Special Edition
includes all 11 tracks from the original release, plus a new version
of "Wreck of the Day" produced by Steve Lillywhite, and three unreleased
acoustic tracks: "More Than Melody," "Drink Me," and "Soldier."
|
Anna
Nalick discusses the re-issue, the Leno moment, album #2, and more!
by Brad Parmerter
Concert Photos by Terence Gui & Beth Dimock
Among the thousands of songs recorded each year, there are only a few
whose melody resonates so deeply that you carry it with you, calling on
it to help you through a particular situation or touching you in a special
way. Anna Nalick's "Breathe" has done just that. More than just
a brilliant vocalist, Nalick's command of melody has helped her develop
an intimate and personal style of songwriting that is universal in its
message.
|
"And
I feel like I'm naked in front of the crowd, and these words
are my diary screaming out loud..."
...reveals Anna Nalick on her far reaching, top 5 single
"Breathe." You might say it's the song that won't
stop, well, breathing. Released as the first single from Nalick's
debut CD, Wreck of the Day, last spring, the song was
a staple at radio and stayed on the charts for over 40 weeks.
It came back to life earlier this year after it was prominently
featured in an intense episode of Grey's
Anatomy, and it's still going strong.
That renewed interest has led to the release of a Special
Edition of the album with three acoustic tracks and a new
version of the title track, recorded with her band and produced
by the legendary Steve
Lillywhite (U2,
Peter
Gabriel, Dave
Matthews Band).
The 22-year-old Nalick grew up in California, with performing
in her blood. Her grandparents toured with the Marx Brothers
and danced onstage with Fred Astaire. She started re-writing
popular songs in elementary school and was writing her own
songs in high school. She cut her teeth onstage fronting a
Rush
cover band.
Writing
her own material was her passion and with the help of a Rainbow
Brite tape recorder, she started pitching her own songs to
record labels. After landing
with Sony/Columbia, she teamed up with Tori
Amos producer Eric Rosse, and the team of Christopher
Thorn & Brad Smith (ex-members of the '90s band Blind
Melon). Coincidentally, one of the songs on her debut,
"Paper Bag," pays homage to the video and theme
of feeling ugly and out of place, of Blind Melon's hit, "No
Rain."
In support of the album, she's been on the road for the better
part of the last 18-24 months opening shows for Rob
Thomas, The
Wallflowers, Train,
the Dixie
Chicks, as well as her own headlining tour. With her accomplished
and rockin' band: Luis Maldonado on guitar (UFO, MSG, John
Waite), Tim Hogan on bass, and drummer, "Bad Ronald"
Crawford (Lisa Loeb, Jeffrey Gaines); the four-piece lock-in
for a dynamic and energetic performance. Offstage they're a
happy little touring family. Maldonado
and Hogan admired the new album cover, "Man, she's pretty
hot!" Nalick quiped back, "Yeah, I clean up pretty
nice." Onstage, seeing and
hearing Nalick one wonders if she's not the next Pat
Benatar. A wide and brilliant vocal range, sass and spunk,
she commands the stage and delivers a stellar performance.
She takes her music and career seriously, but doesn't take
herself too seriously.
While on the road with Train in June, Nalick stopped by fye.com
for a chat and a stunning acoustic performance. She talked
about the new tracks on the re-issue, appearing on Leno, the
upcoming 2nd album, and why her wedding party won't be wearing
taffeta.
|
[click
live images to enlarge]
|
|
|
Bp:
In the past year or so you've been pretty busy! You've
been to Japan, toured with Rob Thomas and the Wallflowers, met Sting,
played a ton of talk shows, received a Gold record, etc. Did you
ever expect all of this?
Anna:
I probably didn't expect things to happen exactly as they have,
but I certainly didn't not expect it. I was one of those kids
that sort of on my own believed that I could do anything. So it's
never a huge shock that I get to do the cool things I get to do.
