Showing posts with label rolling stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rolling stone. Show all posts

St. Vincent

The Spirit of St. Vincent
Annie Clark Tunes Out the Past, Fine-Tunes Her Scream
By Andrew Clayman

Published in The Nashville Scene, May 2012



Annie Clark is turning 30 this year, but the traumatic romantic-comedy consequences of that event don't seem to be plaguing her too much. In the life of her alter ego — the ass-kicking, art-rock guitar goddess St. Vincent — there just isn't a lot of room for dwelling wistfully on the past.

"I think there's a fine line," Clark says. "You want to be respectful of the past and take what you can from it. And obviously, to make anything, you have to mine the past. But generally speaking, I'm less interested in nostalgia. I think that's a product of working with David Byrne, who's always looking forward — always wondering what the next thing is, and in some ways always imagining that the future is brighter. That's kind of the trick, maybe. Even though nostalgia can inspire certain feelings, it can also be sort of a cynical mindset, because it relies on the supposition that the past was better than the present. And I don't believe that."

Clark has consistently backed up this philosophy in her work, with her most recent single, "Krokodil," serving as a fine example. Released hot on the heels of the third St. Vincent studio album — the lushly orchestrated and electro-funky Strange Mercy —"Krokodil" stands alone as an entirely separate species in the Clark catalog. The two-and-half-minute track is fast, hard and vicious, with Clark cursing her way through an onslaught of noise-punk riffage. It's not her first foray into darkness or decibels (fans have long known St. Vincent's ability to wail away on the ax), but in comparison to her better-known chamber-pop works, it does lead one to wonder if "Krokodil" is a harbinger of things to come.

"I can't exactly say, because I think I'll always just need to make a record that is indicative of where I am at that exact moment," Clark explains. "But I always want to keep pushing. And it definitely feels really satisfying to me to get to scream every once in a while [laughs]. So the next record may be pretty heavy. We'll see."

In the meantime, Clark continues touring in support of Strange Mercy, her most ambitious and highest-charting album to date — peaking at No. 19 on the Billboard Top 200. Just a few years removed from her days as a side player for cuddly folk-pop acts like The Polyphonic Spree and Sufjan Stevens, the Tulsa-born Clark is now one of the undisputed indie queens of New York in her own right, with Strange Mercy confirming the clever songwriting craft, adventurous spirit and unorthodox guitar chops of her first two LPs: 2007's Marry Me and 2009's breakout hit, Actor.

In December, even pillar of above-ground rock journalism Rolling Stone ranked Strange Mercy the 26th best album of 2011. But as Clark is quick to note, the listing habits of that particular publication are not always in line with her own sensibilities.

"I mean, don't they still put Jimmy Page on the cover of the magazine, like, three times a year?" she quips, referring to Rolling Stone's latest rollout of its 100 Greatest Guitarists (a list with a notable 98:2 male-to-female ratio). "Rolling Stone is invested in keeping the mystique around that 1967-1975 era, so it doesn't surprise me much to see what they came up with. When I saw Eric Clapton at No. 3, I pretty much thought, 'Yup, I can ignore this now.' [Laughs] It's baloney."

All Slowhand bashing aside, however, Clark acknowledges that the lack of women in the supposed guitar-god pantheon does cast her — however unwittingly — as a potential role model going forward.

"Well, I wonder about this, because when I was young, and it's still this way — I don't really think about music in gender terms. So when I was young and thinking about playing guitar, it just didn't even occur to me whether the guitar players I liked were men or women. But, that being said, if a little girl sees me playing and says, 'Oh, I want to do that, too!' ... I'd be glad if that happens. Of course."

When it comes to the actual craft of guitar playing, though, St. Vincent has a tip for anyone she might inspire to pick up a six-string: Technical prowess is a great thing, but it's not the only thing.

