Janine Wilson Band
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Janine Wilson Band

Washington, D.C., Washington, D.C., United States | Established. Jan 01, 2005 | INDIE

Washington, D.C., Washington, D.C., United States | INDIE
Established on Jan, 2005
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"Indie Scene"

With her third album, Janine Wilson presents a study in contradictions. Her first set of original material finds her savvy but sensitive, questioning the motives of wandering lovers and her own ability to find a willing mate. Wilson’s never weepy; her ability to transform anguish and uncertainty into sultry, assertive attitude rescues her from the trap of self-pity. The arrangements are forceful and assured, but it’s the songs themselves – “It Should Be Me,” the riveting “Just Kiss Her,” the driving “Not for Real” and the cool come on of “Kiss You at Hello” – that attest to her power and conviction. Wilson makes her hooks resonate, giving Wakin’ Up a sense of rousing affirmation.

M Music & Musicians
SEPT/OCT 2010 Issue
- M Music & Musicians


"The Columbus Dispatch"

Lobbyist's aid Wilson lays down the law onstage


Wilson, who works days as an
assistant to a lobbyist in Washington,
returns to her hometown to sing songs
from The Blue Album, a CD she
released herself in 2000, and whatever
else she deems appropriate for a
homecoming party.
The disc showcases her range.
Wilson can rumble in a barrelhouse,
but she is strongest on the slow-burners.
Highlights on a disc that includes takes
on Slim Harpo’s Queen Bee and Helen
Humes’ It’s Better To Give Than To
Receive are Elvis Costello’s Almost
Blue and Keith Richards’ Make No
Mistake.
Wilson sings with a number of
Washington musicians and is working
on her second record, which, she said,
ought to involve inspirations as varied
as her debut.
“Many think of Bette Midler and
think Wind Beneath My Wings,”
Wilson said in reference to another
standout on her debut. “She also did
Breaking Up Somebody’s Home.
When I heard that when I was younger
– ‘Whoa!’”
Wilson’s band tonight will feature
guitarist Sean Carney.
— AARON BECK
- Aaron Beck


"Music Monthly"

It's easy to feel blue nowadays, isn't it? It used to be that just
normal occurrences of life would be the breaking points for many of us. Breakups with lovers, firings from jobs, fights with family members----any or all of these would have been enough to see the tears a'rolling from the eyes. However, all those seem mighty small compared to the new world order that was bestowed upon us a few months ago. All of us have been affected by sadness to some degree. Therefore, Janine Wilson's CD will seem like a soothing tonic to the trials and tribulations!

Her album is aptly named. There's trouble brewing in one form or another throughout all the tunes contained within. Since the songs are all covers, Janine has chosen wisely from all sources. As a result, there is a melancholy Elvis Costello ballad nestled next to a Keith Richards rhythmic jivefest. There's also some fine 60's soul songwriters represented here as well.

The Elvis tune "Almost Blue" is served most respectfully to the original. The only accompaniment to Janine's vocals is a subdued piano that makes this song feel like a torch song. It's sung very expressively and thoughts of Julie London are evoked.

It's quite interesting to see a Keith Richards song make it onto
the album. Most of the time, the Rolling Stones are covered by their fans , but rarely does the solo material garner that sort of treatment. So, "Make No Mistake" from the first solo album is seen as a breakthrough of sorts. Ms. Wilson does a credible job on it, singing the low notes as Keither would do. Add in plenty of holes for the punchy horn section and guitar licks and it's an arrangement that could do him proud.

Speaking of the ol' lads, "Queen Bee" was also done by them back in 1964 with a male gender title then. "(I'm A) King Bee", written by Slim Harpo, has a stinging, blatant sexual come-on attached to it. Here, it's done a bit more playful, with creamy slide guitar throughout like an Allman Brothers take.

Incidentally, the majority of the guitar parts are played by Jesse Taylor, who provides some exemplary sounds throughout, most notably on "Passionate Kiss". Not related to Lucinda Williams' "Passionate Kisses", the tune is more about the thrills one gets from a certain someone's kisses. It's a fix she can't get enough of. Written by Duke Robillard, this arrangement leaves plenty of room for slinky, sexy vocals, and fluid, aggressive guitar, both of which fills the gaps admirably.

