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Talking Book: A Conversation With Macy Gray and Her Take on Stevie Wonder's Classic Album
Posted: 10/27/2012 9:38 pm
A Conversation With Macy Gray Mike Ragogna: How are you doing today, Macy? Macy Gray: I'm doing great, how are you doing? MR: I'm doing very well, thanks. Let's talk about your new album that's got a familiar title -- Talking Book. MG: Excellent. MR: What gave you the idea to revisit Stevie Wonder's album? MG: Of course, he's one of my favorites, and that's got to be one of my favorite Stevie Wonder albums ever. My producer Hal Willner, we were in Poland, of all places, doing a festival and we were talking about Nina Simone songs that he thought I should do and then he goes, "You know what no one's ever done before? No one's ever remade an album. You should remake an album." He wanted me to do this Nina Simone album, but redoing hers was one of those things that should be left alone. It got me on the track of remaking an album and Talking Book was the first one that I thought of because I just know it inside and out and I know what year it was made, I know what studio he was at, I know how many tracks are on it. I just knew I could interpret that. MR: Although most people might misinterpret the concept of doing a project like this as some sort of tribute, but this is not a tribute. MG: No, it's not a tribute. It's really me doing something I've never done before. It's my own way of showing Stevie how much I love him and honoring him the best way I can. At the time, I didn't know that this was the fortieth anniversary of Talking Book, but I think that's a great way to celebrate it, and Stevie Wonder actually made his first album fifty years ago, so this is his fiftieth anniversary, which I don't know why that's not a big deal at the moment. I just thought there should be all kinds of tribute shows and stuff. MR: Isn't that amazing? Fifty years. What a phenomenal talent. MG: Yeah, he's pretty incredible. MR: And Macy let's look at this album. It has classics like "You've Got It Bad Girl," "You Are The Sunshine Of My Life," "Superstition" and, of course... MG: "You and I." MR: Yeah, and also "Blame It On The Sun" MG: "Blame It On The Sun," "I Believe," "Big Brother." "Big Brother" is actually my favorite song on his album. I love that song. MR: You know one of my favorites has always been "I Believe (When I Fall In Love It Will Be Forever)" and I am so surprised that very few artists have covered that song to this point. MG: Oh yeah, that's a perfect song. That's song's the best song ever. MR: Hey, are you going to move on to Innervisions next? MG: [laughs] No, I think I'm going to pull out on that. I'm actually in the middle of two original albums I'm making at the same time. MR: Might it end up being a double album? MG: No, it's not a double album. One is an EP and then the next one is a record I'm doing under my alter ego. MR: Who's your alter ego? MG: I haven't named her yet. MR: [laughs] If the name comes up during the show, share it with us, definitely. MG: I can't think of the name that I want. I thought I had the name but now I don't like it. MR: Maybe it's somehow associated with one of the Stevie Wonder recordings. MG: I'm sure that's it, yeah. MR: So let's give it a swing! MG: [laughs] No, it's coming to me, I've just got to be patient. MR: All right, what else have you been up to other than making two new albums and releasing Talking Book? What's going on? MG: Oh everything's pretty interesting right now. My movie just came out, The Paperboy, Daniel's movie. I've got an audition today for a cartoon, and then I have a lunch meeting and then I'm going to pick up my kids from school and probably come home and hide from them and that's pretty much my day. MR: [laughs] So how was work on the movie? Can you give us a little behind-the-scenes story here? MG: Oh yeah, it was one of the most insane stages of my life. I'm sitting on the set and sitting next to me is Nicole Kidman, of all people, and Matthew McConaughey's there and Zac Effron and John Cusack, who's really very incredible in this movie, and David Oyelowo from Planet of the Apes. It's directed by Lee Daniels, and it's this really bizarre murder mystery that takes place in the sixties in the South. It's based on the book The Paperboy. It's a really insane movie. It's wild. You'll see it and you'll either love it or hate it but you won't be able to stop watching it. You won't be able to leave. MR: And with that cast, nice. This was an actors' playground, wasn't it? MG: Yeah, it was really wild. I never had run into Nicole Kidman, you know what I mean? So it was pretty amazing to just be in that atmosphere, and Lee, of course, is my favorite director right now, so it was pretty great, and I got to meet some really awesome people on the set so it was good. MR: And speaking of the set, did it get crazy because of that kind of cast hanging out together? MG: Um, yeah, because everybody was in character and everybody's character is like psychotic, you know? Like John plays this mass-murderer who's in jail, and Nicole's like this ratty kind of slutty/trashy person and Matthew has this... Everybody in the movie is twisted, except for me. I'm pretty cool in the movie. MR: Of course! Okay, back to Talking Book, which is a forty year-old album. That's just not fair. MG: I know, that's wild. MR: Isn't that something? So what is your advice for new artists? MG: For new artists? Like as far as what? MR: Like as far as people who want to be on American Idol and maybe other talented folks who are out there doing it right now. MG: Okay, I would suggest, not advice because I don't like to give people advice because I could be wrong, but I think the best way to do it is to lock yourself up at first and really master your craft until you get good at what you do to the point where you're sure of yourself and you're confident about what you do. If you're a singer, you should be taking really good care of your voice, you should be hanging out with a coach once or twice a week, you should sing every single day as much as you can and then when you've got it down and you listen back to yourself and you love it, then you go out. And once you go out you go out as much as you can. If someone says, "Come here and play on top of my toothpick, two people are going to show up," you've got to do it because you never know who the two people are. That's what I did anyway. I played every night and then a guy from Atlantic Records just happened to be there and that's how I got my first record deal. All those guys, all those industry guys, go out every night looking for people, because that's their job. So I would just say get out there as much as you can and of course, this generation has the blessing of the internet, of Twitter and Youtube, so I would get very good at that. There's a lot of indie artists that show up number one on iTunes now because they're so diligent about their internet presence. It's possible, there's all kinds of avenues in you. There's all kinds of different ways to get there. I would just use all of them until you get what you want. MR: Wow. Nicely said. So what is the future looking like, other than hiding from the kids? MG: It looks like I'm going to be pretty busy. I'm writing a lot and talking to some people about a TV show. Now that my kids are getting older and they're much more prone to trouble, I feel like I've got