Jill Sobule
Jill Sobule belongs to a rare
breed of artists. Her work is at once deeply personal and socially
conscious, seriously funny and derisively tragic. Over five albums and a
decade of recording, the Denver-born songwriter/ guitarist/singer has
tackled such topics as the death penalty, anorexia, shoplifting,
reproduction, the French resistance movement, adolescence, and the
Christian right. Did we mention love? Love found, love lost, love wished
for, and love taken away.
While her songs cover a huge amount of ground, they all have benefit
greatly from Jill’s subtle intelligence and skillful light-handedness.
No sloganeering flag-and-fist waving here, but rather story songs about
human beings, real and imagined, which allow us to step back from the
issue, be it personal or social, and relate to it as we would a close
friend.
To see Jill live and in concert is a rare treat. It is on stage that she
is most comfortable, most powerful, and where the delicacy and range of
her work can be best appreciated. She entertains, amuses, provokes, and
more often then not, takes her audiences on an emotional roller coaster,
from comedy to pathos in a few bars of music.
Jill began playing guitar when she joined the Junior High School band.
She never learned to read music, though, and faked her way through
rehearsals and performances by playing by ear. As she began writing
songs, it was very clear to Jill this was becoming more than a teenage
hobby. Music was serious stuff. She played in a variety of funk and rock
bands in Colorado, and eventually made her first, Todd
Rundgren-produced, album for MCA,
Things Here Are
Different.
But success did not knock on her door until three years later, when
Atlantic Records released her MTV staple and national top 20 hit,
I
Kissed a Girl. “That song was a double-edged sword for me,” Jill
Says.
“It was perceived as a novelty hit, but on the other hand it was the
first song with an overtly gay topic to be aired on Top 40 radio. I am
quite proud of that.” The self-titled album also yielded another hit
song,
Supermodel, included in the Clueless
soundtrack.
The song also jumpstarted her live music career in a big way, and since
then she’s had the honor to induct Neil Diamond in the Songwriter’s Hall
of Fame, to share the stage with the likes of Neil Young (at his yearly
Bridge School benefit concerts), fellow activists Billy Bragg & Steve
Earle, and Waren Zevon. Quite the serious guitar player, she even toured
the world as lead guitarist in Lloyd Cole’s band a few years
back.
Since then, she has made four more critically acclaimed albums,
Happy
Town,
Pink Pearl,
Underdog Victorious, and 2009’s
California Years,
which Jill released on her own record label, Pinko Records, after
collecting over $85,000 from fans who funded the project.
A veritable gypsy, Jill divides her time between a busy touring schedule
and a variety of other projects. She has played the role of political
troubadour for NPR stations across the country and for Air America
Radio. She also served as songwriter/composer for the hit Nickelodeon
network show
Unfabulous during that show’s three-season run. She
composed the music for the off-Broadway show Prozak and the Platypus and
costarred in the Eric Schaeffer film
Mind the Gap.
In the words of New York Times pop music critic Jon Pareles, “Jill
Sobule can claim her place among the stellar New York singer-songwriters
of the last decade. Topical, funny and more than a little poignant…
grownup music for an adolescent age.”
Watch
GRACE OF MY HEART: Truth Is You Lied – Jill Sobule,
San Francisco by Jill Sobule,
Jill Sobule – I Kissed a Girl,
Resistance Song (follow the bouncing ball) – Jill Sobule,
Supermodel,
Jill Sobule “The Secretive Life”, and
TEDActive: What the world needs now.
Visit her
Facebook page and her
MySpace page.
Follow her Twitter feed.
Watch her
YouTube channel.
Read her
blog.
Learn about her shows.
Visit her store.