Current:Home > NewsSt. Vincent channels something primal playing live music: ‘It’s kind of an exorcism for me’ -WealthRoots Academy
St. Vincent channels something primal playing live music: ‘It’s kind of an exorcism for me’
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-06 02:43:22
LOS ANGELES (AP) — As sweaty fans pushed up against one another, clutching their drinks and swaying to the music, Annie Clark, known professionally as St. Vincent, was being transported.
She recounts that surprise concert in May at the Paramount, an intimate, historic East Los Angeles venue, as a kind of “exorcism” that allowed the singer, songwriter and guitar virtuoso to channel something she doesn’t ordinarily have access to.
As the Grammy winner stood on stage and hypnotically manipulated her guitar, Clark spat on the crowd — a welcomed gesture — before leaping into it to be propelled around the dimly lit room, something artists with her caliber of fame rarely do. The show was a preview for what was to come during her All Born Screaming tour, which kicks off Thursday in Bend, Oregon.
Clark spoke with The Associated Press ahead of the tour about the catharsis she finds through performing, punk music’s influence on her and how the idea of chaos informed her self-produced seventh album.
The interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
AP: I saw your recent show at the Paramount and was struck by how much you lean into the theater of performing live music, like with the crowd surfing and the spitting. I’m curious when you start thinking about that aspect of a tour.
CLARK: Well, it’s interesting that you bring up the Paramount and theatrics because there were no theatrics. Like that was just a full primal moment. The band had been rehearsing, but we hadn’t had any like production rehearsals or anything like that. It was just like “Let’s get up there and play music and just like melt the house.” So, there was nothing consciously performed.
I kind of go into a little bit of a fugue state when I’m performing. Like something else takes over that I don’t have access to in my normal day to day. And the spitting, for example, like sometimes singing is very, like, visceral. And sometimes you just need to spit in order to, like, I don’t know, clear your mouth to keep singing. It’s not like a bit or anything like that. There’s just something so primal about playing in general that it’s just like everything comes out.
AP: Does the size of the venue play into that? Are you able to channel that primal energy more when it’s such an intimate space?
CLARK: Oh yeah, you go more. In a 200-cap punk club, you’re like, “The Germs played here,” you know? I started off playing small clubs and would be lucky to like drive to Denver and be psyched to have like 200 people in a club. So you know it, in a certain way, really excites me and takes me back. You can see people’s faces — you can see people’s faces in other venues certainly — but you can see people’s face, they’re right there. There’s no barricade, there’s no nothing. I mean, listen, I love performing in any context except like karaoke or unsolicited at a party with an acoustic guitar. It’s kind of an exorcism for me.
AP: It seems like you’re really leaning into punk history. Can you talk about your relationship to punk music and what it’s meant to you?
CLARK: I’m a fan of music with a capital F. So I can be as moved by Fugazi and Big Black as I can by Duke Ellington. And it’s all music to me. But I definitely remember seeing Lightning Bolt a lot of times. And obviously this ethos of just like it’s not a stage and performer. We are all one. Also, you didn’t really see the show if you didn’t get like an injury of some kind. I am physical in that way. Just this idea of like a loud, visceral show where we are all in this together. This isn’t about, you know, glitter and capitalism. This is about people having a place to freak the (expletive) out.
AP: You used vintage equipment for “Daddy’s Home.” And the analog synths were such a big part of “All Born Screaming.” Is there an energy that you feel from that?
CLARK: Everything about the making of this record needed to be tactile. It needed to start with moving electricity around through discrete circuitry. And not just to be like a nerd, but because it had to start with the idea of chaos and chance and “I don’t know what’s gonna happen.” Because that’s how life is. I don’t know what’s going to happen — chaos. But then somehow through a process of intuition and work and magic, you take chaos and you turn it into something and make some kind of sense. So that was the reason for starting with analog modular synths and stuff like that.
veryGood! (66)
Related
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Georgia election workers’ defamation case against Giuliani opens second day of damages deliberations
- Matthew Perry’s Cause of Death Revealed
- Michigan man turned his $2 into $1 million after guessing five numbers from Powerball
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Chargers still believe in Staley after historic 63-21 loss to rival Raiders
- Ohio Senate clears ban on gender-affirming care for minors, transgender athletes in girls sports
- No charges for Mississippi police officer who shot unarmed 11-year-old Aderrien Murry
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Illinois county board incumbent wants primary opponent disqualified for misspelling ‘Republican’
Ranking
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Body of sergeant killed when US Air Force Osprey crashed off the coast of Japan is returning home
- 8th Circuit ruling backs tribes’ effort to force lawmakers to redraw N.D. legislative boundaries
- Court denies review of Pac-12 appeal, handing league control to Oregon State, Washington State
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Hailee Steinfeld Has Pitch-Perfect Gift Ideas For Everyone On Your List
- Mexico’s president inaugurates first part of $20 billion tourist train project on Yucatan peninsula
- North Carolina high court says a gun-related crime can happen in any public space, not just highway
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
4-month-old found alive in downed tree after Tennessee tornado destroys home: I was pretty sure he was dead
This week on Sunday Morning (December 17)
Mexico closes melon-packing plant implicated in cantaloupe Salmonella outbreak that killed 8 people
2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
Poland picks Donald Tusk as its new leader, bucking Europe's trend to the far right
One last Hanukkah gift from Hallmark: 'Round and Round' is a really fun romcom
Ja Morant set for comeback, ‘understands the process’ that has led to his return after suspension