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Jewel's thirteenth studio album, Freewheelin' Woman, was released on April 15, 2022, via her own label, Words Matter Media. The album was co-produced by Jewel and Butch Walker and was developed with the intention for Jewel to create music that she felt connected to and excited about rather than creating in order to meet expectations. [92]
"Who Will Save Your Soul" is a song written and performed by American singer-songwriter Jewel. It was the first song released from her first studio album, Pieces of You (1995), and became a hit in North America and Australasia, peaking at number seven in Canada, number 11 in the United States, number 14 in New Zealand, and number 27 in Australia.
2×CD/cassette of Jewel reading her book Chasing Down the Dawn: Stories from the Road; Released: October 3, 2000; Label: Harper Audio (ISBN 978-0694521517) That's What I'd Do: Book and CD of Jewel's first children's book That's What I'd Do; story and music; Released: September 18, 2012; Label: Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books (ISBN 978 ...
Greatest Hits is the first greatest hits album by American singer-songwriter Jewel. [3] The album was released on February 5, 2013, and features duets from Kelly Clarkson and the Pistol Annies. [4] It also contains one new recording, "Two Hearts Breaking".
Precisely at 8 p.m., Jewel took the stage and proceeded to mix her old and new songs to show how she has moved forward from her hits of the ’90s and early 2000s.
Jewel recalls the overwhelming attention she received for her looks, not her vocals or songcraft, when her debut album Pieces of You came out more than 25 years ago.“I was made fun of in the ...
The bulk of the songs featured on Pieces of You were written by Jewel between the ages of 16 and 19; she has said that "Who Will Save Your Soul" specifically was written while she was busking during a hitchhiking trip she took by herself over spring break from the Interlochen Center for the Arts, where she had been studying on a vocal scholarship.
This version omits the first two lines of the chorus and the last four lines of the second verse, and did not gather much attention. It was later cancelled, with the video pulled from MTV and VH1. Jewel recorded the song for a third time, and the resulting version produced is known as the "radio version" and is featured on Greatest Hits.