
New
Woman
Ian
Shaw talks to the multi-talented Sarah Jane Morris about rhythm, writing
and reinvention
To
Bronski Beat/Communards Central
To
Thorne's commentary on the Communards' production
Download
a free 'Cry' and other tracks
Sarah
Jane Morris external:
The
official Sarah Jane Morris website
from
Singer Magazine, August 2001
Sarah Jane
Morris has topped the international charts, played Brecht, won the
San Remo Song Festival, sold out five seasons at Ronnie Scotts, sung contemporary opera, been followed
by fanatical Italian schoolgirls (shes huge in Italy), been murdered
twice on television, and had songs written for her by Paul Weller - creative
achievements that go on and on.
She lives with her composer partner, David Coulter and their little
boy Otis, in an old Warwickshire post house in the leafy lanes and fields
of middle England. It would perhaps be more fitting for her to live
in a Soho loft, a Berlin attic or a Paris studio, places that echo the
sounds of urban decay and city madness reflected in her stories, her
songs.
I caught up with her on the eve of the release of I am a Woman, the
Best of SJM. I reminded her of the early days; the size nine builders
boots, the Victorian lace knickers, the megaphone brandishing redhead
fronting The Republic, then the hugely popular The Happy End. Only SJ
could belt out those revolutionary songs - songs of the workers,
rants of the deprived, the imprisoned, the despairing.
That was a great training, The Happy
End was just before I joined the Communards. It gave me huge confidence
to be big, to sweat and not have to pretend to be someone. The lyrics
I was singing then helped me to be brave, to later be inspired to write
similar words of my own. My voice has developed so much since then.
Ive added one and a half octaves and developed the courage to
experiment with overtones and harmonics
Ive just completed
an album with the great Marc Ribot and for the first time ever, Ive
found an instrumentalist who uses the same effects with his pedalboard
as I do with my vocal cords. His musical character eels like my own.
He comes from an avant-garde background. Together, theyll
be appearing at a few festivals and the end of the year, including the
London Jazz Festival, as well as venues in New York and Umbria. The
album will be coming out on Morris own label, Fallen Angel.
I asked how, after 15 years of belonging to record labels,
she felt about going it alone. Ive been giving to much of
myself to far too many people for much too long. Since having a baby,
my whole approach to live has changed. Apart from having a larger body
and feeling physically and spiritually more powerful, the levelling
experience of childbirth has given me the confidence to ask for my time
to be paid for. I dont think twice about turning things down if
the fee isnt right! Ive also realized that having the wrong
management can stop people reaching me. Ive just sacked my fourth
manager and the liberation was fantastic! How can anyone represent me
if they dont really know me? Ive set up my own label and
my own back catalogue Im on the Madonna trip and Im
not going to give it back! Live performances are where Im at my
best my album Blue Valentine, Live at Ronnie Scotts is
so representative of my voice at its best, although Im very excited
about another album which will be out next year and uses more unusual
percussion to create loops alongside layers of my vocals.
One of the most engaging features of Morris vocal style is how
she interacts rhythmically with her band. Listen to how figures of
wordless, pulsating triplets fire like bullets between herself and
her percussionist. She fuses her love of Ronald Isley, Marvin Gaye
and Stevie Wonder with the bluesy sandpapered timbres of Janis Joplin
and tom Waits. She can also cover the entire baritone range down to
an eerie-sounding bottom F.
Her appearances at Ronnie Scotts are as subversive as they are
inspired just as the Friday night crowd is dancing to Harold
Melvins Wake Up Everybody, an original song, Blind
Old Friends, depicting the jealous rage of an ex-lover who gouges
out the eyes on old photos, stuns the crowd to silence. Weve
all felt this way. This is real. This is no pretty jazz canary. Please
listen. This is 21st-century blues.
Although Sarah Vaughan and Bessie Smith are also big influences on
her style (her take on Nina Simones Dont Smoke in Bed
is heartstopping), Morris is forever chasing the musical Zeitgeist,
citing the rumble and tumble of Morcheeba and the beautiful lyricism
of Moloko as current favourites. What advice would she give young singers?
Ive recently been asked to contribute to a popular music
course at a local college. I went in fully admitting that I was a trained
actress, not a trained singer, and used this theatrical background.
I got great results from the students and we were soon experimenting
with sound and body movement and the power of creating an atmosphere,
totally a cappella. Also as a songwriter myself, I found that the students voices
flourished more when they sang their own stories rather than doing
Beatles covers. My newest path is definitely my own compositions and
collaborations. Although interpreting jazz standards and re-inventing
old rock tunes has been very exciting, singing my own songs has given
me the confidence to truly sing from the soul.
Like Björk, Morris has combined theatre and film with music. Some
years ago, her nightmarish Sprechgesang won rave reviews in The Sleep,
an opera by the English composer Jeremy Peyton Jones. Equally, her Polly
in The Beggars Opera won her a best actress award. It is engaging
that these occasional music theatre outings never reduce her solo shows
to lounge cabaret. Morris always lets the abstract shine through more
Juliette Greco than Julie London.
A fascinating side to Morris career is her mega-star status in
Italy and Greece. Does this bother her going from the huge concert
halls of Rome and Rimini to the Vortex, in North London? No, not
at all. I love the enormity of a stadium as much as the intimacy of
the Vortex or Ronnies. I probably flourish more in the smaller
venues because I like to see peoples faces and I like them to
see me, warts n all! Also, the smaller venues let the humour
and irony through. Theres a danger aspect, which I love. Because
my musicians are not on retainers, Im often forced to compromise
and use a smaller band while they go off with a huge signed
band. Ive been reduced to just bass and voice on one occasion
and it was a creative shove in yet another direction.
Always pushing
and extending her barriers, never trying to be contemporaneous or
hip; always looking for new vocal expression, never a tourist, never
pastiche, always exciting, Sarah Jane Morris is an English treasure
and one of our best exports. There are plans of her signing to a
US label, but as long as there are clubs and halls in this country,
you can catch this powerful, disturbing, soulful, often hilariously
funny performer at her favourite best -- live
and uncensored.
The angel has risen!
To
Bronski Beat/Communards Central
To
Thorne's commentary on the Communards' production
Download
a free 'Cry' and other tracks
Sarah
Jane Morris external:
The
official Sarah Jane Morris website