"You always have to be striking a balance between the athleticism in what you do and the artistry in what you do," she says. "Sometimes those things are very symbiotic, but sometimes you have to make sure you're keeping the athlete in check and thinking, 'What's the meaning of this in the first place?' If what you're doing isn't serving the meaning and the big picture of the song or record, then it might be time to put it away and go somewhere else with it."





Kaki King

King In Her Court
Guitar Goddess Lets Her Words Do the Weeping on "Junior"
By Andrew Clayman
Published in The Nashville Scene and in a 2nd Version in The Cleveland Scene, April 2010

She might still be best known as an acoustic guitar wunderkind, but in recent years, Brooklyn's Kaki King has proven herself more akin to a chameleon than a one-trick pony.

On the leadoff track to her new album Junior, the 30-year-old King announces, "I have become someone else, someone new." Ostensibly, the song — titled "The Betrayer" — is a narrative about a secret agent turned double agent. But it's hard to miss the parallels here: Five albums into her career, Kaki King is quite confident about who she is, even if the rest of us are still trying to catch up with her.

"I just like to do different things," King explains. "I mean, I don't think too hard about it. It's not a bunch of agonizing over 'Who am I going to be now?!' It's just, 'Hey let's make a record, and let's do something we haven't done before,' you know?"

Case in point: King followed up her lone major-label release, 2004's instrumental-acoustic album Legs to Make Us Longer, with 2006's ... Until We Felt Red — an indie record chock-full of atmospheric electric guitars and — gasp! — vocals.

"And people went fucking ape shit," she says, chuckling a bit. "Like, 'Oh my god, Kaki King opened her mouth!' To me, it was really not some big deal at all. I have never understood this supposed divide between lyrical music and instrumental music. Maybe I'm brain-dead, but it has just never made sense to me."

Consequently, King did not race back to the safety of silence on her next album, Dreaming of Revenge (2008). And on Junior, she's gone a step further, fully embracing her potential as a pop singer with equal parts swagger and fragility. The latter element is particularly evident in the breakup ballad "Sunnyside" — which spins a 180 from the espionage of "The Betrayer," revealing King at her most honest and confessional.

"I put ['Sunnyside'] on the record reluctantly," King says, "because I knew that it would open up a lot of questions about my personal life, and who the song was about, and those sorts of things. But in the end, I just felt it was a really good song, and I hope there's something in there that's universal, and will have someone go, 'Yeah, I feel your pain.' It certainly wasn't the easiest decision to make, though."

King was far less hesitant about exploring new horizons musically on Junior, even if it meant de-emphasizing some of the Preston Reed-style guitar tickling that had helped make her the first female member of Rolling Stone's "Guitar God" club back in 2007.

"It was just about playing what I wanted to play," says King, who's also an accomplished pianist, drummer and lap steel player. "I was writing songs that I felt were good songs and that were interesting and beautiful and fun. I think there's a lot of variety on the record, but I don't think I'm any less of a guitar player now. You know, it certainly wasn't a middle finger to any people who might like my guitar playing [laughs]."

It's a good thing, too, because some of the biggest fans of King's ax skills are her fellow musicians, including the likes of Dave Grohl, Tegan and Sara, and John Darnielle (the Mountain Goats) — all of whom have collaborated with King on recent projects.

"The best part about all that is that it's never been something where our managers are organizing us into a room," King says. "It's more like, 'Hey, we're all friends. Why don't you come play on our record?' I mean Dave Grohl just said, 'Hey, love your work. Let's hang out.' So we hung out first, and then we wrote a song later. Every collaborative project I've done has been with friends, rather than some kind of strategic thing based in industry bullshit."

And yes, that even includes a recording session King did last year with superstar producer Timbaland — one which would result in the single "We Belong to the Music," with vocals later added by ... Miley Cyrus?

"Yes, but I never actually met Miley," King says somewhat faux-regretfully. "I didn't get to have the Hannah Montana experience. But hey, it's cool being on the track."