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Joan Osborne Concert Tickets

Singer Joan Osborne was born on July 8, 1962, in the town of Anchorage, KY, but it wasn't until relocating to New York City in the early '90s (to study at N.Y.U. Check our available Joan Osborne concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Joan Osborne Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

There's plenty of love involved in Joan Osborne's first album of original material since 2008 although not a lot of hate. So the title might be a little misleading as the singer dives into a passionate dozen song cycle that examines love from various angles, not all of them uplifting. On the positive side, Osborne relates how her lover keeps her "Up All Night" and about the joys that come early in a relationship on the string enhanced opening "Where We Start...
- www.americansongwriter.com
As a singer, Joan Osborne has one of those voices (along with Susanna Hoffs, Bonnie Raitt, and Brandi Carlile) that makes any song she interprets that much better. Where she has sometimes struggled, though, has been in writing original compositions worthy of her considerable vocal prowess and in finding a musical style broad enough for her eclectic musical inclinations. With Love and Hate, both of those obstacles have been overcome with room to spare...
- www.popmatters.com
For her seventh album, Kentucky-born singer-songwriter Joan Osborne returns to her roots--the soul, blues and R&B she sang while coming up in New York. But perhaps she shouldn't have waited so long. Featuring covers of songs from the likes of Ike and Tina Turner and Muddy Waters, Bring It on Home sounds less like the recordings of a woman throwing herself into the music that moves her than those of a tired artist running out of ideas...
- www.pastemagazine.com
Saguaro Road For Joan Osborne, jumping into the musical limelight with her 1995 album Relish --which produced the monster hit "One of Us"--had to be a mixed blessing. Relish was a great album that featured great songs but Osborne is more than a pop singer. Just listen to her hearty and, yes, world-weary vocals on the handpicked vintage blues and soul songs on Bring It On Home...
- www.relix.com
Bowing to no trends, Joan Osborne's return offers up sturdy, moody blues chronicles of romantic obsession and paranoia ("Angel Face," "Safety in Numbers"); her warm, baby doll rasp; and stonewashed arrangements occasionally spiced with Middle Eastern accents. By the quasispiritual "Poison Apples (Hallelujah)," she's even worked out her love life, for now. What's missing on Righteous Love is all out excitement: the sexy holy soul that made Relish a goosebump raiser...
- ew.com
James Taylor singing "How Sweet It Is". Linda Ronstadt doing Smokey's "Ooh Baby, Baby". Simply Red's Mick Hucknall's reading Gamble and Huff's (brought to life by Teddy P and Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes) "If You Don't Know Me Now"--classic covers of classic soul recordings and this is the world that Joan Osborne, once the princess of progressive rock-pop (courtesy of her breakout debut Relish (1995), delves into on her new recording How Sweet It Is, released on her Womanly Hips label...
- www.popmatters.com
The first time I turned on the radio and heard "St. Theresa," (the opening track off Osborne's 1995 release, Relish) I felt branded for life. That voice, then unknown, hit me upside the head, roughed me up a bit, then mightily and surely knocked me over. I'm still awed by that song, and chilled to the bone by 80% of what's on that album, on the sheer integrity of Osborne's awesome voice. Of course, we're in a different time and place musically with Righteous Love, Osborne's newest release...
- www.popmatters.com
Joan Osborne's latest might get some press as a country record, but don't expect Faith Hill to start obsessing over sales figures out of fear Osborne will overtake her. Osborne does indeed bring in the pedal steel guitars, violins, and banjos, but this is country in a Roseanne Cash or Kim Richey vein: meticulously crafted, understated, and loaded with material that less subtle singers will probably turn into megahits. If Osborne's nod towards Nashville seems unexpected, it shouldn't...
- www.popmatters.com
It's been an exciting millennium for Joan Osborne and fans. In 2002, the singer-songwriter appeared in the documentary Standing in the Shadows of Motown and recorded a soul covers album called How Sweet It Is. Three years later she released One of Us, a Greatest Hit collection that lumped her big hit single together with the bulk of How Sweet It Is and sprayed it onto the wall to see what would stick. Later that same year, she also released a pretty nifty seasonal album, Christmas Means Love...
- www.popmatters.com
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