A Conversation with Edie Brickell – HuffPost 1.18.11

Mike Ragogna: Edie, you seemed to approach your new self-titled album, Edie Brickell, very differently than your previous albums.

Edie Brickell: It was our intention, when I was playing with the band, to record a lot of upbeat songs. I wanted to make a record that was fun to listen to, and hopefully have a little bit of everything. I was more patient than in the past because I would want to record a lot of songs then put it out. I decided to wait until every song was undeniable to me. I felt that (each song) would stay strong and endure, as apposed to being a good song for a while and then I’d grow tired of it. So, I ended up making the best album I could.

MR: And by calling it Edie Brickell, you really are emphasizing that this is “Edie Brickell.”

EB: That’s right. I finally made the record I wanted to make.

MR: You’re also the ultimate collaborator, having appeared on records by Rob Wasserman, Chris Botti, Barry White, Carter Albrecht and others. And you’ve recorded with New Bohemians, The Slip, Harper Simon, and now The Gaddabouts. Considering you enjoy both worlds, it must have been hard to be able to finally say, “Yeah, this is the one!”

EB: It was, I wish I had thought of that earlier. I wish it had dawned on me to just wait a while, to make sure that you love the song in a year and then love the song in another year. I haven’t worked that way in the past; I’m always writing songs. If somebody’s playing music, I like to sing along to it, I like to make something up, and I get excited when I record it and I want to put it out there.

MR: You launch this record with the song “Give It Another Day” which comes off like a classic pop song. Actually, you have a few of those on this album.

EB: That’s so great to hear. The more I played guitar, I just tried to make something simple that had a little bit of a twist. I wanted to express the joy in my life. It’s about a ten-year delay for your mind and body to catch up with where you are. I think we’re bogged-down by memories, and experiences can weigh on us like baggage. I was really confused in my late twenties and thirties, I had everything going for me but I felt a little sad and I couldn’t figure out what it was. I realized that it was just an emotional habit from youth. Once I realized I could change my emotional habit, my creative life caught up with me. It was really great to crawl out from under the rock of melancholy to write music again.

MR: Yeah, some artists do seem to write about things that may no longer be relevant to who they’ve become.

EB: I think it takes a lot of thinking about life, getting quiet, and figuring out what you want your life to be and how to set your intention and move forward. We’re just trying to get life right, right?

MR: (laughs) So, you’ve got this pretty clever song titled “Pill.”

EB: In around 2003–and I’m a little embarrassed because it’s an old topic–we would sit down to watch a baseball game and we were inundated with drug commercials. I just thought, “What has happened to everybody? What has happened to our country?” Drug companies are the new mafia. I’m really uncomfortable with it.

MR: I personally feel that “Pill” might as well represent everything that is advertised to us seemingly every minute of the day.

EB: I suppose your right. I mean, I’m happy people get relief, but that sure seems like a quick fix in a lot of circumstances.

MR: It seems like the consciousness of the country gets awakened, then falls asleep again. I’m really not sure where we are right now.

EB: Yeah it’s hard to know.

MR: The song “Always” has some really cool arrangements. Who were some of the players that added to the vibe of these arrangements?

EB: Well, Carter Albrecht is playing piano on everything, and he was my friend back in Dallas. He understood my personality, he played what I wanted all the time. He played with other bands down in Dallas, and that echoed across the board from everybody he worked with. Carter has an instinct about what you want to hear. His playing was gorgeous and his personality was amazing to be around. That song was originally written on guitar. I started playing it, but then Carter started playing it and what he was playing was so much better. I let him take over and play whatever he wanted. He was a musician you could trust, you could say, “Just put your heart and soul in there,” and he would come through.

MR: Another of my favorites is the song “2 O’Clock In The Morning” which is a really moody, bluesy “almost” relationship song. Am I reading it right, that this is a song about friends flirting?

EB: Yeah, absolutely. The romantic in me has never died. I started falling in love with people in the first grade. I just realized that’s a certain personality type, it doesn’t mean you’re bad or you’re going to act on it. You just look at people and fall in love with them. I just see so many people that are beautiful and have beautiful personalities, but it doesn’t affect my family or my marriage. There are just so many nice things to love in other people. That’s the song that is trying to express the daydream that sometimes passes through when you’re watching somebody and you like the way they move or talk. It’s the curiosity of what they would be like.

MR: I wish everybody was like that, everyone falling in love with everybody at all times.

EB: You know that cartoon character Pepe Le Pew? When I was a kid, I thought that would be wonderful, I love him. I thought, “What were they running away from? I know he’s a skunk but hold your nose, what he’s saying is so wonderful!”

