Erica Jacob’s Debut Album “Extraordinary Woman” Set For Release
Tuesday, August 13, on Young Pals Music
Music video for launch single “Run” lensed at Long Island City’s famed
5 Pointz, which is now scheduled for demolition
Every
“Extraordinary Woman” has her tale to tell. If she’s done it right, life’s
journey embodies adventure, love, passion, heartache, risk, redemption and
rediscovery. Erica Jacob, in short order, has ticked off the majority of that
list, and she’s ready to tell the world about it.
The
singer/songwriter’s debut album “Extraordinary Woman” will be released Tuesday,
August 13, on New York-based indie label Young Pals Music, available on all
download websites and as a physical CD. Produced by Ayhan Sahin (Olivia
Newton-John, Sandra Bernhard, Chaka Khan), its 10 songs exemplify
“everywoman’s” ongoing pilgrimage and showcase a joyous pageant of sing-along
anthems, offering musical mastery akin to the 100-watt persona of Jennifer
Hudson, and the vocal chops of Alicia Keys.
Uptempo
launch single “Run” offers an accompanying music video shot on location in Long
Island City’s famed 5 Pointz, the world’s premiere outdoor “graffiti Mecca.” The
site has become an immense canvas for sanctioned street artists from around the
world, who have painted vivid works across the walls of a marquis 200,000-square-foot
factory building and dozens of surrounding warehouses. Making Jacob’s colorful videoclip
all the more timely, 5 Pointz owner David Wolkoff announced that it will be
demolished at year-end 2013.
Other
highlights on “Extraordinary Woman” include album opener “Kryptonite” (which
features Phil Collins’ familiar percussive hook from Frida’s 1983 hit “I Know
There’s Something Going On”). The song tumbles playfully with a taut tale of
loving the wrong guy: “I can’t live this life without you, but I don’t wanna
live it with you,” Jacob laments. Nimble frolic “Look What You’ve Done To Me”
offers a sax-soaked narrative on love done right; while sonic speedball “Lost
and Found” works up a sizzling sweat with the ultimate lyrical kiss-off.
Slowing
the tempo, beautiful brooding ballad “Falling” swirls with an emotional
instrumental tornado, as Jacob reflects with regret on a faded love affair;
while in equally doleful sonnet “Too Many Reasons”—an album standout—she mourns
with unstrung anguish, “Nothing’s the same as the pain of beginning again.”
The
set’s title track offers the ultimate acclamation of an “Extraordinary Woman.”
The dancefloor twirler is a paean to strength and inner beauty, as she
proclaims, “There’s more to me than meets the eye/Don’t stop at the what, babe,
go for the why.”
Sahin
wrote all songs on the album, alongside several collaborators, including Dennis
DelGaudio, Jerri Bokeno, Bernadette O’Reilly and Tara Bahna James, with Jacob
contributing lyrics for three tracks.
The
artist was raised in Houston, singing in church, and cherishing the gospel
& blues of Ella Fitzgerald, along with the diverse talents of Judy Garland,
Fiona Apple and Jeff Buckley. Eight years ago, she relocated to New York City,
performing at Town Hall’s “Broadway's Rising Stars”; in “Emma the Red” at the
BMI-Lehman Engel Musical Theatre; and in numerous musicals, including “Scarlet
Takes A Tumble,” “Confessions of a Reality TV Star,” “Angels” and “Dear Mr.
Rosan.”
Jacob
has sung backup for acclaimed singer/songwriter Martin Sexton, and recorded
with French producer Francois Bisi, Bollywood producer Gerard John, and
provided vocals for rapper H the Eighth Letter. As a full-fledged Actors’
Equity member, she also serves as Executive Producer for theater company/artist
collective Purple Threads Ensemble. The group’s mandate, in fact, mirrors her
own: “Art is important. It can build a bridge of understanding. For a shared
moment, in the presence of great art, we are united.” Extraordinary,
indeed.
For
information contact: Janet Castiel,
Redwood Entertainment, Inc. -- (212) 543-9998 -- info@redwoodentertainment.com
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