There's a good mixture of tunes and rhythms here to please any follower of the blues genre. To name an album "The Blue Album" means strong conviction in an ability to drive the point home. Janine Wilson and her band have the strength to do so. With that, the CD is very enjoyable to listen to. It may be an oxymoron to feel good after listening to sad songs, but at times like these, having a spokesperson like Janine Wilson may be the medicine we all need!
- Karen Liebowitz


"The Legal Times"

After Hours - The Blues in Lobbyland

There are 99 ways to reach out to lobbying clients in Washington, D.C. Here is the 100th: Grab D.C. singer Janine Wilson¹s CD, "The Blue Album," and send it to most everyone in your rolodex. Or when clients come to the District to work out the details of a lobbying campaign or talk to regulators, round them up at the end of the day and take them to Blues Alley to hear Wilson do her thing.

She might be singing a tune appropriate to the occasion, like Bobby Blue Bland¹s "I Smell Trouble," or‹for that special congressional appropriator in your life‹Helen Hume¹s "It¹s Better to Give Than to Receive."

The giveaway is part of the plan for Robert Dawson, the former head of the Army Corps of Engineers and associate director of the Office of Management and Budget who now runs his own lobby shop, Dawson & Associates.

"When her CD came out, I sent it to every client," says Dawson. "Not just the CEO, but everybody at the client with whom we deal. It¹s good for the client relationship and great for Janine."

Dawson has a special reason to give Wilson a hand. She¹s been working at his side for eight years, as his executive assistant at the lobbying powerhouse Cassidy & Associates and now at Dawson & Associates.

By day, she¹s setting up Dawson¹s appointments at the Hill or the agencies as he works energy and environmental issues for a variety of companies. By night, she¹s earning her place as one of the most popular blues singers in the District.

Last week at the walk-in-closet-sized Velvet Lounge on U Street, N.W. it was easy to see why. A charming band leader, Wilson also is a powerful and nuanced singer, constantly flicking her long red locks away from her eyes as she digs deep into material from across the blues and roots spectrum. After guitarist (and high school student) Robert Frahm took a particularly incendiary solo" He¹s not even jailbait yet!" noted Wilson, she polished off her set with a stirring version of one of the best cuts from her CD, a driving rock anthem called "What Passes for Love," by former Joe Ely and John Mellencamp sideman David Grissom.

On Feb. 24, Wilson was slated to hit The State Theater in Falls Church, up for two of the Washington Area Music Association¹s "Wammies"‹for Best Blues singer and for fronting the Best Blues Band. She¹s been nominated for more than a dozen Wammies over the years.

Wilson is far from the only person in the political arena with music on her mind. Dawson himself is the leader of the Dawson Singers, a country outfit that plays pro bono gigs throughout the region. Sitting with Wilson in his office, by Franklin Square, Dawson explains that he plays "the retirement home circuit," schools, and homeless shelters, and has performed at Lorton Prison and Alexandria City Jail.

"Anywhere there¹s a captive audience," jokes Wilson.

Listening to Dawson reveals why he¹s probably both a good lobbyist and a good singer. His baritone voice and molasses-slow delivery enriched by a deep Alabama accent might lull anyone into adding a harmless little earmark to a bill.

David Shilton, a bassist in the Dawson Singers and a trial attorney at the Department of Justice¹s Environmental and Natural Resources Division, says, "Bob has a real incredible talent for reaching out and communicating with all sorts of different audiences."

While Dawson¹s music venture is not anywhere near as serious as Wilson¹s, the curious need not be locked down to hear him live. He will be performing one of his every-now-and-then solo gigs at St. Elmo¹s Coffee Pub in Alexandria on March 17.

Wilson, as is usually the case, has bigger plans. She and her band will be at Blues Alley on March 26. She will reunite with the other members of Les Tomates Chaudes, a vocal trio also featuring local favorite Mary Shaver and former local favorite Cindy Cain, at the 219 in Old Town Alexandria on April 5 and 6. Wilson will also take her traditional place at the Baltimore Blues festival in May, and every year returns like a migrating bird to Baltimore¹s unique Night of 100 Elvises, though she performs as a non-Elvis.

Cain, one of Wilson¹s fellow Tomates, has her own tangled tale of politics and the blues. When Cain lived in the District, she was the press secretary for Democratic Rep. Dave McCurdy of Oklahoma.

