Rebecca Pidgeon
“I am such a Spartan. I have the ability to withstand anything except discomfort.”
Musica
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Long Island Poem
3:43
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Been and Gone
3:43
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Informazioni generali
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Genere: Blues / Jazz / Lounge
Posizione LOS ANGELES, Un
Visualizzazioni profilo: 152937
Ultimo accesso: 24/05/2012
Iscritto dal 04/04/2006
Sito Web www.rebeccapidgeon.com
Etichetta The Lab/Universal
Tipo di etichetta Indie
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Biografia
.. ...... .. .. ...... .. .. ...... .. .. ..Check out this video: Wouldn't it be Nice........ .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. ...... .. ...... .. She's been recording albums for more than 20 years, but Rebecca Pidgeon had a creative breakthrough as she began working on the music for "Slingshot," her compelling sixth solo effort. "I reached a point where I had to really make a 100% commitment to it, instead of saying this is something I do that's not acting," says Pidgeon."I had to own it" Pidgeon does, indeed, "own it" on "Slingshot," an intoxicatingly adult pop album that explores the arc of love from desire to longing to despair. "I love the concept 'slingshot.' It's such an unusual word to have in a love song," she says of the title track: "'I'm the rock and you're the slingshot and you sling me into the realm of joy'." Other standouts include the yearning "Sweet Hand of Mercy," that recalls Joan Osborne; the electric, driving "Disintegration Man," the jazzy, noir-ish "A Lonely Place," and the plaintive "Baby Please Come Home." The deeply melodic "Slingshot" marks the third time Pidgeon and Grammy-winning producer Larry Klein (Joni Mitchell, Madeleine Peyroux, Herbie Hancock) have collaborated. The two made an often intentionally quiet album that compellingly beckons the listener to lean in and pay attention. "There's simplicity and air and space to it," she says. "That was a conscious decision." In fact, Pidgeon wrote 35 songs for "Slingshot," more than she has ever written for an album before. Working primarily with Klein and David Batteau on the "kernel of the record," Pidgeon also wrote with Timothy Bracy and acclaimed singer/songwriter, Freedy Johnston including the deceptively jaunty, upbeat "I Love No One." "I loved writing with Freedy," she says. "We [both] tend to like stories about being rather bleak. It seems more interesting." There were some realizations along the way. On swampy "Disintegration Man," Pidgeon and Klein set out to make "a basic, dumb rock song," before realizing it's not as easy as it seems, Pidgeon laughs. "Since I've been learning guitar theory, I've been looking at all these rock stars who have their tattoos and drugs and I'm like, 'You don't kid me! You sat in your room as a teen for hours and hours practicing your scales'." "Slingshot" includes a co-production between Pidgeon and her husband, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright/film director David Mamet. The aching, largely a cappella "Baby Please Come Home" showcases Pidgeon's vulnerable, intimate vocals. "It's a humbling experience writing with my husband", she said, "But he's good looking so I subject myself to it". The lone cover on the set is a stirring, poignant version of Warren Zevon's "Searching For A Heart." The chord progression first attracted Pidgeon. "Then I was drawn in by the lyrics. It's so enigmatic," she says. "It sounds like it's sparse, but it's so complex. Every time I sing the song, I get something different out of it". Throughout the summer and fall of 2011, Pidgeon has headlined Wine, Women & Song, a series of concerts that take place at female-run vineyards coordinated by wine company Women of the Vine. "These women are entrepreneurs and artists", she says. "The concerts with the wine tastings have been very lovely." Pidgeon has also shared stages with such artists as Aimee Mann, Madeleine Peyroux, Jeffrey Gaines, Peter Himmelman, and Keb Mo, and joined founders Willie Nelson, John Mellencamp and Neil Young at the 2011 edition of Farm Aid, Aug. 13. She looks forward to performing selections from "Slingshot" live, though as mother of a 12-year and 16-year old, she limits her time away from her Los Angeles home. "I [tour] in bursts", she said. " I do it for a week or two and then I have to get back. I'm not away for six months." The Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts graduate continues to juggle her musical efforts with her extremely successful acting career. She recently appeared in the film "Red," alongside Bruce Willis and Morgan Freeman. Up next is an HBO film about record producer Phil Spector and his recent murder trial. Pidgeon stars with Al Pacino and Helen Mirren in the film directed and written by Mamet. And she, of course, is the voice of "The Pear" in the hugely successful webisodes, "Home Grown." .. .. .. -
Iscritti
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Influenze
Hello there! Tim Young and I are playing at a cool place called "Kulaks Woodshed" on Thursday night at 8:30. Hope some of you can catch the show. It will also be web streamed live. Happy Holidays and stay warm! -
È simile
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Stream
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Rebecca Pidgeon
I am such a Spartan. I have the ability to withstand anything except discomfort.
tramite Twitter
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Rebecca Pidgeon
Today I got a telephone call from myself. Both of us thought it was weird.
tramite Twitter
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Rebecca Pidgeon
"@kazdor: @rebeccapidgeon oh no! What happened?" / Too much arm wrestling
tramite Twitter
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Rebecca Pidgeon
SLING SHOT. http://t.co/eiURiBNl #whati'mdoing
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Rebecca Pidgeon
It's kind of comforting that Siri doesn't get anything right.
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Video
Wouldn't it be Nice
03:10 | 1845 ascolti | 12 feb 2009
Musica
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11 Brani musicali | 30 nov 1999
Commenti
- 7xdown4 mesi fa
Nice tunes, skillfully written, carefully produced - easy to listen to.