Maybe I'm idealistic or maybe it's all just really stupid,
but I don't know any better than to think that I can accomplish
anything. So it's been really fun. That said, it is also that
much more exciting to actually see all of the things that I'd
hoped for, come to be. And to meet all the people I wanted to meet.
Sting was on the list of people I wanted to meet and here I met
him and he's very charming. I got to introduce him to my Mom
too, who came to that particular show, and we were both a little
bit smitten by his charm. He's very much the gentlemen.
Bp:
An amazing year, and hopefully another ahead with the re-issue.
Anna:
Yeah! It's been a long process, because I toured with "Breathe"
at radio for a year before the record actually came out. It's been
over a year now since the record has been out and so many things
have happened. It was going on a steady incline and then all of
a sudden it sort of plateaued and people started telling me, 'Ok,
"Breathe" is dead. It's time for you to go back into the
studio.' And I was like 'Dang.' I wanted another single. I wanted
to do more things with this record. I worked so hard promoting it
and so I was kinda bummed that I had to go back home and organize
new material. And then around the same time, Grey's Anatomy
played "Breathe" on the show where the guy got blown up.
Within days of that show playing, lots of new offers came in. Grey's
Anatomy relaunched "Breathe" and because of that it's
given me the opportunity to now put out a re-issue, which is Wreck
of the Day as it was before, plus a new version of the song
"Wreck of the Day," and three tracks of acoustic songs
that I wrote a long, long time ago that I sent as demos to record
labels. So it should be fun now to treat it as a brand new record
because now there's a brand new audience listening.
Bp:
These wouldn't be the Rainbow Brite recordings would they?
Anna:
No. [laughs] But I just recorded a bunch of songs for the new album,
the new-new album, which we'll probably go into the studio for in
maybe November, and I'm sure that I do have the means to record
it really professionally now, but maybe chock it up to laziness,
I just went to Target and bought a cheap tape recorder and a few
tapes and I recorded them that way. It's just the easiest for me.
I didn't want to go into the studio. I'd rather keep it simple.
Bp:
In 10 of 15 years when they're compiling the Anna Nalick box set,
you can include those, The Bedroom Tapes!
Anna:
Yeah, which will be funny 'cause I actually recorded the cassettes
for my band so that they can learn the songs and so throughout the
tapes I'm giving a little commentary, 'Ok guys, this part's the
bridge, and Luis, I want you to do this.' Or I'd mess up, 'Ugh,
hold on, let me start over again. Stop judging me, I know you guys
are judging me right now.' It's been fun and I think the next, next
record, as in Record 2, cause this next one is like Record 1 and
a ½, I think the second one will be really exciting because
I've matured a lot over the last few years and my writing has matured
with me. Also I've got an official band now, which I didn't have
for the first record. I had studio guys and while they were amazing,
they didn't know me and know my voice the way that my guys do now.
So as I'm writing some of the new stuff I'm thinking, 'What would
Ronnie do on the drums at this part,' and 'What would Luis do on
guitar.' It's exciting to bring the songs to them and know that
we're gonna come at it from a group standpoint. They know my voice
exactly and they know my range and how I think, so it's going to
be so much fun to make this record. I'm really excited about it.
[click
images to enlarge]
Bp:
You've been playing so many shows with these guys?.
Anna:
We've been together for about two years. They're my best friends,
they really are. I've been thinking about it lately. It's based
on the fact that a few of my friends are getting married now. My
friends have always been older than me, so I'm 22 and they're 26,
27 and getting married. So I've been thinking, 'When I get married,
who am I going to have in my wedding?' 'Cause I don't have a lot
of really good girl friends. I've got a sister, two brothers, and
if I was gonna try to pick out my best friends, it'd be my band.
So I'm thinking that my wedding would be my sister as my maid of
honor, and then my brothers and my band as my bridesmaids [laughs].
So there's just gonna be lots of dudes in my wedding.
Bp:
Well, you don't have to hire a band that way.
Anna:
No. And Timmy, my bass player, says he's fine with it as long as
he doesn't have to wear taffeta, 'cause he swears it makes him look
fat, which I don't even want to know how he knows that. But they're
up for it. They're like my brothers. I really love my band. I'm
their biggest fan.