"He gave me some of my first gigs," says Cain, recalling a party at the Cannon Building for the House Legislative Assistants Association where her then-band, C.C. and the Rhythm Toys, first met the public.

But her plans to use politics to launch her musical career‹she was saving money to go full time into music‹suffered when the Republican sweep in 1994 helped knock McCurdy off the Hill.

"The great voter revolt put my retirement plan into action a lot earlier than I had anticipated," she laments. But, as the pa - Bill Kisliuk


"The Legal Times"

After Hours - The Blues in Lobbyland

There are 99 ways to reach out to lobbying clients in Washington, D.C. Here is the 100th: Grab D.C. singer Janine Wilson¹s CD, "The Blue Album," and send it to most everyone in your rolodex. Or when clients come to the District to work out the details of a lobbying campaign or talk to regulators, round them up at the end of the day and take them to Blues Alley to hear Wilson do her thing.

She might be singing a tune appropriate to the occasion, like Bobby Blue Bland¹s "I Smell Trouble," or‹for that special congressional appropriator in your life‹Helen Hume¹s "It¹s Better to Give Than to Receive."

The giveaway is part of the plan for Robert Dawson, the former head of the Army Corps of Engineers and associate director of the Office of Management and Budget who now runs his own lobby shop, Dawson & Associates.

"When her CD came out, I sent it to every client," says Dawson. "Not just the CEO, but everybody at the client with whom we deal. It¹s good for the client relationship and great for Janine."

Dawson has a special reason to give Wilson a hand. She¹s been working at his side for eight years, as his executive assistant at the lobbying powerhouse Cassidy & Associates and now at Dawson & Associates.

By day, she¹s setting up Dawson¹s appointments at the Hill or the agencies as he works energy and environmental issues for a variety of companies. By night, she¹s earning her place as one of the most popular blues singers in the District.

Last week at the walk-in-closet-sized Velvet Lounge on U Street, N.W. it was easy to see why. A charming band leader, Wilson also is a powerful and nuanced singer, constantly flicking her long red locks away from her eyes as she digs deep into material from across the blues and roots spectrum. After guitarist (and high school student) Robert Frahm took a particularly incendiary solo" He¹s not even jailbait yet!" noted Wilson, she polished off her set with a stirring version of one of the best cuts from her CD, a driving rock anthem called "What Passes for Love," by former Joe Ely and John Mellencamp sideman David Grissom.

On Feb. 24, Wilson was slated to hit The State Theater in Falls Church, up for two of the Washington Area Music Association¹s "Wammies"‹for Best Blues singer and for fronting the Best Blues Band. She¹s been nominated for more than a dozen Wammies over the years.

Wilson is far from the only person in the political arena with music on her mind. Dawson himself is the leader of the Dawson Singers, a country outfit that plays pro bono gigs throughout the region. Sitting with Wilson in his office, by Franklin Square, Dawson explains that he plays "the retirement home circuit," schools, and homeless shelters, and has performed at Lorton Prison and Alexandria City Jail.

"Anywhere there¹s a captive audience," jokes Wilson.

Listening to Dawson reveals why he¹s probably both a good lobbyist and a good singer. His baritone voice and molasses-slow delivery enriched by a deep Alabama accent might lull anyone into adding a harmless little earmark to a bill.

David Shilton, a bassist in the Dawson Singers and a trial attorney at the Department of Justice¹s Environmental and Natural Resources Division, says, "Bob has a real incredible talent for reaching out and communicating with all sorts of different audiences."

While Dawson¹s music venture is not anywhere near as serious as Wilson¹s, the curious need not be locked down to hear him live. He will be performing one of his every-now-and-then solo gigs at St. Elmo¹s Coffee Pub in Alexandria on March 17.

Wilson, as is usually the case, has bigger plans. She and her band will be at Blues Alley on March 26. She will reunite with the other members of Les Tomates Chaudes, a vocal trio also featuring local favorite Mary Shaver and former local favorite Cindy Cain, at the 219 in Old Town Alexandria on April 5 and 6. Wilson will also take her traditional place at the Baltimore Blues festival in May, and every year returns like a migrating bird to Baltimore¹s unique Night of 100 Elvises, though she performs as a non-Elvis.

Cain, one of Wilson¹s fellow Tomates, has her own tangled tale of politics and the blues. When Cain lived in the District, she was the press secretary for Democratic Rep. Dave McCurdy of Oklahoma.

