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Mr. Lucky -- Chris Isaak’s stunning new masterpiece -- perfectly balances the ecstasy of great romance with the agony of pure heartbreak. Mr. Lucky offers passionate music that feels decidedly lived-in. Like some rocking Sinatra album for the 21st Century, Mr. Lucky is a song cycle about the good luck we earn and the bad luck we just can’t seem to shake. Right from its killer opener -- the wonderfully tortured “Cheaters Town” -- to the concluding and uplifting “Big, Wide Wonderful World,” Isaak takes us all on a dark but beautiful ride -- one you will likely recognize as your own. “For better or for worse, the songs on this album do reflect where I am at in my life right now in one way or another,” Isaak confesses. “I couldn’t define where that is exactly, but suffice to say when I hear these songs, they all make sense to me. The truth is I do put a lot of myself into my music. If people out there listening feel that it’s me in these songs, that means I’m probably doing my job. At the same time, I believe that anyone who’s ever fallen in love -- or out of love -- should be able to hear themselves in this album too.” Throughout his impressive recording career -- right from his stunning 1985 debut to this latest stellar effort -- Chris Isaak has tunefully and artfully explored the good, the bad and the ugly of love, as well as other matters of profound human interest. He has done so with an abiding respect for popular music’s past, but at the same time with clear and vital passion for the here and now. Yet for all the heartbreak evident on Mr. Lucky -- and yes, Virginia, there is a lot of blood on these particular tracks -- make no mistake, Chris Isaak considers himself to be a very fortunate man indeed. “When I call this album Mr. Lucky -- or sing a song titled `Big Wide Wonderful World’ -- my tongue is nowhere near my cheek,” Isaak explains. “The truth is that anyone who gets to do what I do for a living should be saying `Thank you’ on a daily basis. For all the pains and the pleasures of life, this is a wonderful world and I understand that I really am one of the luckier guys on earth.” Like some of Isaak’s best known past compositions, such as his international breakthrough smash “Wicked Game,” “Baby Did A Bad, Bad Thing” and “Somebody’s Crying,” the songs on Mr. Lucky have a deeply felt sense of the consequences of good love gone bad, and bad love gone good. Standout tracks on Mr. Lucky include the opening “Cheaters Town,” his intimate travelogue of heartache, the tormented yet transcendent “We Let Her Down” -- the first single from the new album -- and “You Don’t Cry Like I Do,” a searing song of love and loss that reaches the operatic heights of Roy Orbison, one of Isaak’s greatest heroes and a kind man who generously made the effort to help Isaak out on his way up. On the other hand, there’s also tremendous optimism and hope and love here, on songs like, “Best I Ever Had” and “We’ve Got Tomorrow,” on which he sings, “A simple plan is all we’ll do/You count on me/I count on you.” Those words offer a lesson that cuts very close to home for Isaak. For all the epic romance that he learned through the music of his heroes like Orbison, Elvis Presley and Ricky Nelson, his own most lasting lesson in how love should work came from his own parents who’ve been married for sixty years now. As Isaak recalls, I asked my mother for the secret, and she said, `Don’t leave.’ Recently, I noticed my father’s wedding band and asked him why he got such a thin one. He said, `Well, it wasn’t thin when I put it on.’ That teaches you something about love and what really lasts in this world.” As for any impression from the album that “Mr. Lucky” has himself been unlucky in love, Isaak pauses for a second then adds, “Honestly, I’ve been pretty lucky in love. I’ve met wonderful women, and I like to think I’m friends with all of them today. In the end, most of the heartache that I’ve experienced, I’ve brought on myself. When you live on a bus and travel from town to town making music, it’s not exactly a great way to set down roots.” Perhaps so, but when the result is music like Chris Isaak’s Mr. Lucky, it works out just fine for the rest of us. From the beginning, Chris Isaak has earned his good luck the hard way -- by consistently delivering excellent work, both onstage and in the studio on a series of accomplished albums from Silvertone (1985), Chris Isaak (1986), Heart Shaped World (1989), San Francisco Day (1993), Forever Blue (1995), the largely acoustic Baja Sessions (1996), Speak of the Devil (1998), Always Got Tonight (2002), the seasonal-themed Christmas, the Best of Chris Isaak compilation (2006) and now 2009’s Mr. Lucky. In between all those album and tours, Isaak has also used his famously sly, self-deprecating wit and matinee idol looks to enjoy a whole second life onscreen. He has appeared in numerous films including Jonathan Demme’s Married To The Mob (1988), David Lynch’s Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (1988), Bernado Bertolucci’s Little Buddha, Jonathan Demme’s Academy Award-winning Silence Of The Lambs (1991), Tom Hanks’ rock & roll movie That Thing You Do! (1996) and John Waters’ A Dirty Shame (2004). And in addition to high profile guest parts on a special Super Bowl episode of Friends and the Emmy-winning HBO miniseries From The Earth To The Moon, Isaak starred in his own acclaimed Showtime musical comedy series The Chris Isaak Show from 2001-2004 -- an inspired vehicle that expertly showcased many of his considerable talents as a comedian and musician. “I’ve had a blast, and been paid to try and act,” Isaak admits. “I say `try’ because anyone who has ever seen me act knows I’m no actor. Still, I’m thankful for the opportunities. In truth, the first thing I ever considered being was a filmmaker, but I couldn’t even imagine how you could ever get paid to do that, but I figured if you got a band together you just might be able to get someone to pay you to play a gig. It’s all worked because music is my real passion.” Most recently, Isaak has also started hosting The Chris Isaak Hour, a brand new music interview series on the Biography Channel that debuts in February 2009 and has already found Isaak interviewing and making music with a wide range of distinguished artists, including Stevie Nicks, Michael Buble, Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens) and Trisha Yearwood. “Frankly, it’s the only way I could get some of these people to talk to me and even play with me,” Isaak explains with a grin. Though Isaak confesses that he can be very happy just surfing or drawing during his down time (he did all the art for the new album), at heart, he is still that same kid from Stockton, California who grew up decidedly working class -- and to this day he has the outstanding work ethic to show for it. As Isaak recalls, “Someone once asked Buck Owens how he wanted people to remember him and Buck said, `That I was a hard worker.’ I loved Buck even more for saying that, and I try to live up to that idea with every album and every show. Every night, we try to do a great show for people because we know they may have hired a babysitter and driven a hundred miles just to see us. We take that responsibility seriously, even if we don’t take ourselves too seriously. But as much fun as we have, we take pride in trying to live up to the respect people show us.”

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