Heather Nova accessible music with evocatively sensual and stunning female vocals
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music reviews © Evelyn Downing, Jamie Field,Justin R Elswick, Russell W Elliot 2003
interview © Musical Discoveries (credits) 2003
photos © Jelger Groeneveld and Joseph Voncken 2003
images © V2 Records and Saltwater Ltd 1993-2003
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Born
in 1968 as Heather Frith, her father's family is one of the oldest in
Bermuda, with their history on the island going back 200 years.
Heather's mother is Canadian and the name Nova is a surname present on
that side of the family. Heather spent most of her childhood sailing
off to sea in a 40-ft boat, with her parents sister and brother, a dog,
a cat and a power generator, the latter one being useful to blast off
her family's records. Heather quickly showed an interest in music, and
started learing to play the guitar and violin and writing songs at a
very early age. Her first recording was a four track EP entitled "These
Walls" released in 1990.
Heather Nova's music was brought to the
attention of our editorial staff by Evelyn Downing and Jamie Field
(feature) earlier this year. The albums quickly went on extensive
rotation in offices on both sides of the Atlantic ocean. The run up to
Heather's 2003 release Storm inspired a collaboration amongst several
Musical Discoveries correspondents who contributed to the construction
of the indepth interview with Heather Nova completed in November 2003
and presented below.
You are about to read an in-depth and
retrospective article that reviews all of Heather Nova's (authorised)
albums: Glow Stars (1993), Blow (1993), Oyster (1994), Live From The
Milky Way (1995), Siren (1998), Wonderlust (2000), South (2001) and the
new album Storm (2003). The article also includes reflections on
Heather's live performances. The worldwide web offers plenty of further
information on Heather Nova including a vast array of photographs of
this stunning vocalist.
Go to the section "Album reviews" to read the music reviews.
Go to the section "Live Performance Reflections" to read more about Heather Nova on stage
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The interview
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Musical
Discoveries: Many of your songs contain highly personal and intimate
lyrics. What drives you to express these feelings in song form?
Heather
Nova: I think the need arises simply from a desire to find clarity in
my life. Somehow through writing I am able to learn things about
myself, about how I feel. And it makes me feel more alive; more in
touch with life. Writing is very much a process of searching and
discovery.
During the writing process do you start with the lyrics first or the music?
I
usually get a few lines of lyrics with a melody already attached. They
are very much married from the start. sometimes i will think of a
melody first but rarely a lyric. If that happens it usually becomes a
poem instead.
Do you have a songwriting 'process' as such, or do different songs demand different approaches?
Well,
some songs land in your lap; they seem to come through me and those are
the lucky days, as they seem to write themselves, but more often I get,
as I mentioned earlier, a few lines in my head and then I follow the
thread to finish it. Sometimes it takes days or weeks to write a song -
I keep coming back to it until it completely gels.
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Neil
Young and Bruce Springsteen appear to have been influential to you
since you have covered a few of their songs. What other artists have
influenced you and what else are you listening to these days?
The
artists that have influenced me have been ones that take risks; that
put themselves completely into their songs; the ones that aren't afraid
to be exposed and dig deep and go to the dark side too. Over the years
the ones that stand out are Kate Bush, Patti Smith, Dylan, Neil Young,
Van Morrison and Chrissie Hynde.
On a side note one of our
correspondents wrote that he would love to hear you perform Neil
Young's "After The Gold Rush." What do you think?
That whole album is wonderful. I will give it some thought!
The
Glowstars album is definitely a rock album, yet only one track seems to
use a drum kit and the percussion on others is sparse. The space and
atmosphere created is brilliant. How and why did you and producer Felix
Tod decide to do the songs this way?
Funny, I don't really
think of Glowstars as being "rock" - in a way it is more electronic.
The beauty of that album in retrospect is that we were so limited that
we got even more creative sonically than if we had had a full band and
lots of gear.
We made that album at home on an 8-track cassette
machine and it was just the two of us, my guitar, a little keyboard and
an effects box. A few friends dropped in and contributed bits of
electric guitar and stuff, but we were literally set up in our living
room. Felix was brilliantly innovative with the sounds.
