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According
to her bio, Edie Carey's musical career began "the moment
she stuck her two-year-old head between the green, sticky
seats of her baby-sitter Grace's car and belted out, 'Love
Lift Us Up Where We Belong!'" From that somewhat inauspicious
start - and an after an 18-year delay - Edie Carey has launched
a career that has seen her win critical praise, industry
awards, and a fiercely loyal fan base that regularly pays
her the ultimate singer-songwriter compliment - they put
down their beers, stop talking and listen raptly when she
starts to play and sing.
But
an Edie Carey concert isn't a somber affair; in fact, her
before- and between-song banter is usually an uproariously
funny, frequently self-deprecating stream-of-consciousness
rap that endears her to the audience and lingers with them
long after the last chiming chords of her Martin guitar
have decayed into silence. Part of her charm is that she
is able to remove the barrier that so frequently divides
the performer from his or her audience. To see Carey in
concert is more like settling down with a long-lost friend
- albeit one that has been blessed with impressive songwriting
skills, solid acoustic guitar chops and a soaring, emotive
voice that can race from a whisper to a throaty roar in
the matter of a heartbeat.
For all
her talent and accomplishments - a long list of awards includes
a 1998 acoustic/folk GLAMA nomination (along with Ani DiFranco,
Rufus Wainright and Sandra Bernhard), being named a Top
5 Emerging Artist at the 1999 Falcon Ridge New Artist Showcase,
and winning the 2000 Abe Olman Scholarship for Excellence
in Songwriting, among others - Carey is still operating
just under the radar screen of major-label attention and
the kind of buzz generated by more established artists in
her genre, such as Shawn Colvin and Lisa Loeb. That means
she survives on a steady diet of smaller-venue headlining
gigs, opening slots with artists such as Leo Kottke, Cliff
Eberhardt, Luka Bloom, Brooks Williams, and Lucy Kaplansky,
and constant touring. Still, Carey is only 26 years old
- and her achievements are made even more impressive when
you consider she didn't start writing songs and performing
until she was 20.
Carey,
who released her debut CD, The Falling Places, in 1998,
is now touring in support of her sophomore effort, Call
Me Home, which features a stellar cast of supporting musicians,
including drummer Shawn Pelton (Saturday Night Live, Shawn
Colvin), bassist T-Bone Wolk (Shawn Colvin, Carly Simon,
Saturday Night Live), and acclaimed Red House Records recording
artist, Cliff Eberhardt. In addition to her solo work, Carey
has teamed up with four other New York-based singer-songwriters
in a touring troupe called Live from New York, which tours
up the East and West Coasts and allows the group to play
clubs and venues they might not be able to book - and fill
-- individually. Carey also received some good news recently
when MTV's Road Rules licensed some of her songs for the
program.
Carey
recently stopped by the StarPolish offices for an interview
with StarPolish editorial director Jim Willcox to discuss
her burgeoning career, the hardships of constant touring,
and what opening gig finally made her dad stand up and take
notice. Then she strapped on a guitar and offered up a solo
acoustic performance that made it clear why many critics
and fans expect that Carey will one day stand alongside
idols such as Shawn Colvin as an equal.
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The Long Road to
Stardom
I was not at all precocious, no - I started really late. I didn't
write my first song until I was 20, I guess officially, where
I actually wrote a full song from beginning to end. I started
playing guitar at age 19, at the end of my freshman year in college.
So I hate [teenage guitar whiz] Shannon Curfman…she makes me feel
pathetic and sad. Actually, I think she's amazing. So it was a
late process. But then I kind of went into overdrive, and then
it's kind of been nonstop since then. I'm 26 now, so it's been
six very full years.
I went to a really crazy high school - it
was very busy, I had so many other things going on. I was singing
like crazy, I was singing in every a cappella group, and every
band and every band situation there was at school. So I was feeling
fulfilled that way -- I was constantly performing, and I was doing
plays and musicals, so it didn't feel like there was a lack of
music in my life. And then I was singing privately; I was singing
classical music, which wasn't really my thing. I mean I loved
it and thought it was beautiful when other people sang it, but
not when I did it -- it didn't do a whole lot for me. So by the
time I got to college, all of a sudden… I so wanted to sing, and
I was singing in an a cappella group to get the performance thing
happening - I feel really sad when I don't perform - but by the
time I got there, all of a sudden I had my own time. I was like,
"Oh my god. I go to class a couple of hours a day and I have a
lot of work to do, but now maybe it's time for me to start finding
new ways to express myself musically." And it then was at the
end of my freshman year that I decided to stop singing classically
and buy a guitar and finally decided that maybe I could make music
without 12 other people there.