"He gave me some of my first gigs," says Cain, recalling a party at the Cannon Building for the House Legislative Assistants Association where her then-band, C.C. and the Rhythm Toys, first met the public.

But her plans to use politics to launch her musical career‹she was saving money to go full time into music‹suffered when the Republican sweep in 1994 helped knock McCurdy off the Hill.

"The great voter revolt put my retirement plan into action a lot earlier than I had anticipated," she laments. But, as the pa - Bill Kisliuk


"The Washington Post"

On the Town
By Eric Brace - Washington Post Staff Writer
Janine Wilson plays the Washington game in her day job as executive assistant to Robert Dawson, head of the big-time energy and environmental lobbying firm Dawson & Associates. After a full day of dealing with power brokers, Wilson somehow finds her second wind and launches into her parallel career as one of Washington’s best blues singers.

Wilson moved to Washington from Columbus, Ohio, in 1983, tagging along with a friend who was attending college here. She hung out in the roots music scene, but didn’t start performing on her own until 1990. “I was always singing along to records and I was in musicals in high school,” Wilson says, “but I never imagined myself really doing it.”

That changed when she befriended Virginia Lawrence of the rockabilly band Virginia & the Blue Dots. “I remember one day we were eating in some little Italian joint in Virginia somewhere, and I just told her how great it was that she was singing in a band, and that I really wanted to do it, too,” Wilson recalls. “She just said, ‘Well, you should.’ And that was that.”

Lawrence introduced her to some musicians and a band was born. Wilson began by mining the same rockabilly vein as the Blue Dots, but then a dose of Lou Ann Barton made her shift gears. “It’s not like I hadn’t heard the blues before Lou Ann Barton or anything,” she says, “but it just spoke to me. Her stuff was more mature, it was more up my alley.”

Rowdy Texas blues became Wilson’s signature style on the local club scene. She didn’t seem that inclined to take it any farther until a wedding in Texas opened up new possibilities.

“It was a client of my boss’s wedding, actually, and the band was great,” Wilson says. “I really wanted to sit in, and Don McCalister was the leader of the band, and he let me sing with them. I didn’t know who he was, but two years later he called me up and asked if I wanted to come down and make a record.”

The result of that trip was Wilson’s debut, 2000’s “The Blue Album,” produced by well-known Texas musician McCalister and featuring several top Austin studio cats. Wilson released it on her own Almost Blue Records, and it was one of the best albums by a D.C. artist that year. “I’ve been writing some of my own material for the next record,” Wilson says, “but I don’t really have a set band just yet, and I don’t want to record again until the line-up is more fixed.”

Wilson’s got a gig on Tuesday at Blues Alley, where she’ll be backed by guitarist Robert Frahm (a 17-year-old phenom who was tearing it up during a recent appearance by Wilson at the Velvet Lounge), bassist Brian McGregor, drummer Robbie Magruder, saxophonist Chris Watling and keyboard player David Sobel. Wilson is also appearing at the Tyson’s Corner Tower Records Saturday at 3 p.m. for an in-store concert; Saturday night at Summit Station in Gaithersburg; and Thursday at Jammin’ Java in Vienna.

- Eric Brace


"The Washington Post"

On the Town
By Eric Brace - Washington Post Staff Writer
Janine Wilson plays the Washington game in her day job as executive assistant to Robert Dawson, head of the big-time energy and environmental lobbying firm Dawson & Associates. After a full day of dealing with power brokers, Wilson somehow finds her second wind and launches into her parallel career as one of Washington’s best blues singers.

Wilson moved to Washington from Columbus, Ohio, in 1983, tagging along with a friend who was attending college here. She hung out in the roots music scene, but didn’t start performing on her own until 1990. “I was always singing along to records and I was in musicals in high school,” Wilson says, “but I never imagined myself really doing it.”

That changed when she befriended Virginia Lawrence of the rockabilly band Virginia & the Blue Dots. “I remember one day we were eating in some little Italian joint in Virginia somewhere, and I just told her how great it was that she was singing in a band, and that I really wanted to do it, too,” Wilson recalls. “She just said, ‘Well, you should.’ And that was that.”

