Interview with Joe Montague
Late
in 2007
New Zealand
singer – songwriter Jackie Bristow released her second album,
Crazy Love,
a collection of love songs that followed her debut album
Thirsty,
from 2002. On February 15th
of
this year, Jackie Bristow launched her third album
Freedom
and it is her best foray into the North American music scene yet, with songs
that offer more texture, more color and rock out a bit more than her previous
outings. The album opens with a disarming, low key guitar riff, before Bristow
energizes the listener with vocals that blur the lines between country, and what
she refers to as white girl Blues and Gospel, on the title song “Freedom.”
It is a high impact original song penned by
Jackie Bristow and gone are the more mellow vocals which populated
Crazy Love
and in their place are phrases that have a bite, “I’ve
been on a rollercoaster, it’s been up and down / But I am learning to trust in
the universe / I am learning to trust myself.”
Hammond B3 player Clayton Doley is an artist extraordinaire, as his fingers
paint vivid colors on this musical canvass and background singers; Gary Pinto,
Natasha Mousuff, Mahalia Barnes and Rob Woolf answer Jackie’s Bristow with a
soulful response, “Freedom.”
When we talked to Jackie Bristow, a few days after
the release of
Freedom, she
was in the middle of an American tour with two-time Grammy Award nominated
Australian guitarist Tommy Emmanuel. Bristow opened for Emmanuel and has been
performing in celebrated venues such as
Portland,
Oregon’s
Aladdin Theatre and
Seattle
Washington’s
Moore Theatre. Other stops have included
Montgomery
Alabama,
three concerts in
Florida,
three more in
California
and two in
South Carolina,
with a single date in
Kentucky.
In comparing
Freedom
to her previous album
Crazy Love,
Jackie Bristow says, “They are actually quite different. I am proud of the
Crazy
Love album and of the songs, but I thought
some of the performances could have been stronger. I wanted this album to rock
just a little bit and I wanted to have fun. I changed my writing a little bit,
so I could do more storytelling and it wasn’t just love songs. Then we tracked
it all live. The first two songs “Freedom” and “Holy Mess,” are live vocals,
live bass, live drums and live guitar. “Running,” is all live, except the
vocals. I redid the vocals. It wasn’t all tracking, tracking, tracking. It was
much more organic and it was much quicker to make. It didn’t take too long to
make, whereas I think
Crazy Love,
took too long and it lost a little bit of the energy. I think that this one (Freedom)
has more energy overall and I didn’t do as many ballads, although I love
ballads. I wanted to have more fun (with
Freedom)
and when I do gigs I want to be able to put on a show that covers everything,
instead of just one thing. I want it to rock out and I want the audience to have
a good time. I want to make it easy on people, because sometimes if you just do
ballads and heartbreaking songs it can be hard on the audience and I really like
to rock out too (she laughs). I had a chance to do that on this album with Chris
Maresh (Bonnie Raitt, Doobie Brothers, Willie Nelson, Ellis Marsalis), JJ
Johnson (John Mayer) and Mark Punch. I think my guitar playing improved over the
years too, which helps with the writing and with composing different styles of
songs.”
All of the songs on
Freedom,
with the exception of two, were completely written by Jackie Bristow, the two
co-writes being, “Hightail It Outta Here,” a song for which the lyrics were
written by her friend Louise Moulin and “Rebel In My Soul,” which she co-wrote
with longtime friend and fellow musician Mark Punch.
The pretty “Pray For
The Love,” which again makes use of her background singers, with Mark Punch
stepping in this time for Rob Woolf, is a song that will lift you out of your
seat and the vocals are emotive, coming from deep within the soul of Jackie
Bristow.
“Oh My God, that song was written from a very sad place of loss and grief. I was
saying pray for the love, pray for the spirit,” says Bristow, talking about
“Pray For The Love,” before adding, “I can’t go on, because it is a bit too
personal. I love Gospel music. I love Soul music. I love Blues. I love real
Country. Because, I was living in
Austin
(Texas)
I was getting influenced by a lot of the music that was around me.
I always heard that chorus sounding quite epic
with lots of voices. That is why we went that way with the vocals. It was one of
the most amazing times of my life living there (Austin),”
says Bristow, who with a brand new visa is returning to
Austin,
Texas
to make it her home.
