ghost of miles Posted July 13, 2006 Report Posted July 13, 2006 Pulled this off the Songbirds list: That's Why the Lady Sings the Blues Last year, Madeleine Peyroux went missing just as her glorious voice was propelling her to stardom. Now she gets to explain -- in song. by Gaby Wood London Observer, July 9, 2006 Last summer, as her second album, Careless Love, was about to enter the UK top 10, American jazz singer Madeleine Peyroux performed what appeared to be her most compelling act yet: she disappeared. One minute, she was impressing critics at Edinburgh and appearing on Top of the Pops; the next, her record label was making it known that a private detective had been hired to track her down. Her vanishing was quickly made to match a longer script. She had disappeared before, we were reminded, for eight years after her lovely debut, Dreamland, in 1996. Her quixotic career had begun when she was discovered as a busker (she had been playing in Paris since she dropped out of school at 15). When Dreamland was released, critics were astonished by her voice's uncanny resemblance to Billie Holiday's, all the more surprising since Peyroux was only 22. How, people wondered, could she have arrived at such sweetly aching sounds? She was working on a second album with Atlantic records, set to be her breakthrough into the mainstream, when she announced that there was something wrong with her vocal cords; she abandoned the album in favour of singing in bars across America and playing for tips. More recently, she had begged leave from the confines of commerce by abruptly pulling out of an appearance on Parkinson; by turning her nose up at Starbucks even as the coffee chain contributed to the one million sales of Careless Love when it put the album on its counters; and by refusing to allow a sticker reading "as heard on the Simple ad" to be put on her CD. Now, however, Peyroux tells me that her so-called disappearance last summer was "a misnomer". "For me, it wasn't a disappearance at all. I had been in London the last day of the tour and the UK label dropped me off at the airport to send me to New York. A couple of days later, I went up to visit my manager, went to sleep and the next morning, there was an announcement that I was missing." Which leaves you wondering whether she is trying to cover her ambivalent tracks or if others are too quick to want to see in hers a life that matches her envelopingly fragile sound. On her forthcoming album, Half the Perfect World, she sings, in words she wrote herself: "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but tears don't leave any scars." "The way that I talk about good and bad things, pain and happiness and joy, is through music," she says. "Part of the reason that I do what I do is to be able to talk about the things we don't normally invite into conversation." Peyroux has a reputation for being troubled, I suggest; is that something she would agree with? "Well, I mean troubled can take so many different forms," she says obliquely. "I don't think the music that I play is any different from the kind of person that I am." I am reminded of her producer Larry Klein's comment, when describing the "poetry" of Peyroux's voice: "Ninety per cent of what she does is implied." It is said of Peyroux that she could have been Norah Jones before Norah Jones. But Peyroux, apparently, has more traditional aims: she combines the timbre of Billie Holiday with the consonants of Anita O'Day and the phrasing of Bessie Smith. She says she has even tried to copy Louis Armstrong. An appropriation doesn't have to be literal, she explains: "I think you can hear that Louis Armstrong always has joy in every note. And I think you can hear a plaintive quality in Billie Holiday's voice that I've heard in a lot of blues singers; she made things sound sad in the way that they actually are, rather than adding to them." The crossover appeal of Peyroux's musical resurrections (songs made famous by Edith Piaf, Josephine Baker, Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, Patsy Cline) always seems to surprise her. About 10 years ago, she found herself back in the working-class Brooklyn neighbourhood where she grew up, playing in a little Italian restaurant. Remembering the outsider she had been as a child, listening to Fats Waller when everyone else was in thrall to Madonna, she felt like giving up before the gig began. But her act opened with "The Way You Look Tonight" and the whole audience sang along. "My jaw dropped. It was really moving." The outsider had become the leader of the pack. Peyroux was born to intellectual parents who met in Canada during the Vietnam War. Her father was an academic who became an actor; her mother was a French teacher (the surname comes from New Orleans). The family moved all the time -- from Georgia to Hollywood to Brooklyn and eventually to Paris, where 13-year-old Madeleine went to live with her mother when her parents had split. When she was asked to pass the hat round for a group of buskers in the Latin Quarter, she says, "it seemed like a lot of different things came together". She left school and travelled with them, learning two songs a week, living at times on their boat, a life that led her to view her own musical ambitions philosophically. "I had this career as a street musician and I thought, well, this is never gonna last," she says. "And then I got the offer for a record deal and made the record and my voice started giving me trouble. I thought, OK, it's just not meant to be." When, while making her soon-to-be-abandoned second album with Atlantic, Peyroux discovered she had a cyst on her vocal cords, she went to a dedicated voice hospital in Nashville. Doctors suggested surgery, but she found that her voice had been so damaged by singing on the street she could rescue it by training it in a certain way. I ask Peyroux whether, despite the very real cyst, part of the problem was psychological, whether the fear of losing her voice was what stymied her. She deflects the question, but eventually she says: "I'm sure that's half of it." Did she think you had to have Billie Holiday's life in order to match her sound? She certainly didn't think you could copy a sound without any understanding of its meaning. "I don't think everybody agrees with me. I think there are a lot of people who believe you can prescribe how to bring out an emotion, that you can just write it out, like a doctor's note. But if I sing a song that Billie Holiday sang, I'm not doing it her way, because I can't take her life experience and put it into my song. "I'm attracted to artists because of what they've lived through and what they understand. Not because I've read about it in a biography, but because when I hear their music, I can feel what's happening." Quote
Bright Moments Posted July 13, 2006 Report Posted July 13, 2006 thanks for the article! i dig her! Quote
RonF Posted July 13, 2006 Report Posted July 13, 2006 Ditto. Thanks. Interesting read....I like her too. Quote
ghost of miles Posted July 13, 2006 Author Report Posted July 13, 2006 (edited) I'm just glad that it's (apparently) not going to be another eight-year wait between records. RonF, what did you think of the latest Cassandra Wilson? I confess that I've played it only a couple of times... I appreciate the new style she's trying to forge, but as a listener I don't feel nearly as compelled to return to it as I do her earlier work. It didn't seem to do very well on the JazzWeek charts, esp. in comparison to the most recent Karrin Allyson. Edited July 13, 2006 by ghost of miles Quote
RonF Posted July 13, 2006 Report Posted July 13, 2006 I'm just glad that it's (apparently) not going to be another eight-year wait between records. RonF, what did you think of the latest Cassandra Wilson? I confess that I've played it only a couple of times... I appreciate the new style she's trying to forge, but as a listener I don't feel nearly as compelled to return to it as I do her earlier work. It didn't seem to do very well on the JazzWeek charts, esp. in comparison to the most recent Karrin Allyson. That's pretty much my scenario with Cassandra's latest. Maybe a couple of tracks but otherwise it didn't happen for me like earlier records. And I feel the same as you about her different direction. I like the fact that she's always always pushing. Blue Note sent the record to Triple A weeks before they even approached jazz radio. They knew what was going on. I liked the Karrin primarily because of her generous sharing of the lime light with Nancy King, who is a real pro...and of course the Jon Hendricks tracks. I have to admit I liked much of the lyric writing too even though the police got their noses twisted. The addition of Bruce Barth was also a plus. Wondered if you've listened to Roberta Gambarini? Quote
ghost of miles Posted August 10, 2006 Author Report Posted August 10, 2006 (edited) Half the Perfect World, due out Sept. 12. Edited August 10, 2006 by ghost of miles Quote
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