Cratedigger: Rickie Lee Jones, “Pirates”

Rickie Lee Jones - PiratesI have to admit that I was hesitant to make Rickie Lee Jones’ Pirates the subject of this week’s Cratedigger. The weather has been gloomy here in New Jersey all week, the Yankees dropped the first game of the World Series to Philadelphia, and my finances are in the sewer. Since Pirates is perhaps the most heartbreaking album I’ve ever encountered, I was afraid listening to it again would throw me into an even deeper funk. Despite the sorrow, when pressed, I will tell you that Pirates is one of the best albums ever made, and it is easily ensconced in my personal Top Five, where it has resided since its release in July, 1981.

Rickie Lee Jones burst on the scene with her eponymous debut, and it’s massive hit single, “Chuck E.’s In Love,” in 1979. She was part of a bohemian L.A. crowd that included the aforementioned Chuck E. Weiss and singer/songwriter Tom Waits, with whom Jones was in a relationship. The songs on her second album, Pirates, are largely a wistful reflection on her time with Waits, following their breakup. “We Belong Together,” “A Lucky Guy,” and the title track all refer to her relationship with him, and “Living It Up” and “Traces of the Western Slopes” (written with new boyfriend Sal Bernardi) are peopled with characters from the bohemian milieu that they moved in. The most devastating heartbreak of all, however, comes in the song “Skeletons,” based on the true story of a young man who was killed by the Los Angeles police in a case of mistaken identity as he was driving his wife to the hospital to give birth.

Jones was fortunate to be able to pair a collection of great songs with a group of brilliant and sympathetic musicians. A who’s who of the most well known session players of the day are on board. They include guitarists Buzzy Feiten, Steve Lukather, and Dean Parks, drummers Steve Gadd and Victor Jones, and horn players Randy Brecker, Tom Scott, and David Sanborn. Oh, and there’s a guy named Donald Fagen playing synthesizer. The real musical hero on this album for me is bass player Chuck Rainey, whose contribution is monumental.

So what’s the verdict? Did listening to Pirates add to the gloom around here? No — it only served to increase my admiration for this masterwork. Hearing it again, and on vinyl, was a revelation. It’s an album that, while well received by critics (five stars in Rolling Stone), has never really caught on with the public in a big way. I hope that in some small way I can help to change that, because Pirates is an album that should be heard, and loved, for generations. Rickie Lee Jones has gone on to have a storied career, which continues to this day, but for me this was the high point.

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  • Bob
    While not in my personal top five, it's definitely my favorite RLJ album ever.

    Thanks for spotlighting this gem, Ken. (And I hope the money situation improves!)
  • jbacardi
    Oh man- "Skeletons" is just devastating. I guess it's just that I'm an old softie, but I really have a hard time making it through that track because it just breaks me up with that delicate melody and her emotional vocal. "Living it Up" is almost as bad for me!

    As far as I'm concerned, this album was RLJ's masterpiece.
  • I saw Rickie Lee live when she was out promoting Pirates. I went with my ex-girlfriend. We had lived together for seven years, and I was very upset about the breakup. I looked at the evening as an opportunity to maybe patch things up. Then Rickie Lee launched into "We Belong Together." I lost it, and any opportunity there might have been for a reconciliation.
  • Finally someone else in the world places this fantastic record in their top 5. If you do not have this record you are missing out big time!
  • One of my all-time favorites as well. Came out when I was twenty; I used to sit around listening to it over & over, with the definite sense that I was learning something about the world every time. I'd loved RLJ's first album, but Pirates was like nothing else I'd ever heard. It felt very private to me and I'm not sure I ever played it when I wasn't alone.

    Haven't listened to it in several years, actually... I may have to remedy that this weekend. Thanks for reminding me of it!
  • One of my favorite things about writing the Cratedigger column is that I get responses from people who like the same albums as I do. Sometimes, like with this album, I feel like I might be the only one who loves it. It's nice to hear from all of you on it.
  • "Pirates" is a record I have seen all thoughts of descriptions of, from being seen as brilliant to overproduced and dated. The reality is that the album is a strange combination of mainstream 1980s production with very complex music. One could compare it with Kate Bush's "The Dreaming", "Hounds of Love" and 1993 album "The Red Shoes", except that "Pirates" is as earthbound as Kate Bush purely mysterious. Overall, I wouldn't say it's as good as those Kate Bush albums, but it is still a worthy listen.
  • This has always been one of those albums I've meant to look into and have never investigated why I hadn't. "Chuck E.'s In Love" was just so omnipresent when it came out, and for so many years after, that maybe it was a reaction to that (being that her later work got short shrift in my eyes.) I might need to get over any perceived aversions after your write-up, Ken.
  • Fletch
    Great album! Yes, I agree that "Skeletons" is devastating, but if you haven't yet, listen to the version of Skeletons from her live album "Naked Songs". It's a version of the song with just voice and piano and it's even MORE devastating if you can believe it!; in fact, the Naked Songs version is where I heard the song first and I ended up near bawling my eyes out. She sings it live like she's choking back tears - on the verge of crying and it's AWESOME. Please give it a listen.
  • This album is indeed a masterpiece - that it failed with the public is utterly perplexing. Genre defying and so much more than the sum of its parts, it remains, for me an all time favourite.
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