Bp:
It's important to have that camaraderie. You've got to
have a good relationship with them since you're basically living
together on the road with them.
Anna:
Yea, you kinda of have to have that. With living on the bus, it's
such close quarters, it's sort of like?imagine being,
well, you don't have to imagine being the only girl, but as
a girl it's like living in my living room with five brothers.
And there's not a lot of space and sometimes it can be frustrating,
but they're all very tolerant of our differences and they know
when the time comes to not bother me. [laughs]
Bp:
Let's talk about the release of 1.5. Are the bonus tracks demos
or fully produced acoustic tracks?
Anna:
They're not produced, they're just me on guitar. It's the tracks
that we made to send to record companies to sort of give them something
to listen to. I guess it's a little bit produced because it was
done in a studio, but there are no effects on it. It's just me and
the guitar and that's it. It's really simple. It's kind of fun,
because now that I'm getting a chance to start over again I can
kind of draw from the very beginning as well, which is interesting
to some people who have been with the record for a long time. And
that was really my goal with putting out the re-issue. Of course
it was a smart idea and best to take advantage of the fact that
new people were interested so we get to treat it like a new record.
However, there's half a million people or more who've already bought
the record and for them I wanted something else on there. So that's
why there's the new version of "Wreck of the Day," which
Steve Lillywhite produced and my band played on and it's just amazing.
Hopefully that will be the next single. And then these extra tracks,
that'll just be fun to listen to, and gives them something extra
to listen to.
[click
images to enlarge]
|
|
Bp:
About these extra tracks. Since these are the 'new' ones
for many folks, what can you tell me about them?
Anna:
One song, called "Soldier," I never wanted to put out.
I think it's a beautiful song. It doesn't sound finished, which
I like. It's just me being myself. I never wanted to release it
only because two or three years ago when I was collecting songs
for the first album, there were a lot of songs out that were about
the war and about the soldiers and about the guys coming home and
part of me felt like that's a really great way to comfort people.
But then a part of me felt like it was a little bit of exploitation
when it caught on and all of a sudden bands realized, 'Ok, this
is the way to make money right now, because this is what people
are feeling.' And then there were these songs that just seemed half-hearted
but had that theme. And I thought, this song, my song, "Soldier,"
is very personal because it's about a boy that I know. The whole
story is true. It's about a boy that I knew in high school who was
ready to give up entirely and then met a girl who turned everything
around for him. And now he's great. Now he's married and has a baby
and is very happy. But I thought, 'I don't want to be in that category,'
because what if that becomes the single and then I'm just one of
those people that took a very opportunistic approach to what was
going on at the time. So that's one song that I'm excited to share
with people. Another one, ["More Than Melody"], I've already
gotten some strange comments about, because it's a little
well,
I don't think it's that risqué, but I suppose
from reading
my message board I've seen people say, 'That doesn't sound like
Anna's writing.' Because I'm talking about, I guess it could be
taken in a few different ways, but it sounds like a one-night stand.
And it kind of is about that [laughs]. Kind of, it kind of is. Stress
the kind of. So that's one that I've already heard people say, 'That
doesn't sound like her.' The truth is we all have lived a lot of
life in however many years we've been alive and it's really just
one more aspect that I guess sometimes I don't talk about. And that's
a fun song for me. If it was ever produced, I would imagine it would
be something like "Consider This." It has a little bit
of
I would want it to sound a little burlesque; a little saucy.
"Drink Me" is a funny
not funny, but an interesting
song to use on this album because it previously was only used as
a b-side for the Japanese record. I was inspired to write that song
after I read the book East of Eden and there is a character
in there who was beautiful her whole life, but she was a very disturbed
little girl. And as she gets old, realizes that her looks are gone
and that she's ready to go, she drinks a bottle of poison and she
imagines that she's like Alice in Wonderland, slowly getting smaller
and smaller and smaller until she finally fades away. So that's
what the song "Drink Me" is about because of course, 'drink
me' is what's written on the bottle that shrinks Alice in Alice
in Wonderland. And I'm a huge fan of Alice in Wonderland
and Through the Looking Glass and all that. I think it's so
brilliantly written and interesting and I collect the books. Anytime
I see a new Alice in Wonderland book with different pictures
or something like that, I always buy it.