Influences
Seeing other people play guitar, I just thought it
was really cool. I always wanted to play piano and I thought it
was beautiful, and in many ways I feel like piano may be better
suited to my voice; a lot of people have said that to me. I don't
know if that means, "Stop playing guitar!"[laughs]. I would love
to learn that at some point. But mostly just seeing people play
guitar - I thought it was so incredible what you could do with
six strings… it's pretty amazing how you could make this instrument
sing. Whereas a piano, you have all these keys, and there's a
set amount, but [with] the guitar, it seems like the possibilities
are kind of endless, with different tunings. And that sort of
intrigued me; how you look at a guitar and you have no idea what
kind of sounds you can really make with it.
And then I saw people my freshman year --
I saw Ani DiFranco play, and I saw Ellis Paul, and great songwriters,
Buddy Mondlock, and Catie Curtis, and people like that -- who
were doing it solo. I had just had no idea of that kind of…that
part of the music scene. It was like you play at weddings, or
you were Madonna or Sting; I didn't know anything about the middle
part. And then I started seeing people in New York City, and they
were so accessible. I would see Lisa Loeb, I kind of followed
her all over town - "Hi, it's me, I'm stalking you again (laughs)."
It just seemed like an easier way to do it. And I was thinking
as a way to tour, having a guitar is a lot easier…well, I didn't
think it through all that much, but I guess maybe that's why I
was drawn to it.
Playing Out
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Edie
Carey & Live from New York Boat Cruise
Edie
Carey Fans - Edie and her fellow Live from New York crew
-- Teddy Goldstein, Anne Heaton, Andrew Kerr, and Sam Shaber
- are inviting you to join the Live From New York (LFNY)
Fan Cruise aboard Carnival Cruise Lines' Fascination. The
cruise runs January 4-7, 2002. For details, visit Edie's
website (http:www.ediecarey.com),
or the tour company's site (http://www.belairtrav.com/lfny.htm).
If you have questions or would like to make a reservation,
email lfny@fanclubcruises.com
or call 800-638-0827. Special bonus for bookings made before
July 31, 2001.
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I guess I knew I wanted to do this when I first played in front
of people who actually spoke English. I should clarify - I lived
in Italy for a year, and that's where I got comfortable playing
in front of other people. I started writing songs when I was away
during my junior year in college with some regularity, and then
I went out and starting trying out those songs out in front of
people on the street in Italy - it was a safe place because they
didn't know what I was saying (laughs). So I felt OK about that.
And then when I got back I had one more year of school, and I
played for people on campus and did a lot of coffee house kinds
of things and played at frat parties - a perfect place for folk
music! - and it just went from there. And people kind of responded
to it. I was like, "God, this is crazy!" I'd never had that experience.
I had always had been singing, but it was really different to
sing your own music, because I think a sense of honesty comes
across, or a reality, or some sort of truth comes across when
you're singing your own music that maybe people were responding
to more than they would if I were singing…Cher, for example.
It was kind of gradual. I think by the end
of my senior year, after I'd played maybe five gigs, I kind of
felt like, "I don't know if this is what I want to do for my life,
but when I get out of school I want to make more time for it."
Which meant getting a nine-to-five job at a magazine and at night,
trying to play and write as much as I could, and playing one gig
a month. And it just kind of went from there. I want to do it
as along as it makes me happy. It is hard - it's very exhausting,
I'm tired all the time. But I also am energized by the feedback
that I get, and the people that I meet, and I love to travel,
and that's kind of what it's about.
Building a Career
I think about the kind of career I want to have and
the kind I don't want to have, and I think the kind of career
I want to have requires has a lot of patience. And a lot of letting
things be how they are. A career that really inspires me is Shawn
Colvin's. I feel like if you ask Shawn Colvin, she'd probably
say, "I'm so sick of this, it took me until I was 41 to have a
hit." I mean, she won a Grammy in '90 or'91 for Steady On, but
nobody knew who she was at that point. People in the industry
knew she was great, but people in the mainstream didn't. And she
just toured her butt off and made her name known to so many people,
who then became such loyal fans. And she was never going to lose
them if she didn't get a hit -- I mean, she never had a hit. So
her career to me is really one that is exactly what I would want.
I think Shawn Colvin in many ways could still walk down the street
and have nobody know who she is if they don't specifically know
her music. And a lot of people still don't know her name. But
enough people who really care about that kind of music know her
name.
And then it also reaches the 12- and 13-year-olds,
whose tastes constantly change. But I'm not at all interested
in getting the big hit and then disappearing. If that does happen
-- if for some reason the stars align and there's a radio hit-I
want to be good enough in my art to back it up with something,
and I haven't been doing this that long. So I want to make sure
I have something solid to back it up with. And I think that only
comes from years of work, and writing and touring and life experience.
I'm only 26 -- there's a whole lot more to come. I want to be
making music for a long time, and I want to be doing it in a sane,
kind of healthy way, and it's OK with me not to be hugely famous.
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