Lauren Wood: Love, Death & Customer Service
Singer
and songwriter Lauren Wood who makes her home in Studio City, California is most
often identified with her blockbuster song “Fallen,” featured in the film Pretty
Woman, starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere. The soundtrack for the movie
would eventually exceed eighteen million copies in sales, largely fueled by Ms.
Wood’s song, which rocked the North American and European charts. Lauren Wood
however, is much more than a one hit wonder and she has enjoyed great success
throughout her career, both as a performer and as a songwriter.
Wood’s most recent album
Love,
Death & Customer Service is her eighth
album and second self-produced record released under her own label
Bad Art
Records. Ms. Wood has almost thirty movie
and television songwriting credits. The songstress with the romantically etched
alto vocals has appeared as both a soloist and background vocalist for a number
of top performers such as the Doobie Brothers, Kim Carnes, Patsy Moore and
Albert Hammond. She has authored songs that have been recorded and performed by
numerous high profile artists including,
Wood’s music as evidenced
with
Love, Death & Customer Service is elegant
and picturesque and demonstrates once again that she is not a follower but an
innovator. She has remained alive and excited about both her music and her life.
“My parents were always really supportive of my music.
My mother always taught me that the glass is half full not half empty. I come
into life with that,” says Wood and then continues, “My family is also very
funny. There was nothing that I could do that was too silly and didn’t make my
mother laugh. They (her parents) were both really supportive of all of my whacky
ideas.”
Wood recalls something her
parents said to her when she was a small child, “You are so brilliant cookie
face. You can do anything. Just do it.”
“I was raised with a really good and fun loving
attitude. All you had to do was put your mind to it and do it. I was taught that
there were not limitations and I was taught to have a good sense of humor,” she
says.
The desire to have fun and to thoroughly enjoy life is
imprinted on Ms. Wood’s personality. “I think once I decide to do a record I
just have to have fun with it. I can’t just put a record out (based upon) what
is going on in the industry. I have never had music that was happening at the
time. (I ask) what type of music would be fun for me to make now?”
Although she is promoting her most recent studio
adventure to smooth jazz and adult contemporary radio stations Ms. Wood’s music,
is a great example of genre blending and creating tones that have no particular
genre to call their own. “My music is always a little hybrid. That is the kind
of music that I like and that I cut my teeth on,” she says.
“The kind of music that I love can’t be classified (in a
similar way to artists such as) Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon, Randy Newman and
Sting who keep moving into different things. It is music that isn’t exactly
anything,” she says.
“I just go with my creative instincts and it leads me to
different places on different albums. I am never going in one direction. It is
as though each album is its own symphony. It is whatever I am feeling at the
time, whatever is fun. I have never been able to direct myself to do anything
that is commercial. Whenever I tried (to do that) I just completely lost my
bearings,” she admits.
There is no indication that
Wood lost her way with
Love, Death & Customer Service
in fact the music suggests the contrary. The
recording may be her best solo outing yet. She possesses a gift for creating
wispy romantic songs that bare her soul.
“I think (it comes from) my love of melody,” says Wood
speaking about her flair for the romantic, “I think I am a very softhearted
person and a very compassionate person. It comes from my heart. My deepest
expression is very soft edged. I find that a lot of today’s music is not very
soft edged. It is all about me, I am better than you. There is a lot of good
music out there if you dig for it. There is a lot of bad music out there too.
There is a glut of very bad, hard edged, cold music that I don’t relate to.”
Where does Ms. Woods’
inspiration for her music come from?
“Usually I will be in my studio at the
keyboard and noodling around on it. I will be playing an old song and I will
play the wrong chord and go, oohhh that’s kind of weird, that’s pretty. Now
where would I go with that weird chord,” she says.
At other times, “I will be noodling around and I will
feel this energy bubbling up inside of me. I will just start noodling around on
the keyboard and will come up with a series of pretty chords. I will ask, what
is the prettiest melody that I can put to that,” says Wood. She will often drive
around in her car with the series of chords playing in the background and start
to form lyrics in her head.
“Something may be bubbling
underneath and it will just happen to come out in a lyric. I will go, that’s
what I have been thinking about. There it is. For me it is usually music
bubbling underneath first,” she says. She says that often her lyrics will
originate with something she is going through in her own life at the time.
When it came time to record
Love,
Death & Customer Service Lauren Wood the
producer surrounded herself with old friends she trusted.
Ms. Wood says, “The reason that I use these
players and the reason that I don’t sequence a lot is because I want what they
bring to it. I know this group of musicians is going to bring me beautiful gifts
that I could never think of. I will always have the last say and I may say how
about more of this. These are really, really, special musicians who bring me
wonderful ideas.
It is a collaborative effort.”
Ms. Wood does however exert
her influence as a producer and knows what she wants to hear. “Sometimes I have
something that I desperately need to have in a song and I will say this song
needs to have this,” she says.
Wood takes time to speak
warmly about the musicians who appeared on
Love, Death &
Customer Service. “A lot of them are my
best buddies or cohorts that I have worked with for years. This includes (my
cousin)
Wood continues, “I always use my favorite guitarist in
the world and good friend Larry Treadwell. He is unbelievable. What comes out of
Larry Treadwell’s guitar is so unexpected. You never know what kind of gifts he
is going to bring to the session. It is always so much fun recording with Larry
Treadwell.”
The beats for
Love, Death &
Customer Service were a community effort.
Wood plays some percussion, Peter Bunetta sparkled behind the kick drum and on
the toms and Arnold Lucas also plays percussion. Bunetta produced Wood’s
Cat Trick
CD. He also was one of the producers for
the song “Fallen.”
“Billy Payne on keyboards was
a really important element on this record. He played all the keyboards that I
can’t play. I have a good feel but I play simple and straight ahead. If there
are funkier things that I need or a
Wood recruited three friends for vocals. Vicki Randle
sang counterpoint on “Come Live With Me,” while Stephen Bishop who she refers to
as one of her dearest friends appears on the song “You Are Mine.” Chris Montan
now an executive with Disney provided vocals for “Contradictions,” a single,
Wood released to radio in January.
“It is really important to me
that the record is elegant. That is exactly what I was trying to go for. I
wanted it to have a lilt to it. I wanted it to sound really wide and for you to
hear all the delicate intricacies and all of the things that I worked so hard
and for so long putting into this record,” says Wood. She accomplished just that
as
Love, Death & Customer Service is one of
the prettier albums to come our way in a long time.
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