lifeblood: listlogs: 2008v10n153-news


ig-news-digest        friday, october 31 2008        volume 10 : number 153


today's subjects:
-----------------
  [ig-news] cleveland free times amy interview  [sherlyn koo <sherlyn@pixelo]


----------------------------------------------------------------------


date: fri, 31 oct 2008 10:07:04 +1100
from: sherlyn koo <sherlyn@pixelopolis.com>
subject: [ig-news] cleveland free times amy interview


hi folks,


here's an amy interview from the cleveland free times.  you can read it
online at http://www.freetimes.com/stories/15/78/amy-ray.


cheers,
sherlyn


- ---begin forwarded article---
soundcheck
amy ray
singer-songwriter
by jeff niesel


as half of the folk duo the indigo girls, singer-guitarist amy ray has
pretty much done and seen everything a pop star can imagine. she was on a
major label for a good chunk of her career and had a couple of hits that
charted. so perhaps that's what fuels her punk-inspired solo career, which
took yet another turn with the release of the new, garage-soul cd, didn't
it feel kinder, out on the indie daemon records label that she runs.
calling via phone from an omaha tour stop, ray talked about her new disc
and the writing approach she took this time around.


you really pushed your vocal range on didn't it feel kinder, didn't you?


yeah, hopefully i can do it live. i started thinking about challenging
myself vocally and just stretch it a little bit. i was trying to sing in my
in-my-head reflective voice and not just my in my chest voice and do things
that reflected lyrically where i was coming from. i wanted to work on
phrasing and a rhythmic approach to certain things. it's not just about the
vocal range but also presentation and tone and all that. i worked with a
producer on this record, and we made that one of our priorities. it was
just a fun thing to do.


what made you want to pursue a solo career outside of the indigo girls?


i had a lot of friends in bands on my indie label. i wanted to write with
them in mind and be part of that community. it kind of came from that.
that's kind of a world i remain part of, and i wanted to express it
musically.


it gives you the chance to explore your rock and punk sides a little more,
no?


yeah, and at that point we were on a major label and i wanted to be in the
indie world more. it's not just the music you play but how you put it out
there. it appealed to me on that punk level.


you wrote didn't it feel kinder over the course of year on the road, right?


yeah, i basically write between shows and sound checks and tours. i had
started writing for this record, and i hunkered down and anytime i had free
time, i would just set up my computer and work with garageband and have a
discipline about it. i think what comes out of that is that you're
influenced by the different places, even if you don't know it.


"bus bus" was one of the first tunes you wrote. is that a reference to
elliott smith in the song?


yeah, i was writing that in england. i started it backstage and finished it
on the bus while i was listening to elliott smith. i went to see him a few
times, and some of my contemporaries were friends with him. i met him once,
but i don't remember where it was. he was amazing. it's a total loss.


i like the fact that you wrote a letter (as a press release) about kinder.
do you do that for every album you make?


um, yeah. i do some type of letter or intro about the making of it. i don't
know why i do that. i think because i have run a record label for so long,
i realize it's often good when an artist presents their work from their
perspective.


you write about some real events that took place recently, like the
shooting at virginia tech and a tour stop in salt lake city. what's it like
working in the realm of non-fiction?


i typically write in the realm of non-fiction, but even when you do that,
fiction gets in there. you start combining people, and people morph into
other people. i can't remember who said it, but some writer said that even
when you write non-fiction, about 80 percent is fiction. it's your
perspective, and you elaborate on things and how they turn out. for me, it
becomes a conglomerate of a lot of different things, even though i start in
one place.


you're playing here on halloween. did you pack a costume?


i'm thinking about it. everyone is deciding what they're going to wear. i
have no idea.


any special spooky songs planned for the show?


no, i don't. i wish i did. we'll try to make one up.


jniesel@clevescene.com
music@freetimes.com


- -----------------------------------------------------------------
this has been a message from the ig-news list.
please send feedback, questions etc to owner-ig-news@smoe.org.
submissions are welcome - please send these to ig-news@smoe.org.
to unsubscribe send the appropriate command to majordomo@smoe.org:
bounce subscribers:   unsubscribe ig-news
digest subscribers:   unsubscribe ig-news-digest


------------------------------


end of ig-news-digest v10 #153
******************************


home | appearances | articles | bootlegs | discography | fanzine | fun | listlogs | official | socs | songs | videos | youtube