Now (Cara Jones album)

NOW is a 2000 album by Cara Jones. It was the first international release for the million-selling singer-songwriter, whose career thus far had been mostly in Japan. The album received favorable reviews in the US and abroad, and is continually used in soundtracks for film and television.

NOW
Studio album by
Released2000
Recorded1999
GenreSinger-songwriter
Length43:43
LabelFall Girl Records
ProducerMichael Aharon
Cara Jones chronology
Pandora’s Box
(1996)
NOW
(2000)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Musical Discoveriesfavorable link

Track listing

All songs by Jones, except where otherwise noted.

  1. "Spit It Out" – 3:58 - Cara Jones, Michael Aharon, Masanori Narikawa
  2. "River High " – 3:42 - Cara Jones, Masanori Narikawa, Shigeru Watanabe, Norihiko Abe
  3. "CandyBar" – 2:50 - Cara Jones and Michael Aharon
  4. "Stay" – 3:54 - Cara Jones and Masanori Narikawa
  5. "See It My Way " – 3:01 - Michael Aharon and John Anthony
  6. "Choose" – 3:53
  7. "Better Safe Than Sorry " – 3:44 - Steve Holloway and Cara Jones
  8. "Heaven's Waiting " – 4:18
  9. "1999" – 3:49
  10. "Golden Thread" – 4:31 - Cara Jones and Nobuhiro Makino
  11. "Settle For Love" – 5:56

The opening track, "Spit It Out", was featured in the opening scene of episode #501 of the popular television series, Dawsons Creek. The final track, "Settle For Love", charted on the original MP3.com at #1 on the Adult Alternative chart and has been featured in several films.

Musicians

  • Michael Aharon: guitars, keyboards and programming, piano, accordion,

bass, mandolin, bouzouki, dobro, cello, backing vocals

  • Steve Holloway: drums, congas
  • Chico Huff: bass
  • John Anthony: percussion, drums
  • Daryl Burgee: congas
  • Bob Meashey: flugelhorn
  • Helen Bruner and Terry Jones: backing vocals
  • Jenae Freed: backing vocals
  • Irene Lambrou: backing vocals
  • Cara Jones: vocals, additional piano
gollark: It sounds like a weird thing which wouldn't transfer well to other radio stuff.
gollark: <@224348995844177920> It's from an RTL-SDR and some software. RTL-SDRs are cheap software defined radio receivers using a digital TV receiver chip which turned out to have SDR capabilities for some reason.
gollark: I might look into that. Although I think I would still need a better antenna and such.
gollark: The direct sampling thing?
gollark: I have an RTL-SDR but don't use it much, are there any cool things I can do without much additional hardware?
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