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February 18, 2011 at 12:14 am #30477West WordsParticipant
It looks like Lu’s caricature made the cover of the local entertainment paper, “Lucinda Williams on Pain and Blessings” – it would be a cool poster. đ
http://npaper-wehaa.com/shepherdexpress#2011/02/15/Wednesday, February 16,2011
Lucinda Williams Counts Her Blessings (And Some Woes)
By Lynne MargolisThough Lucinda Williams titled her new album Blessed, and she counts the many ways in which blessings come on its title track, sheâs still far from the soft and mushy fool in love that some feared sheâd become after she finally found domestic bliss. Not our Lucinda.
In fact, the roots-rock songwriter starts out her new album, due March 1 on Lost Highway Records, with a rather vicious kiss-off, âButtercup,â then moves into âI Donât Know How Youâre Livinâ,â another song about her troubled brother Ă la âAre You Alright,â from her 2007 album, West. The third track is âCopenhagen,â which begins with the line, âThundering news hits me like a snowball striking my face and shattering.â
âI wrote that about my late manager, Frank Callari, who died suddenly when we were touring over in Europe,â Williams explains, actually rather cheerily, via phone from her Los Angeles home. But clearly, she hasnât lost her talent for using vivid imagery to express painâor the need to get it out in song.
âI donât sit down and think of a theme before I go in to write,â she continues. âItâs whateverâs goinâ on in my life at that time. Unfortunately, thereâs sad stuff that goes on. I mean, thatâs why Iâm an artist to begin with. Itâs like writing a journal for me or something; I just have to get it out of my system.â
Another song, âSeeing Black,â was inspired by her friend Vic Chesnuttâs suicide; he died on Christmas Day 2009. Its opening verse:
How did you come up with the date and time?
You didn’t tell me you changed your mindHow could I have been so blind?
I didn’t know you changed your mind.
âI think I found out about it when I was in the middle of writing songs,â she says. âIt was very sudden and startling and upsetting.â
Thoughts of mortality permeate Blessed. Even the closing love song, âKiss Like Your Kiss,â contains finality in its words, as she recounts the special nature of each passing season with lines like, âWeâll never see a yellow so rich. ⌠There will never be another kiss like your kiss.â
âThese things are gonna happen and, of course, the older you get, the more strange or different things youâre gonna experience in life,â Williams observes. âI just turned 58 (in January), so of course Iâm gonna see life differently than I did when I was 48 and 38 and 28.â
Then thereâs the devastating âSoldierâs Song,â inspired in part by Jimmy Webbâs âBy the Time I Get to Phoenix,â as well as Williamsâ newly acquired habit: reading the newspaperââthe actual, physical newspaper,â she says. Reading so much about war, she started thinking about how soldiers spend their days, and who they think about.
âIâm always coming up with ideas; Iâm never at a loss for that,â Williams says. âBut I donât sit and finish a song; I donât say, âOK, Iâm gonna write a song a day or a song a week,â or whatever. I just keep ideas. I write everything down.â
Blessed is a departure in one respect: Except for one incendiary Elvis Costello guitar solo on âSeeing Black,â thereâs no barnburner cut, no âGet Right With Godâ or âJoy.â That wasnât intentional. âI just go where the song wants to go,â Williams says. But despite the lack of rockers, there is, she notes, an intensity to this one.
âIt kind of reminded me of a Jim Morrison vibe, almost, with some of (the songs),â she says.
Morrison, of course, thought of himself as a poet. Williams has the same gene; her father is renowned poet Miller Williams. But she says writing lyrics really is different than writing poetry. Every time she tries to pen a poem and then shows it to her dad, âHe says, âHoney, I think it wants to be a song.ââ
Williams and her father have done a few evenings of shared poetry and song, however, and he wrote the vows for her 2009 wedding to her manager, Tom Overby, onstage at the First Avenue nightclub in Minneapolis, Overbyâs hometown.
At the wedding, Williams and her band performed a concert, and following a couple of solo songs for an encore, her dad came out and read a poem.
âIt was really fun, really fun,â she recalls. Then they got back on the tour bus and continued to the next town.
Williams admits that her and her husband occasionally butt heads, just like any married couple, but âyou work through it,â she says.
And then you count your blessings. And maybe put them in a song.
Lucinda Williams plays a solo acoustic show on Wednesday, Feb. 23, at the Turner Hall Ballroom with opener Dylan LeBlanc.
February 18, 2011 at 1:16 am #45548tntracyParticipant@West Words wrote:
It looks like Lu’s caricature made the cover of the local entertainment paper, “Lucinda Williams on Pain and Blessings” – it would be a cool poster. đ
http://npaper-wehaa.com/shepherdexpress#2011/02/15/
I LIKE that!
Tom
February 18, 2011 at 1:25 am #45549LafayetteParticipantI’ll tick the “like” button on the caricature (and the preview). Uh Huh.
February 23, 2011 at 11:22 pm #45550stogerParticipantFor those who still like “the actual, physical newspaper,” I have one of these in my possession, sullying the tips of my fingers with every re-reading of this [pretty perceptive] interview/article. Wednesday being the hub day for weekly independent papers (but not for travelers), the new, subsequent issue had actually hit the free bins around town by the time I arrived, but I managed to commandeer a stray copy of last week’s from the ledge in front of the Pabst box office. Boola boola.
February 24, 2011 at 9:33 am #45551popscribeParticipantStoger, Thanks for the compliment on the story. I’m thrilled to see it got the cover. And such a cool one at that!
Lynne
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