That's an accomplishment.
7xD - Doc Gaffer4 mesi fa
Let's keep in touch in the New Year :)
http://twitter.com/docthegaffer
http://www.IntheBackRow.com - 4 mesi fa
- 5 mesi fa
- JavaAudio.Net Alessandr…5 mesi fa
Hello Rebecca, step to get a greeting, listen to your beautiful music is always a pleasure priceless :-)
I'll leave illink of an album that I finished last summer, I would be grateful if you gave me some of your consideration about this work.
I embrace you with infinite respect and affection
___________________________alessandro
http://soundcloud.com/happymopyrecords/sets/my-foolish-heart-ocean-ocean - Rana Zeeshan1 anno fa
hey beautiful how r u<3
thnx for accept
how r u?
nice pic n profile!!
whats up - Malcolm's Mind1 anno fa
merci, mon ami ... :-)
Malcolm's Mind - Herb Nutts1 anno fa
Hello, Hello!
and again hello my dear friend !!
How have you been?
Happy Halloween Day!
Peace and love to you !
Herb Nutts - Dag Tru1 anno fa
Hi Rebecca! Keep rocking, sounds good!
- Linda1 anno fa
Hi Rebecca! Loved the music. Reminds me a little of karla Bonoff...one of my favorite singer songwriters! Have a great day! (-:
Bio:
Check out this video: Wouldn't it be Nice
On Rebecca Pidgeon’s new album, Behind The Velvet Curtain, it’s the bravery of her choices - the smarts behind her fragile, wistful vocal style - that merits the polished brass behind producer Larry Klein’s impeccable production.
There’s the intrigue of “Long Island Poem,” a song crafted from a strained dinner encounter; the Bossa Nova slink of “Dawn,” which she boldly reprises in fluent Portuguese at the end of the album, (titled “Manha),” thanks to a translation by singer Luciana Souza, who also appears with Rebecca on the Brazilian-tinged duet “When You Were Mine.” In between, the singer/actress messes with our heads and hearts, trading on the softer currents of a voice that manages to sound as confident as it is caressing, with two of the songs co-written by playwright/film director (and Rebecca’s husband) David Mamet. The noted dramatist was so moved by Rebecca’s Bossa Nova leanings he placed some of the songs in his new movie Redbelt, which explores themes of honor and respect in the world of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu set in the culture of the west Los Angeles fight world.
“I don’t know why I began writing some of the songs in the Bossa Nova style on this one,” says Rebecca. “There was a song on Tough On Crime (her previous album released in 2005 which was also produced by Larry Klein) called “Tangerine” that hinted of that. There must be something about that rhythm that is innate in me.” Klein, who won the 2008 Grammy for “Album of the Year” with Herbie Hancock seconds the notion: “One of the things I love about working with Rebecca is that the ambition isn’t driving the singing or songwriting. She has a very natural quality about what she does. The style that she was writing in, her ability to write in her own syntax and vocabulary created a spare quality that really set her vocals apart. I also think that on songs like “Behind The Velvet Curtain,” and “Been And Gone” she is really digging deeper. She writes to her strengths on this album and it shows.”
Choosing to co-write a song or two with one of the world’s most accomplished writers can also get the blood flowing. The idea of Rebecca and David Mamet writing a country song together, such as the plaintive “Baby Please Come Home,” is worthy of an essay unto itself. The duo already has one country song under their belt, “Army Brat,” which was a bonus track on her previous CD. “When two artists live together, they are undoubtedly going to influence one another,” says Rebecca. “One of the things Dave taught me about writing is to try not to go for the obvious. You don’t want to the listener to beat you to the punch line of the rhyme. I also realized with my background I can imagine myself into a character even when I’m writing.”
Raised in Edinburgh Scotland, Rebecca’s successful acting career (Heist, Spanish Prisoner, Shopgirl) has been more documented than her music, but both passions seem to serve her well. Her first record was released on the small indie label Red Flame Records while she was still attending the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London. She’s released five albums, establishing her unique musical presence in the band Ruby Blue in the mid-1980s, and crafting a solid jazz rep with New York indie Chesky Records the following decade. After releasing an impressive string of albums in the mid-90s, including the acclaimed New York Girls’ Club and Four Marys, Rebecca and Klein connected in 2002 to begin the rough sketches for Tough On Crime.
That album also put Rebecca in the realm of some exceptional studio musicians, including the late Billy Preston. She also credits Larry for the caliber of musicians who grace Behind The Velvet Curtain: Danny Frankel and Debra Dobkin (drums), Dean Parks (guitar), Greg Leisz (pedal steel guitar), David Piltch (bass), Paulino Da Costa (percussion), among others, with Larry himself playing bass on a few tracks. Rebecca also began to sculpt a crackling live show, cementing her rep at tastemaking LA nightspots like the Hotel Café and Tangier, and building a top-notch live band that includes Danny Frankel, Debra Dobkin and guitarist Willie Aaron, who also appears on Behind The Velvet Curtain.
“Playing the songs live has definitely taught me a lot too,” says Rebecca. “When Larry and I first met to talk about this record, I had a very strong idea this time of how I wanted it to sound. We both wanted it to be very simple.”
“Behind The Velvet Curtain is very much the case where less is more,” offers Klein. “What Rebecca brings to it just carries you from song to song, which is exactly what a good album is supposed to do.”
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