“I am just moving back in March. I was living in
Austin
when this album was written and recorded. We finished it up in
Australia,
because my work visa expired and I had to leave the country. I also have very
good connections and friends in
Australia
who mixed my album for free. It was Mark Punch’s brother. He has a beautiful
studio in Sydney, Electric Avenue Studios, so I went down and finished it there.
Then I toured
New Zealand
and I did some shows in
Australia,
because it took a whole year to get my visa organized. Now I have my visa and I
am going back to
Austin.
It is a little bit of a hiccup, but at the same time it was a chance to make
some money, to see my family and to be at home. Once I got this tour with Tommy
I (decided) to release the record around the tour,” she says.
While she was at home in
New Zealand,
she was warmly embraced. “I got a lot of support from the media there. I am from
a really small town in
New Zealand
called Gore and it is very, very deep south and very small, so for someone from
Gore, you could say that I have done a lot and I have traveled a lot. It is the
small town girl makes good, kind of a thing. I got a lot of media because of
that and because I had been living in
Austin
it was quite exciting for everybody. I got great reviews and I got on tele
(television) and on some big shows. I always get nervous going home. I am more
nervous about going home to
New Zealand
than I am in going to
Australia.
You just want to be seen in a good light when you are going home,” says Bristow.
Although, Jackie Bristow hears her music as being more in the vein of Folk-Rock,
Alt-Country and White Girl Blues, she bursts out laughing when asked if Country
music is popular in
New Zealand.
“No, New Zealanders don’t really like Country music. It is the funniest thing.
Gore is technically the capital of Country music in
New Zealand.
When I was a child I sang in the school choir and at church and all of that. I
played the ukulele and the guitar, but when I was eleven years old, I entered
the Gold Guitar Awards. Then my sister and I started touring around
New Zealand
with mom and dad, driving up to all of these country music festivals and we were
called the Bristow Sisters. We would sing Linda Rondstadt, Dolly Parton and
Patsy Cline covers and although I did write songs as a teenager, I didn’t
perform them. I wanted to keep them a secret. Then I got on with bands and I
tried not to sound country or to be country in any way, because there was such a
stigma in
New Zealand.
When I went to
Australia,
I was quite surprised in the way that people responded to my music. I was quite
young when I went to
Australia
and I wanted something else, but I didn’t even know quite what. I bought a one
way ticket and I went to
Sydney
and I stayed there for ten years.
Australia
was very good to me. I met Mark Punch very early on and Mark Collins. I recorded
and I had a couple of record deals in
Australia.”
Reflecting further upon her moves, Bristow says, “Moving from
New Zealand
to
Australia
was a massive move, because I moved from a small place to
Sydney,
which has five million people, and without hardly two cents to my name, and that
was tough. I landed on my feet and I had a great community of musicians around
me. It was tough getting radio in
Australia
too.”
A record deal took Bristow to
Los Angeles
and eventually after visiting
Austin,
Texas
several times, for concerts and for music festivals such as SXSW, she was pulled
to the southwest hotbed for music.
She says of her initial move to
Austin
a few years ago, “I was embraced, got all of these gigs and I had the time of my
life. The people were so generous and so responsive to the music. I ended up
being happy there.”
Although, in some
respects, Jackie Bristow does not hear her sound as being traditional Country
music, she does a good job of channeling Reba McIntire with the Bristow original
“Holy Mess,” and her vocals in a word are stunning and backed up beautifully by
Gary Pinto, Natasha Mousuff, Mahailia Barnes and Rob Woolf. The guitar work is
also fabulous with Jackie Bristow on acoustic, Mark Punch on electric and Chris
Maresh on electric bass.
About “Holy Mess,” Bristow says, “That is actually, a
true story about a family that I know. On the
Thirsty
and the
Crazy Love
albums, I was writing more love songs and with
Freedom
I was trying to learn how to develop more as a writer and to write more
storytelling and to write from my roots.
There are a few songs like “Running,” that
ended up on here that are about me, stories from my life or they are about
people that I know.
That was “Holy Mess,” and it just came out a
little bit easier and a little bit rockier. I was quite excited and that was in
an open tuning that I had learned. I use a lot of open tuning.
If Jackie Bristow’s brand new album
Freedom
is an indication of what lies ahead for this talented
singer-songwriter-guitarist, then we are going to be enjoying her music for many
years to come.
Please visit the
Jackie Bristow website.
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