MR: Nice. It sounds like you’re having a lot of fun on the song “On The Avenue.”

EB: Yeah, that song was written on rehearsal for a tour. That little melody came, and I started singing it to the band and they started jamming on it. That song just bloomed from that. The intention was just to express the feeling behind that riff and the groove.

MR: Let’s also talk about The Gaddabouts. What is the story behind this other project that’s additionally being released?

EB: Well, I ran into Steve Gadd one day. He was working on another band, and he asked me what I was up to. That was around the year 2000. I was raising my kids, and he asked me if I was still writing. I said, “Yeah,” and he told me I should be recording again and he invited me to go into the studio with him. I thought he was just being nice and I never followed through. So, a few months later, I heard that he was wondering what happened. Anyway, I got into the studio and showed him my demos. I was worried to show him because I’m not a great guitarist. I just play well enough to write. I keep writing songs, but I don’t practice being a musician as much as I should. I showed him my songs and he started playing them, and we made some really great demos this one afternoon. I was so excited because he made everything sound great, and it was a terrific vibe in the studio. He said he knew some great guys who were great players and he could put a great band together for these songs and I said, “If you want to do that, I would be blown away, I’m honored.” That’s how the band was born.

MR: So, since you’re married to Paul Simon and considering the critically acclaimed catalogs of material you both have written and recorded, how does it work having that amount of talent under one roof?

EB: Songwriters are just very private. I have a studio downstairs, and I will go write there or I will write a lot of songs while I’m out walking the dogs. Paul works here and there in different rooms; it’s just a quite thoughtful atmosphere. You need that. The house always seems to be very quiet because there’s always music in your head, not necessarily on the radio or on an iPod. You just do your thing. For me, songwriting is about evolving and learning what it is that you like and who you are. So, it’s very personal and very private. I don’t feel like music is a competition, so I’m not threatened in that way. But really, it’s very easy if you think of it as a spiritual process. It’s just a part of who you are and what you do. It’s not about what anybody else does.

MR: There have been a few musical dynasties that fell apart because of competition. It’s so beautiful that your home has such a healthy dynamic.

EB: I learned really early on when playing in a band in Dallas that, first of all, there was a bit of a competition about playing in the clubs–who gets the Friday night or who gets the Saturday night. Instead, when you’re friendly with other bands and (actually) make friends with them, the competition melts away and everybody’s happy for everybody’s success and you go hear each other play. You realize how lucky you are to play music and to play in a band. Then, if the dream comes true and you get to make a record, you’re not thinking about the charts. It’s the media that does it to artists. Media makes people crazy because they will write about you, compare you to another artist, or say someone is better than you. They do that and they will set you up and ask you trick questions and if you answer them and say something a little bit off, it sounds like you’re negative towards another artist and it sounds like you’re Looney Tunes.

MR: Many bands and artists never figure that out. What’s nice is that you learned it early on with the bands in Texas.

EB: Yeah, and on the road. There was so much downtime on tour that I had a lot of that hotel time to think about life, the process, and what’s important to me.

MR: I’m always floored by people that can hold onto their positivity. It’s very hard to not get cynical. I’ve always known you to be a positive person and I’m glad you’ve taken this through life.

EB: Thanks Mike. I try but I don’t always. It sure is the goal. I realize I feel a whole lot better if I focus on the things that don’t bring me down.

MR: What advice do you have for new artists?

EB: Don’t look around to see what everybody else is doing and express your heart. If you like it that’s all that matters.

MR: What does the future look like for Edie Brickell and The Gaddabouts?

EB: Well, with The Gaddabouts, WFUV has a concert series and they’ve brought us on board for that, we’re going to play there April 8th. After that, I don’t know when The Gadabouts will play because all of those players play with the big boys. I have a couple of shows lined up. I’m going to be opening for Iron & Wine in New York City at the end of January, and I’m playing the New Orleans Jazz Fest at the end of May.

Edie Brickell Tracks:
1. Give It Another Day
2. Pill
3. Been So Good
4. Always
5. 2 O’Clock In The Morning
6. Avenue
7. Waiting For Me
8. You Come Back
9. It takes Love
10. Bad Way

The Gaddabouts Tracks:
1. Never So Far Away
2. Let It Slide
3. Remind Me
4. My Heart
5. They Say Everything
6. Mad Dog
7. Gonna Hold On
8. Good Day
9. Good For Me
10. More Than Anybody
11. Feelin’ Better

Transcribed by Theo Shier

 
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