Day Breaks

Day Breaks is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter Norah Jones, released on October 7, 2016, through Blue Note Records. The album features nine original songs and three covers. Jones returned to a piano-driven sound as heard on releases early in her career. It peaked at number two on the US Billboard 200, becoming her sixth album to reach the top ten. Day Breaks received positive reviews from music critics, with many praising the album's production and Jones' vocals with many comparing it favorably to her debut album Come Away with Me. Jones promoted the album with television performances and interviews.

Release
Day Breaks was released on October 7, 2016, through Blue Note Records. At the time of its release it was made available on CD, vinyl and as a digital download. A limited edition orange vinyl was also released.

Writing and recording
Eight songs on the album are composed or co-written by Jones; composing on piano, she intended the album as a return to the sound of her 2002 debut, Come Away with Me. The album was co-produced by Jones and Eli Wolf and features drummer Brian Blade, organist Lonnie Smith and saxophonist Wayne Shorter. Jones explains the songs were composed by drawing on jazz music influences and were recorded live without any overdubbing.

There are three cover songs on Day Breaks: "Peace", by Horace Silver (first recorded by Jones in 2001), "Fleurette Africaine (African Flower)", by Duke Ellington and "Don't Be Denied", originally by Neil Young, whose lyrics were recast in the third person by Jones. The album also includes "Sleeping Wild" written by Sarah Oda, who co-wrote three other tracks on the album and co-produced.

The album was released on October 7, 2016, with the first single being "Carry On". Subsequent singles included the songs "Flipside" and "Tragedy".

Promotion
Jones performed songs from Day Breaks on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and The Today Show. She discussed the album on PBS's Tavis Smiley show on October 14, 2016. She also appeared on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and performed her cover of Horace Silver's "Peace" from the album. To further promote the album, Jones embarked on Daybreaks World Tour.

Critical reception
Day Breaks received an average score of 77/100 from 10 reviews on Metacritic, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic rated the album four out of five stars and wrote that: Jones' originals feel as elegant as time-honored standards, and all her covers feel fresh. The former speak to her craft, the latter to her gifts as a stylist, and the two combine to turn Day Breaks into a satisfying testament to her ever-evolving musicianship. Glenn Gamboa of Newsday rated the album an "A", calling it Jones' "latest masterpiece". Rating the album an "A−", Entertainment Weekly's Jim Farber writes of Jones: "Not since her entrancing debut has she sounded this engaged."

Commercial performance
Day Breaks debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 (behind Green Day's Revolution Radio), moving 47,000 equivalent album units; it sold 44,000 copies in its first week, with the remainder of its unit total reflecting the album's streaming activity and track sales, marking her sixth top five album on the chart. It was a considerable drop from her previous efforts, Little Broken Hearts (2013) and The Fall (2009), which opened to sales of 110,000 and 180,000 units, respectively. The album debuted at number one on the US Jazz Albums chart, making it Jones' second album to reach number one.

Track listing
All tracks produced by Norah Jones and Eli Wolf, co-produced by Sarah Oda.

Personnel
Musicians plus on tracks 6 and 9
 * Norah Jones – vocals and piano (all tracks), Hammond B3 organ and Wurlitzer electric piano (track 3) , electric guitar (6)
 * Peter Remm – Hammond B3 (1, 2, 6, 7), electric guitar (7)
 * Tony Scherr – electric guitar (1, 6), background vocals (6)
 * Wayne Shorter – sopranino saxophone (1, 8), soprano saxophone (7, 12)
 * John Patitucci – double bass (1, 8, 12)
 * Chris Thomas – bass guitar (2, 3, 7), double bass (4, 5, 10, 11) , electric guitar (7)
 * Brian Blade – drums (except 6, 9)
 * Daniel Sadownick – percussion (2, 3)
 * Lonnie Smith – Hammond B3 (3), background vocals (11)
 * Jon Cowherd – Hammond B3 (11)
 * plus on tracks 5, 7 and 10
 * Dan Iead – pedal steel guitar (7 only)
 * Katie Kresek, Max Moston – violin
 * Todd Low – viola
 * Dave Eggar – cello, string arrangements
 * Tony Maceli – bass
 * Chuck Palmer – string arrangements, string conductor
 * Phil Faconti – orchestration, copyist
 * Leon Michels – tenor saxophone
 * Dave Guy – trumpet
 * J. Walter Hawkes – trombone
 * Vicente Archer – double bass
 * Karriem Riggins – drums
 * Sasha Dobson, Sarah Oda, Catherine Popper and Petter Ericson Stakee – background vocals (6 only)

Technical
 * On bonus tracks 13 and 16
 * Norah Jones – vocals, piano
 * Pete Remm – Hammond B-3 organ
 * Jason Abraham Roberts – guitar
 * Josh Lattanzi – bass, backing vocals
 * Greg Wieczorek – drums, backing vocals
 * On bonus tracks 14, 15
 * Norah Jones – vocals, piano
 * Pete Remm – Hammond B-3 organ
 * Chris Thomas – bass
 * Brian Blade – drums
 * Tarriona 'Tank' Ball and Anjelika 'Jelly' Joseph – backing vocals
 * Norah Jones and Eli Wolf – producer
 * Sarah Oda – co-producer
 * Ted Tuthill – recording engineer (at Sear Sound Studios, NYC, additional recordings at Brooklyn Recording, Brooklyn, NY)
 * Owen Mulholland – assistant engineer
 * Tom Elmhirst – mixing (at Electric Lady Studios, NYC)
 * Joe Visciano – mixing assistant
 * Cameron Alexander, Brandon Bost, Jeff Citron, Adam Tilzer – studio assistants
 * Greg Calbi – mastering (at Sterling Sound, NYC)
 * Marcela Avelar – art direction
 * Danny Clinch – photography