Lawrence introduced her to some musicians and a band was born. Wilson began by mining the same rockabilly vein as the Blue Dots, but then a dose of Lou Ann Barton made her shift gears. “It’s not like I hadn’t heard the blues before Lou Ann Barton or anything,” she says, “but it just spoke to me. Her stuff was more mature, it was more up my alley.”

Rowdy Texas blues became Wilson’s signature style on the local club scene. She didn’t seem that inclined to take it any farther until a wedding in Texas opened up new possibilities.

“It was a client of my boss’s wedding, actually, and the band was great,” Wilson says. “I really wanted to sit in, and Don McCalister was the leader of the band, and he let me sing with them. I didn’t know who he was, but two years later he called me up and asked if I wanted to come down and make a record.”

The result of that trip was Wilson’s debut, 2000’s “The Blue Album,” produced by well-known Texas musician McCalister and featuring several top Austin studio cats. Wilson released it on her own Almost Blue Records, and it was one of the best albums by a D.C. artist that year. “I’ve been writing some of my own material for the next record,” Wilson says, “but I don’t really have a set band just yet, and I don’t want to record again until the line-up is more fixed.”

Wilson’s got a gig on Tuesday at Blues Alley, where she’ll be backed by guitarist Robert Frahm (a 17-year-old phenom who was tearing it up during a recent appearance by Wilson at the Velvet Lounge), bassist Brian McGregor, drummer Robbie Magruder, saxophonist Chris Watling and keyboard player David Sobel. Wilson is also appearing at the Tyson’s Corner Tower Records Saturday at 3 p.m. for an in-store concert; Saturday night at Summit Station in Gaithersburg; and Thursday at Jammin’ Java in Vienna.

- Eric Brace


"The Washington Post"

JANINE WILSON"Save Me From Myself"

Janine Wilson won several awards from the Washington Area Music Association for her 2000 debut album, "The Blues Album," including best blues album and best blues female vocalist. Although Wilson still projects the same brassy, captivating vocals on her follow-up, "Save Me From Myself," it's not until the final song -- a dramatic cover of Melissa Manchester's "Alone" -- that she fully exposes the torchy, traditional blues vibe she championed on "Blues Album."
Elsewhere, "Save Me" follows a twangier, more up-tempo path because of its more conventional guitar-bass-drums arrangements and Wilson's animated vocals. She kicks things off with a straight-shooting couplet, "You might think that I want more than this/But your kiss isn't that good," her unflinching delivery mirroring the confident message of the song "Don't Even Start." That candor permeates the album: The title track carries the same kind of self-exposure (and the same nearly hoarse vocals) as Sheryl Crow's early singles.
Despite the five-year hiatus between albums, most of "Save Me" is devoted to covers rather than to originals, including a saucy version of Stealers Wheel's "Stuck in the Middle." Her choice to turn Bruce Springsteen's melancholy "Ain't Got You" into a duet with Last Train Home's Eric Brace twists the song's original loneliness into a glimmer of hope. That creative reinterpretation combined with her outspoken delivery is precisely what makes Wilson so enchanting.
-- Catherine P. Lewis
- Catherine P. Lewis


"The Washington Post"

JANINE WILSON"Save Me From Myself"

Janine Wilson won several awards from the Washington Area Music Association for her 2000 debut album, "The Blues Album," including best blues album and best blues female vocalist. Although Wilson still projects the same brassy, captivating vocals on her follow-up, "Save Me From Myself," it's not until the final song -- a dramatic cover of Melissa Manchester's "Alone" -- that she fully exposes the torchy, traditional blues vibe she championed on "Blues Album."
Elsewhere, "Save Me" follows a twangier, more up-tempo path because of its more conventional guitar-bass-drums arrangements and Wilson's animated vocals. She kicks things off with a straight-shooting couplet, "You might think that I want more than this/But your kiss isn't that good," her unflinching delivery mirroring the confident message of the song "Don't Even Start." That candor permeates the album: The title track carries the same kind of self-exposure (and the same nearly hoarse vocals) as Sheryl Crow's early singles.
Despite the five-year hiatus between albums, most of "Save Me" is devoted to covers rather than to originals, including a saucy version of Stealers Wheel's "Stuck in the Middle." Her choice to turn Bruce Springsteen's melancholy "Ain't Got You" into a duet with Last Train Home's Eric Brace twists the song's original loneliness into a glimmer of hope. That creative reinterpretation combined with her outspoken delivery is precisely what makes Wilson so enchanting.
-- Catherine P. Lewis
- Catherine P. Lewis