to stay home more, so I'm just like working on stuff that I can do in LA or at least in one place, because this year, I bet we toured at least seven months out of this year. I'm going to try to hang out at home this year and do some stuff here. I haven't done that since my career started. MR: Have you taken the kids on the road with you? MG: Oh yeah, when they were little, I dragged them everywhere. They've been all over the world, but the thing about taking a one or two or three-year-old all over the world is that they don't remember it. They've been everywhere but they don't remember none of it. Now when I take them, they have a ball, but they can't go as much because they have school. MR: Wow. Speaking of Stevie Wonder, I'm going to share a not remembering story. I was talking with my dad the other day and he remembered that Stevie Wonder came by City Hall in New York City where I grew up. He was participating in some rally my father took me to. Anyway, Stevie was the musical act, and my dad put me on his shoulders to watch, and later on, we ended up standing right next to Stevie. My dad said he put me down and all I could do was stare up at Stevie in awe. MG: But you don't remember? MR: No. Now that's a memory I would love to have. MG: That is hilarious. MR: Yeah. Hey Macy, you need to come back here, this was really sweet, all the best. MG: Thank you so much. Take care. Transcribed by Galen Hawthorne
Macy still gong strong... will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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In stores tomorrow. I'm listening to some of the samples now. I'm kinda on the fence about it. [Edited 10/29/12 8:30am] "It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates | |
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The whole album is streaming at AOL Music. | |
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What I find interesting and ironic is when she thought that redoing a Nina Simone album would be a bad idea, and should be left alone. She should have taken her own advice and left this project alone. I just heard it, and I don't like it. She ruined it.... [Edited 10/29/12 10:56am] "Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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Now see, that's someone who has really bad judgment on her craft. How she think doing Nina would be bad but doing Stevie wouldn't? Nina's more her thing than Stevie... I don't get it... | |
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I agree Timmy. She would have, nailed Nina. Stevie??? Really?
"Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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God, I listened to the clips on iTunes. It sounds wretched. The fundamental problem, at least to my ears, is that her voice just doesn't suit that material. It's ok on numbers like Maybe Your Baby and Big Brother, where there's short, punchy phrases she can rasp her way through convincingly enough, but the ballads are (predictably) atrocious. Plus, the arrangements/production all seems pretty straightforward and uninspired, meaning that aspect of it doesn't stand up next to the original - especially when you consider that the production on those early albums from his 'classic period' was one of the distinctive, inspired features of the work.
Maybe the way to deliver her 'love letter' to Stevie was to pick out some stuff from various stages of his career - ones that suit her voice - and work on them with some close musicians to make them her own. Or even to do something 'inspired by' Talking Book - i.e. taking lyrical/musical themes from the album and running with them, along with some full covers. I don't know. Getting stuck in the trap of doing the whole set of songs, all in the same order they'd previously appeared, just seems to me (again, predictably!) to have yielded a product that's just an inferior recreation of the original. "Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin | |
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Yep. Plus his stuff is too pop oriented for someone like her. Of course she doesn't even have the quarter inch of Stevie's voice so it's just shameful. | |
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Could've been the reason she chose to do the Stevie album
Nina would've been too easy 4 her | |
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But now the concept of doing a cover of a whole album has been shot out the cannon. NO one will be doing something interesting like that for quite some time. Has that been done before? | |
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just listened to the sound samples I won't be buying this | |
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There is a difference between, "too easy" and "playing it safe". I think she didn't want to play it safe and in this case, it was a bad idea. It's like a fat kid who ask's for more food on his plate. Just because you asked for it, does not mean that you should have or are able to eat it.... "Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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Something tells me that Macy covering songs from a classic album is gonna sound jaded. At least Me'Shell's new nod to Nina sounds more ispired than this does...but in all, I'm sick of them. Check me out and add me on:
www.last.fm/user/brandosoul "Truth is, everybody is going to hurt you; you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for." -Bob Marley | |
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I think I'm going to skip this one. The thing that ruined it for me is "Superstition". If only she would have left that intact instead of changing it up she would have had me. This is a FUNK anthem. She ripped the Funk right out of it! She shot herself in the foot by doing that. There are some songs that you want to take, put a different spin on and make it your own. "Superstition" ain't one of 'em! "It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates | |
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Hey, I didn't say she would succeed
Doing a Stevie tune is one thing, but a whole album?
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Unless that song is "You & I", how would do a Stevie song be easy? Especially considering only Michael, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jeff Beck and B.B. King can do Stevie songs justice that other artists can't do? | |
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What a hypocritical thought process? | |
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^ All you have to do is read "Macy Gray doing Stevie" and abandon ship. [Edited 10/29/12 18:41pm] | |
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False. Najee covered the entire "Songs In The Key Of Life" album. But maybe they meant vocally... because no one with her voice (or maybe ANYONE's voice) would ever dare to cover an entire classic album. | |
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I wonder what Stevie thinks. I bet he wishes he was deaf too! | |
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Just when you thought no one was gonna trump him seeing crack babies... Marrk you are killin' me here. And yeah, you are most correct. | |
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100% trash. A major insult 2 my EARS. | |
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