Jill Sobule profile picture

Jill Sobule

About Me

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 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 couple of years back.
Since then, she has made three more critically acclaimed albums, Happy Town, Pink Pearl, and 2004’s Underdog Victorious. She has played the role of political troubadour for NPR stations across the country and for Air America Radio.
A veritable gypsy, Jill divides her time between a her busy touring schedule and, since last year, her responsibilities as songwriter/composer for the Nickelodeon network hit show, Unfabulous. She composed the music for the off-Broadway show Prozak and the Platypus and co-starred 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...grown-up music for an adolescent age.” ..

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 1/1/2006
Band Website: jillsobule.com
Influences:

The Videos!

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New! Live video of Empty Glass from Prozak and the Platypus.
Click on Frankie (below) to learn more!



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Sounds Like:

"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 ...grown-up music for an adolescent age.”
- Jon Pareles, New York Times

“Vocally gifted and lyrically witty ... a peerless satirist.”
- People Magazine

“A feisty post-punk feminist whose work brings to mind a cross between Liz Phair and Gertrude Stein.”
- The New Yorker

“Where other 'quirky' musicians stagnate or flameout, Sobule only gets stronger... In the gets-better-with-every-album race, she's the rare real deal.”
- Amazon.com

“Songwriting skills that transcend her one-novelty-hit wonder status.”
- Village Voice

“One of pop's best satirists.”
- New York Daily News

“Sobule possesses the uncommon ability to combine lilting, infectious melodies with personal and socially relevant lyrics, and then couch them in artfully crafted arrangements ... A top pop tunesmith.”
- CMJ New Music Report

“A deft ironist. She is smart and original, a treasure undervalued by inevitable association with countless lessers who also happen to be singing about going to the laundromat in Brooklyn.”
- The New Republic

“On songs that act as many self-contained vignettes, she captures life's little miseries and epiphanies with economy and understated humor.”
- Amazon.com

“Sobule shows a great eye for satire... [but she] lends her tales an extra layer of tenderness through her deadpan vocal delivery. Her Bacharach-like lounge-pop tunes also keep things light. But underneath the froth lies Sobule's need to speak honestly about what it's like to live mainly inside your head." (Underdog Victorious listed as one of the "Magnificent 7 ... terrific recent CDs that slipped under the mainstream radar")
- Jim Farber, New York Daily News

"Each record [Jill Sobule has] released ... has been better than the last... Her lyrics are always catchy and funny and smart; her hooks and choruses are always fine-tuned and elusive... There's a truth to her stories; it's impossible to avoid. Not that anyone except a total sourpuss would want to."
- Will Hermes, All Things Considered, National Public Radio


Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

expired passport and Yanni

Hey Guys, you can now comment on the blog section on my jillsobule.com. Go there and let's talk: http://jillsobule.com/jillsjournal.aspBut it's here too:I went way early to the airport -- I always am ...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Wed, 25 Jun 2008 08:34:00 PST

Expired Passports ...and Yanni

Hey guys, you can now leave comments on my blog at Jillsobule.com! Let's talk.   I went way early to the airport -- I always am early. I am overly paranoid about being stuck in a 40-car pileup wh...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Wed, 25 Jun 2008 07:44:00 PST

Don’t Be Jealous

I had a surprise guest come into the studio Thursday. I was sitting by the mixing board trying to concentrate when in walked... Davy Jones!!! Yes, Davy Jones of the Monkees! Don, the engineer, and eve...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Mon, 16 Jun 2008 10:40:00 PST

Mixing in the Studio

Here at the studio in the mixing phase, so I have some time to catch up with friends, write, and wash my car. I have never seen such a dirty Prius on the road. You never see dirty Priuses. Did I tell ...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Wed, 11 Jun 2008 09:22:00 PST

Prozak and the Platypus

For those that don't know it, there is this marvelous musical that has yet to get a Tony. In fact it has only been performed 3 times. It is the best kept secret - not even my mom has seen it. But unt...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Sun, 08 Jun 2008 11:52:00 PST

Rupert Murdoch... My Opening Act?

I am at The Wall Street Journal's D: All Things Digital Conference -- another one of those fancy conferences that I get to go to. This one is more or less tech driven, so the speakers are folks like t...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Fri, 30 May 2008 06:21:00 PST

The Other I Kissed a Girl Girl

I got so excited. An email popped up last week that said The Bold and The Beautiful wanted to use my song I Kissed a Girl on their show and was offering me... $10,000! I was planning on what I would b...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Mon, 26 May 2008 08:54:00 PST

jill in NYC and on the Huffington Post

Hey everyone in NYC! Come to Joe's Pub on the 18th and/or 20th. I will play whatever songs you guys want to hear. I may bring out a band to play with me (The Madison Square Gardeners). I have no idea ...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Wed, 14 May 2008 11:56:00 PST

The Bridesmaid

"Always a bride, never a bridesmaid." This was uttered by a friend who has been married four times but has never been forced to wear the traditional unflattering pouffy rose-colored satin dress along ...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Mon, 05 May 2008 07:50:00 PST

Lasting Fame

I always thought there were 3 sure signs of lasting fame. One is that, as a performer, female impersonators will want to do you. Ten Years ago, I walked into a bar to a very tall and more glamorous me...
Posted by Jill Sobule on Thu, 01 May 2008 09:03:00 PST