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It
seems like most if not all of the songs on Oyster are autobiographical.
Can you describe where you were personally and spiritually when you
wrote those songs?
I had a few demons to confront. I had
just gotten out of a relationship with a very abusive and controlling
man and alot of the album is about finding my strength and freedom.
There are some intense songs on there but overall I would say the mood
is one of catharsis. No matter how dark a song is there is a sense of
hope in my music I believe. I guess I see writing as a hopeful act in
and of itself.
With a song like "Sugar" it would seem that
you would have the lyrics first since it's almost done in a narrative
style during the verse and lyrically there is a lot going on. Can you
elaborate on the writing process for this song?
No, actually
I was going round and round that guitar figure on my acoustic guitar,
in a sort of trance-like way, and the words started coming. I like
working with spoken word, mixing poetry with rock and roll. I want to
do more of that.
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When
the CD single of "Truth and Bone" was released you re-recorded the
track for the single. What led you to re-recording this track with a
different arrangement than the version on the Oyster album?
Getting
the production right on a song is a tricky thing because there is a
real spirit to a song and it's a delicate thing, and sometimes you
don't really nail it the first time in the studio. I wanted to try
again to capture the feeling of the song with a different arrangement.
Please describe how your music developed from Oyster to Siren.
Well,
with Oyster it was my first time in a recording studio. it was all new
to me. I think I had more confidence on Siren - I knew what I wanted
more in terms of production and I had just been on the road for 18
months and was inspired by the sound of playing with a live rock band.
I wanted to capture some of that on the album.
Do you think that the path from Siren to Storm was more of a straight line or was there a curve in the road?
The
whole of my career has been an evolution, though some albumsIi have
liked better than others. I think that Storm is probably my favourite
and South my least favourite, probably because I had so much
interference and pressure from the label on South they wanted a hit,
and that is no climate to make music in. I made Storm independently
with no label and that was the best thing for the creative process.
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Were there times when you made conscious decisions about your the path your singing style has developed?
In
a way Storm was a return to my roots, to a kind of simplicity. On Storm
I didnt so much want to rock, I just wanted to make something very
atmospheric and beautiful and intense without being angsty. It is
intensely honest album. sometimes dark, but not at all angry. I think
from playing live for the last ten years I have become a better singer.
I am able to give myself up totally to singing - to lose myself in it,
and that's when I sing my best - when I really let go.
What were your reasons for doing a remake of the classic "Gloomy Sunday" for the South album?
I
was asked to record a version of "Gloomy Sunday" for a film that was
being made in Germany. The film was actually called Gloomy Sunday and
was all about the song and the composer of the song. It was a great
oportunity to try a different style; I loved singing with the
orchestral arrangement.
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Who are the artists who've made an impression on you recently?
Jeff
Buckley made a real impression on me. Again, for his abandon and for
putting all his soul into the music. I was impressed by Sandy Dillon,
who I first saw play live a few years ago. She plumbs the depths, and
writes beautiful songs and sings them with an extraordinary voice.
I
also listen to stuff completely unrelated to what I do. I loved the
first Air album, and actually I am a big Eminem fan! I also go back to
old favourites alot. Right at this moment I am listening to an old Joan
Armatrading album.
Some of the images of you used in the CD
artwork are very beautiful, particularly on Oyster and Siren and they
are almost works of art in their own right. How much do you have to say
on the photo shoots and on which images are eventually used?
I
have a lot of say on photo shoots. Sometimes the final decision of
which one to use on a cover becomes a pretty heated debate with the
record company though!
Are you happy to leave the production
to other people or do you have input on the production side even if
it's not credited on the albums?
It would be impossible for
me to just sit back and let someone else take control of my songs. It
is always a collaborative effort. It's helpful to have the objective
ideas of a producer, and in the beginning I relied more on that. With
Storm though, it was more a collaboration between me and the band.
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In
a previous interview you mentioned you would probably feel pretty
strange talking in front of an audience without music. However, you
performed at the Crossing Border festival in Amsterdam last year, doing
a mix of reading your poems from The Sorrowjoy and singing a few songs.
