Marti Jones is an American singer and visual artist known for her albums (solo and with husband
Don Dixon) and her paintings. She exhibits visual art as "Marti Jones Dixon."
Early life
Marti Jones grew up in
Uniontown, Ohio, United States near
Akron, Ohio. She performed with her sisters in a folk music group and graduated from
Kent State University in 1979 with a degree in studio art.[1] While in school, she performed in solo, duo, and trio contexts.[2]
Career
Color Me Gone
Producer and songwriter
Liam Sternberg gave Jones her first studio experience singing demos, and suggested she join Akron band Color Me Gone who needed a lead singer. The band recorded one EP for
A&M Records in 1983.[3][4]
In 1990, Jones moved to
RCA Records to record Any Kind Of Lie. She relied more on original material and adapted an adult-contemporary sound. She was dropped by RCA after one album.[4][8]
Sugar Hill Recordings
After losing her label, Jones, 35, decided to settle down and have a child (Shane Marie Dixon).[9] In 1996,
Sugar Hill Records released a pair of Jones albums only a few months apart. Live at Spirit Square was an August 29, 1990, live recording at the Spirit Square Center for the Arts, documenting the Any Kind of Lie tour.[4]
My Long-Haired Life was a return to her previous method of blending original songs and covers. Having cut her characteristically long hair when she became a mother, the album title alludes to her life of singing back when her hair was long. The album's cover shows a self-painted portrait of Jones sitting in a barber's chair, her golden locks strewn on the floor.[10]
Dixon Archival Remnants Recordings
2002's My Tidy Doily Dream was a slower tempo album, featuring songwriting collaborations with
Richard Barone and Kelley Ryan of astroPuppees.[4]
After that, Jones curtailed her singing career for a time, and focused on painting.[11]
In 2003, Jones recorded the song "Room With a View" for a tribute to Let's Active's Every Word.
In 2006, she toured with singer-songwriter
Amy Rigby as The Cynical Girls.[12]
In 2008, Jones and Dixon released the download-only album Lucky Stars: New Lullabies for Old Souls A departure from Jones' and Dixon's previous sound, this recording began as a request from a friend who was putting together an album of lullabies to sell in hospitals to new parents. The album featured six vocal songs and five instrumentals.[4]
In fall of 2009, Jones and Dixon toured, performing a series of live acoustic performances.[13]
In 2010, Jones and Dixon recorded Living Stereo, a proper duet album.[6]
In 2014, Jones released You're Not the Bossa Me, which incorporates
bossa nova rhythms and sensibilities into her own musical themes.[14]