"Richmond Style Weekly"

Janine Wilson, "The Blue Album" (JW) - Local music fans may remember Wilson from her rocking live shows at Moondance. This first CD from the Washington, D.C.-based blues belter is a highly satisfying blend of tunes and textures. It was recorded in Austin, Texas, with guitar master Jesse Taylor, and Wilson kicks off the recording with a solid Lou Ann Barton-Angela Strehli bad-girl blaster, "It's Better to Give Than to Receive," before rolling into a sultry "That Last Night." Other highlights include a tormented and soulful horn-driven turn on the Isaac Hayes-David Porter tune "When My Love Comes Down" and the straight blues groove of Slim Harpo's renamed "Queen Bee." Floyd Domino's understated piano gently frames Wilson's softer side on Elvis Costello's "Almost Blue," before a well-timed acoustic break comes with "And I Cried." A simmering "I Smell Trouble" puts a smoldering exclamation point on the project.
... when Wilson digs her heels in and opens up her big voice, it's best to pay close attention.

- Ames Arnold


"Music Monthly"

It's easy to feel blue nowadays, isn't it? It used to be that just
normal occurrences of life would be the breaking points for many of us. Breakups with lovers, firings from jobs, fights with family members----any or all of these would have been enough to see the tears a'rolling from the eyes. However, all those seem mighty small compared to the new world order that was bestowed upon us a few months ago. All of us have been affected by sadness to some degree. Therefore, Janine Wilson's CD will seem like a soothing tonic to the trials and tribulations!

Her album is aptly named. There's trouble brewing in one form or another throughout all the tunes contained within. Since the songs are all covers, Janine has chosen wisely from all sources. As a result, there is a melancholy Elvis Costello ballad nestled next to a Keith Richards rhythmic jivefest. There's also some fine 60's soul songwriters represented here as well.

The Elvis tune "Almost Blue" is served most respectfully to the original. The only accompaniment to Janine's vocals is a subdued piano that makes this song feel like a torch song. It's sung very expressively and thoughts of Julie London are evoked.

It's quite interesting to see a Keith Richards song make it onto
the album. Most of the time, the Rolling Stones are covered by their fans , but rarely does the solo material garner that sort of treatment. So, "Make No Mistake" from the first solo album is seen as a breakthrough of sorts. Ms. Wilson does a credible job on it, singing the low notes as Keither would do. Add in plenty of holes for the punchy horn section and guitar licks and it's an arrangement that could do him proud.

Speaking of the ol' lads, "Queen Bee" was also done by them back in 1964 with a male gender title then. "(I'm A) King Bee", written by Slim Harpo, has a stinging, blatant sexual come-on attached to it. Here, it's done a bit more playful, with creamy slide guitar throughout like an Allman Brothers take.

Incidentally, the majority of the guitar parts are played by Jesse Taylor, who provides some exemplary sounds throughout, most notably on "Passionate Kiss". Not related to Lucinda Williams' "Passionate Kisses", the tune is more about the thrills one gets from a certain someone's kisses. It's a fix she can't get enough of. Written by Duke Robillard, this arrangement leaves plenty of room for slinky, sexy vocals, and fluid, aggressive guitar, both of which fills the gaps admirably.

There's a good mixture of tunes and rhythms here to please any follower of the blues genre. To name an album "The Blue Album" means strong conviction in an ability to drive the point home. Janine Wilson and her band have the strength to do so. With that, the CD is very enjoyable to listen to. It may be an oxymoron to feel good after listening to sad songs, but at times like these, having a spokesperson like Janine Wilson may be the medicine we all need!
- Karen Liebowitz


"Press Quotes"

"This stellar collection finds Janine wakin' up to a rockin' sound that combines all the best of her blues and soul chops. Fans from previous discs won't have any trouble getting on board the new sound."
Buzz McLain, writer for Playboy

"Wilson's voice is ridiculous on the new CD. That is, ridiculous in a good way. Just gorgeous. Holy hell." David Furst WAMU's Metro Connection - JWB


Discography

Discography:

Wakin' Up - Almost Blue Music
Save Me From Myself - Almost Blue Music
The Blue Album - Almost Blue Music
Viva Las Vegas - Night of 100 Elvises, Hungry For Music
Hungry For Music - A Holiday Feast Volumes II, III, IV, V, VII and VIII

Janine has also contributed harmonies or backing vocals to other studio projects, including the critically acclaimed roots rock compilation Americana Motel, a 2001 release.