Was that an experience you would consider doing again?
That was a real challenge for me. I was very nervous! But it's good to take risks. In the end I enjoyed it.
What is the difference between reading your poems and singing your songs to an audience?
I
don't know. I think that ideally a poem is to be read to oneself from
the page. It's a quiet private thing. During the reading I interspersed
it with some acoustic performances of old and new songs. Singing calms
me down!
More recently you said you are on a personal quest,
and that writing in itself is a quest, but it also clarifies emotions,
situations. Are you at all afraid of finding the "secret" of life or of
your inner-self? I mean, that everything becomes too clear? Isn't this
the mystery that keeps us going? That we need to find hope and
inspiration?
Ha! That makes me laugh! I don't think I am in
danger of finding too many answers. Life is such a big mystery, and
every day there are challenges, but I do enjoy searching. And sometimes
writing is simply an expression of an emotion just for the sake of
expressing it. What is the human need to express itself? I don't know -
that too is part of the mystery.
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Now that you live in Bermuda again, is it easier to find inner peace to
let emotions flow towards the pen, rather than in hectic London, or
does it not really matter where you are? Has there been a change in the
way the emotions find their way out? I imagine the surroundings
influence the nature of the emotions, and as such the tone of the
writings.
It doesn't really matter where you are; that old
cliche is true - inner peace is something you find inside. I have only
had moments of it. It's like happiness - people ask you if you are
happy but happiness only comes in moments. It is the harder times
between that define the happiness.
You have now done a tour
in a semi-acoustic setting, which fits with the style of your latest
album. Some older songs (like "Island") sounded like they have been
made for this setting, it seems their delivery is even bigger than in a
'full band' setting. Is it right to say that a more stripped down set
can actually give more contrast to a song? Does it bring you closer to
the essence of the song?
Yes, i really enjoyed this tour.
Ironically there can sometimes be more intensity on an acoustic version
of a song, without the big guitars. There is more exposure and that can
be arresting.
There are some songs that don't appear on your
main albums. When can we hope to have a compilation album or a box set
that includes these rare and beautiful songs?
I would love
to do that. I don't have total control over my back catalogue, however,
as it is my old label who owns the recordings.
Your
performance of Neil Young's "Like A Hurricane" was performed in
Hiroshima. How did the audience respond to it and what did you feel
performing that song in this location?
It was quite intense
to visit Hiroshima. To think of what had happened there, and then to be
an "American" playing there a couple of generations later. It made me
aware of how people have the ability to heal and that love is the
overriding human quality we have. It was humbling in a way.
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Do you think becoming a mother will affect your music in any way?
Of
course. Everything in my life affects my music, and surely becoming a
mother has got to be one of the biggest things to experience.
We have heard that one of your recent concerts was recorded for a future DVD. When can we expect its release?
Early in the new year.
What has been your "greatest moment" in all your years as an artist?
I
couldn't put my finger on one moment, but in general it has been the
live gigs - some of them have just had a magic; where there is a
synergy between us on stage and the audience. Ultimately playing live
is about a connection, communication, and sometimes you really feel it
so strongly.
What are your musical plans, hopes and dreams for 2004?
I hope to make another album in 2004. I will keep you posted!
Go to the section "Live Performance Reflections" to read more about Heather Nova on stage
Go to the section "Album reviews" to read the music reviews.
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Interview
Credits. Our questions were prepared by regular contributors to Musical
Discoveries: Scott Bassin (Nanuet, NY, USA), Russ Elliot (Endicott, NY,
USA and Portsmouth, UK) Justin R Elswick (Provo, UT, USA), Evelyn
Downing (Manchester, UK), Jamie Field (Hereford, UK), Jelger Groeneveld
(Amsterdam, Netherlands), and Joseph Voncken (Herleen, Netherlands).
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Article reprinted on this website courtesy of http://www.musicaldiscoveries.com/
Go to http://www.musicaldiscoveries.com/reviews/heathernova.htm to read the original article
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