Bp:
So that leaves "Home" as the only song that hasn't
been released.
Anna:
I didn't put "Home" on there because that's something
that we sing on stage. And I guess I just wanted to leave it as
a song we've done on stage. Plus I think the people that have already
been interested in it have already downloaded it. So it's been available
for a while. I thought if folks want to hear that song, they can
download it. I don't need to put it on an album. I'd rather put
different stuff on there. I'm sure you can download "Drink
Me" at this point too. At this point you can probably download
all of them. I've heard rumors of that too. By the people who've
already heard the lyrics of "More Than Melody," and I'm
thinking 'How do they know the lyrics?' I asked my manager 'How
do they know them?' But they figure out a way. It's alright, just
as long as they're listening somehow.
Bp:
I found "Home" on the Australian single of "Breathe"
on eBay.
Anna:
That's how people have that. I wasn't gonna use that on the original
these
songs were all written before I finished my first album so they've
been around for a long time. And "Home" was another one
I wasn't going to use because I was in New York when I wrote it
and I'd been listening to John
Mayer a lot. Because he was at my label, we have the same representation
within the label, so he was my example for everything. Anytime I
was shown anything, 'This is what a DualDisc looks like,' 'This
is how we're going to do the video,' and they would show me John
Mayer stuff, because he was the guy at that time. So I was listening
to his music and he had a song called "Home Life" and
I thought, 'Gosh, that reminds me of how I feel a lot of the time.'
But I didn't put it on the album because somebody was like, 'This
is a more appropriate song for once you've been on tour for a while.'
My A&R girl told me that and she was right. It is more appropriate,
it makes more sense, now. But at the time I was living at home,
I was going to college, and every weekend I was flying to New York
to meet with record companies and all of a sudden I was like, 'Maybe
I just wanna go home.' [laughs] Like, I don't know what I'm doing
because going home actually just meant going to school for a few
days and literally being at school, in the library, doing my homework
all day long. And then going to work during the night and then flying
to New York. So it was tough and that song is really just about
not feeling like I fit in anywhere. And realizing that especially
with the life I knew I was going to be living, the life that I'm
living now, which is I don't really have a home. My home really
is where my heart is. So if my best friends, if my boyfriend, if
my parents are in Minnesota or California or Colorado, that's where
home is.
|
Bp:
And, as you mentioned, the new version of "Wreck of the
Day" with Steve Lillywhite.
Anna:
That's the most exciting part for me. I can't wait for people
to hear that. I've never heard that song sound exactly like
I wanted it to until I started playing it with my band. And
it's all because they all have such a good feel for what I
like and how I sing. We're just the greatest mix, the four
of us. "Wreck" is my favorite song on the album
and now it's just more dynamic. I listened to a lot of Jeff
Buckley on the Live
at Sin'e CD and I wanted the dynamics to be kind of like
he played, with lots of playing with the melody and bring
it down low and
.I just wanted it to be powerful. So
I told my guitar player Luis about it and since he's brilliant,
he managed to figure that out on guitar and I did my best
to do as much vocally as I could. And actually I did things
that I didnt know I could do! Now we actually pull out
all the stops on stage too, which is fun. We also brought
in Rami Jaffee, who plays keyboards and organ for The Wallflowers.
We toured with them for a while and became friends with him.
So we brought him in and he played some parts and he had a
string arrangement done for the track and Steve Lillywhite
was amazing to work with. That's the easiest time I've ever
had in the studio, being with Steve and my band and with Rami.
It was perfect. I do hope we can do that again.
continued...
|

[click to enlarge]
|
continued
on page 2
|
|