Concert Preview-Amy Ray Hops Into Toad's Place With A 'Kinder' Agenda
Concert Previewâ
Amy Ray Hops Into Toadâs Place With A âKinderâ Agenda
By John Voket
Supporting Didnât It Feel Kinder, her newest and best solo work by far, singer-songwriter-activist Amy Ray is on the road with a decidedly different musical agenda than when she is backing Indigo Girls partner Emily Saliers. Not since the powerful Indigo Girlsâ Come On Now Social have fans heard Ray digging so deeply, coming through with such rage, range and expression.
In an exclusive conversation with The Newtown Bee, Ray also expressed how happy she is to be on the road and going solo for awhile before reteaming with Saliers and starting the Indigo Girls bus up again with a planned new release from the duo, and extensive touring in 2009.
She said her return to New Haven for a Monday night set November 10 is a welcome homecoming of sorts.
âThere are certain places we play that are historical,â Ray said. âToadâs Place is a very relevant, historic and important place for me because it represents one of those early career goals for me and Emily: to play at Toadâs Place. So for me it holds a lot of good stuff, good memories. Playing there makes you feel like youâre part of this greater legacy, which is a good feeling.â
Rayâs new project also provides the greatest performance challenge of her career. She admits getting older is presenting its limitations on her voice just when she has turned a corner, producing a body of new work that requires raw, gritty punk vocals one moment, and delicate, plaintive almost whispering inflections the next.
âVocal range is something Iâve been working on for the past couple of years, but Iâve been working on my durability for maybe the last five years because when Iâd go out on solo tours Iâd lose my voice so much,â Ray said. âSo I started working with a DVD called The Zen of Screaming, because if Iâm going to have that increased range, I need that durability otherwise Iâd be losing it all the time.â
Ray said sheâs also trying to limit her conversation after shows, and performs a daily spoken vocal exercise every morning, and a singing warm-up before sound checks.
âMy voice is actually stronger now than it ever was,â she said. âSo I think whatever Iâm doing â the warm-ups and paying attention to the way Iâm singing so I donât damage my voice â Iâm going to keep doing what Iâm doing so my age doesnât catch up with me. I know Iâm going to lose range into my â50s, so Iâll just have to deal with it.â
Ray said creating her new album also offered myriad technical and emotional challenges from the process of songwriting, to recording to collaborating on the final production.
âTechnically, it took me the longest to finish âSheâs Got To Beâ and âBus Bus,â which is also the one I look forward to playing every night,â she said.
âEmotionally, it probably was hardest to complete âStand and Deliver.â And I think âStand and Deliverâ was the most satisfying to complete because it was the hardest one to get right. We just kept working on it doing it over and over again, and I didnât think we were going to get it, but we did,â Ray said. âThat was the one where I could sit back and say âYES.ââ
The artist said the minute she finished her last solo album, Prom, in 2005, she started focusing on a new solo project as an opportunity to grow and explore her untapped creative reservoir.
âI think I did what I wanted to do on Prom, but after, I needed to grow and work more. To pay more attention to some different things,â Ray said. âSo I think having a producer who really kicked me in the butt made me do it.â
Politically speaking, something she and Emily Saliers do passionately both independently and together as Indigo Girls, Ray was looking forward to the outcome Tuesdayâs historic election having already worked with John McCain when she lobbied (unsuccessfully) over nuclear power and global warming issues. (Rayâs interview occurred Sunday, November 2.)
But when asked what she would say if invited to spend a few minutes with President Obama, if he became elected, Ray was uncharacteristically taken aback for a moment.
âOh my God! First I would thank him for being a great visionary and a great humanitarian,â Ray said. âThen I guess I would ask him to make a list of all the values and promises he started with, and to keep it on his desk and reference it in every decision that he makes so power wonât corrupt.â
Itâs obvious that the newly elected President has made an impression, because in her advance for Didnât It Feel Kinder, Ray looks back on her experiences, and sends her new work out to the world with a sentiment of hopefulness that sounds like it came straight out of an Obama speech.
âWhat ties the record together for me is this human yearning to be understood and the yearning to become empathetic with other people: how to love each other and be kind even when weâre brutally angry.â Or, as the final words of this album ask:
âDidnât you feel stronger
when you let love grow?
Didnât it open you up inside?
Hey let love abide...â
Amy Ray and her band play Toadâs Place in New Haven on Monday, November 10. Advance tickets are $15, or $18 the day of the show. Doors open at 7:30 for the 8:30 opening act Jennifer OâConnor. Visit ToadsPlace.com or call 203-562-5589.