-changing array of collaborators resulting in a diverse stream of singles (with Mavis Staples, Rodrigo Amarante, Thomas Bartlett, Tarriona Tank Ball, and more). But then slowly but surely, the session songs Jones hadn't released congealed into that very thing she'd meant to avoid — an album. But Pick Me Up Off The Floor is not some disjointed collage. It holds together beautifully, connected by the sly groove of her piano trios, lyrics that confront loss and portend hope, and a heavy mood that leans into darkness before ultimately finding the light.

"Living in this country — this world — the last few years, I think there's an underlying sense of, 'Lift me up. Let's get up out of this mess and try to figure some things out,'" says Jones. "If there's a darkness to this album, it's not meant to be an impending sense of doom, if feels more like a human longing for connection. Some of the songs that are personal also apply to the larger issues we're all facing. And some of the songs that are about very specific larger things also feel quite personal."






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