Five questions for singer-pianist Regina Spektor[11 October 2007] By Ben EdmondsDetroit Free Press (MCT) Before we’re told that some people can make music and some can’t, everybody makes music in their heads. You can hear this primal level of music-making at work in the songs of Regina Spektor. At the same time, the extensive classical training she received—first in Moscow, where she was born, and then in New York, where her family eventually settled—informs her music as well. This delightful blend of pure wonder and acquired skill has set Spektor apart from the gaggle of quirky piano girls trying to claim the corner of the modern rock territory first colonized by Tori Amos back in the early `90s. Spektor’s fourth and breakthrough album, “Begin To Hope,” is her first fully produced effort, but when she performs on her latest tour it will be just Regina and her piano. To her ever-expanding legion of fans, that’s enough. Some feel classical training can be an impediment to self-expression. Do you? How was your first experience with full studio production? Are there sounds in your mind you can’t yet replicate in the concrete world? Whose music offered inspiration as you searched for your own identity? Who has the kind of career you’d like for yourself? Related Articles
Regina Spektor: FarBy Dan Raper26.Jun.09 Regina Spektor returns with a new album that's darker than Begin to Hope, but just as poppy. |
|
Comments