Last Thursday April 13th, Amelia Curran started the local
leg of a series of launch events to promote two artistic projects: the release of her CD titled Watershed and the release of her first book called Relics
and Tunes. I attended the launch at Fred's Records, known for its
consistent support of local musicians, knowledgeable staff, and its nearly-all
wood interior makes for some very sweet acoustics for the free 45-minute
concerts that rival a love-in.
The bigger city centres like Toronto had already had their
share of Amelia, as had the national media like CBC's Strombo Show. Most
of this has been covered on Amelia's website, if you are curious or would like
to sample the tunes. (See
ameliacurran.com)
Amelia Curran is a celebrated singer songwriter on the East
Coast and recognized nationally but within her own province she is especially
cherished and regarded on par with the late Ron Hynes. In 2008, she signed with Toronto indie
powerhouse Six Shooter Records and her international ascendant started. I confess that I had lost track of
Curran somewhat. As a CFA who
arrived in the province in 1994, I was not aware of her early days in
Newfoundland or of her years spent in Halifax where she was a fixture in the
music scene. In the Foreword of Relics
and Tunes, Shannon Webb-Campbell
writes, "When Amelia moved
back to St. John's in 2009–where she recorded Hunter, Hunter, with Don Ellis, a 12-track album of daring
confession and love's unrequited reflections–she earned her Leonard Cohen-esque
lyrical status."
It was precisely that double-barreled lyrical status that
intrigued me. "When is a poet
a songwriter and vice versa?" I wondered. I believe that Leonard Cohen owed his success to a profound
understanding of that dynamic, not to mention that he probably would never have
been able to make a living if he had not become a recording sensation. (As a marketing aside, I will observe
that the 3-song performance at Fred's
was an astute intro to the event that encouraged fans to buy Curran's CD, vinyl
album and book and have them all signed.
It was tasteful cross promotion.)
Addressing the relationship between poetry and song lyric Curran
reflects. Beyond the obvious,
essential ingredient of music to song she offers, "This may sound daftly
romantic, but I think of poems and songs as beasts to be hunted and either
tamed or killed, depending on their demeanor."
Curran is careful to point out that Relics and Tunes is a songbook and not a volume of poetry. The book lists the keys for each song
included along with the chord progressions. It notes verse and chorus for five of her albums, the
foreword and Curran's Coda: On Writing, which is a lyrical view from the songwriting trenches. It is a "this is how it
feels" account and not a how-to.
The book is insightfully designed with faint versions of Curran's own
handwriting haunting the front and back pages. There are a few author pics and the cover features a
portrait painted by Darren Whalen.
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