Photos

Bio

JANINE WILSON, WAKIN' UP

Washington Area Music Awards (Wammies) winner in the following categories:

Album of the Year - Wakin' Up
Song of the Year - It Should Be Me
Roots Rock Album - Wakin' Up
Album Design

It Should Be Me wins Gold in the Rock/Alternative Category of the 26th Mid-Atlantic Song Contest and Wakin' Up in Texas and The Grass is Always Greener receive Honorable Mention!

It Should Be Me is a winner in the Dallas Songwriting Contest

Wakin' Up in Texas places as a semi-finalist in the International Song Contest!

...a very impressive record. Take those early Lucinda Williams/Norah Jones/kd lang CDs out of your changers and put this one in, now! Michael Jaworek, The Birchmere

Janine Wilsons name carries with it certain expectations. A big voice with a stage presence to match it. Award-winning songs full of love, heartache, and mischief. A command of vocal styles ranging from the blues to Americana roots rock. And while those expectations will not go unfulfilled with her next album, don't let the familiar face on the cover fool you.

It's time to wake up to a very different Janine Wilson.

Her third album since releasing the debut The Blue Album, Wakin' Up is Janine's first album of all-original material, making it her most personal artistic statement to date. Building on the same partnership that delivered the award-winning songs Don't Even Start and So Long, Janine teamed up with guitarist extraordinaire Max Evans (Ugly Americans) to write the songs that would eventually belong on Wakin' Up.

Once the writing was complete, Janine approached maverick recording artist Blake Morgan, founder and president of NYC's Engine Company Records, in the hope of having him produce the album. Morgan proceeded to do one better, putting together an incredible band of top-flight New York musicians for the recording sessions - Jonathan Ellinghaus on drums, John Turner on bass, Melissa Giges on backing vocals, and even providing Wurlitzer, Hammond B-3 organ, and backing vocals himself. Together with Evans playing guitar, Janine's powerhouse vocals have never been in front of a more solid or sophisticated sound.

The album opens with another award-winning track, It Should Be Me, and though this song appeared on Wilson's album, Save Me From Myself, the similarity ends there. With new songs, a new producer, and a new band, Janine has also found a new kind of confidence. Her voice now shares its usual outspokenness with a more open vulnerability, amplifying the natural sultriness of her delivery.

The opening guitar licks of Just Kiss Her make it apparent that this vulnerable side of Janine Wilson hasn't softened her, a fact mirrored by the directness of her lyrics (You keep wasting your time / While I'm standing here / Offering mine / And its all right here for you). The heartache and pain are palpable in her phrasing as she sings Disappear, a rock ballad reminiscent of Sheryl Crow, contrasting with the masked denial found in Evans's Not For Real (I don't take anything to heart / I'm just a million and one false starts).

With the pseudo-title track Wakin' Up in Texas, a new direction starts to appear, blending her bluesy roots with a pop-rock sensibility more akin to Chrissie Hynde and The Pretenders. The desperation of her lyrics draws you in as the first half of the album ends, and as the second half begins, the sweetness of the acoustic guitar on Only One In Love capitalizes on that closeness, commiserating the loneliness of unrequited love (I let you take my hand / Let myself have too much fun / Too bad I'm the only one in love). The pop-rock angle continues in Kiss You At Hello, a shamelessly hopeful song of love at first sight.

Janine sings about the urgent need for green living during today's hard times (When the markets crash and the headlines flash / That there's no end in sight / You've gotta learn to live with less I guess / And make the wrong things right) in the alt-country-tinged The Grass Is Always Greener, followed by an equally passionate plea to not waste an opportunity for love in Rustin' In the Rain. Janine shares the vocal spotlight with Evans on this one, leaving you wanting to hear more of this duo.

Recorded with Blake Morgan at the helm of Engine Company Records studio in NYC and at Philadelphia's Studio 4 with Grammy Award-winner Phil (Butcher Bros.) Nicolo, Wakin' Up proves to be yet another step in Wilson's continuing evolution. 

Band Members