“From a musical standpoint, my influences came a
lot from what was around me,” Brown continues. “My brothers were older
than me and played a lot of Beatles and David Bowie and things like that –
and they really impressed pop structures on me. I also like Tom Waits a
lot. I remember somebody giving me Swordfishtrombones shortly after it
came out and it’s one of those CDs that just changes your life and the way
that you look at music and its possibilities. It gets deconstructed and it opens
this door of perception…
“I think an album like that proves that you
can mess with these traditional ideas but it can still be brilliant in
terms of being a vehicle to really service metaphors for emotions. I’ve
always liked that about music; the idea that you can express things that
you don’t normally have many outlets for without feeling awkward. In
music, they take on a life of their own and become more something that
anybody can relate to. You can take your personal stories and enter a
dimension that’s more universal.”
While 2004’s Tomorrow The World saw Brown and
collaborator Michael D’Amico diving headfirst into every direction that
struck their fancy and trying on every hat available to see what fit,
according to the singer a desire to simplify things has become the
standard as they’ve been steadily working on the follow–up to the disc. “I
guess it’s a little more mature, but I like to think of it as a little
simpler,” explains Brown of the duo’s approach to following up Tomorrow
The World. “The first record is actually a lot different from what we’re
doing now. It was very experimental in its way. I took about 3 years to do
it and I didn’t want to limit myself in any way in terms of production or
anything like that so it takes a lot of turns throughout the course of the
CD and ends up being a really varied listen. We took a lot of different
approaches with the last album, but this time we’re really sticking to an
essential format of just making it clean with a less-is-more approach. The
one track, “Free Toronto” is the exception, but a lot of the rest of it is
really stripped down. We’ve been going closer to letting each song hold
its own this time out.”
From
those songs already completed for the next record, the early standout it
certainly “Achilles At My Heels”. Amid crystalline
guitars and sparse keys, Brown sings
tentatively

about the hesitation and worry that tends to surround the
human experience as people attempt to move forward with their lives.
The song is beautiful and very disarming a
truly unnerving listen that is impossible to turn away from. It’s
cathartic and, while Brown does concede that her music and lyrics are
auto-biographical, she realizes that, after it has left her head and is
put on disc, it becomes the property of the
listener.
“I
try to document life as I go along and songwriting has always been a way
for me to do that,” says Brown as she attempts to explain her compulsion
and penchant for songwriting and the themes that she explores in her
music. “It’s comforting and I think that’s what I really identified with
when I was growing up. As lost as I ever felt at times, I could always
find artful things that I could relate to that tended to mirror my
confusion and I found I didn’t feel quite so alone. That’s always kind of
stuck with me.”
But,
by the same token, Brown quickly points out that the trick is to not get
overly involved in the process for fear of getting too self–absorbed. “I
always raise an eyebrow when I think of music as a kind of therapy because
there’s only so much of that that you can do before it becomes really
self–indulgent so I’m always trying to look for that middle ground where
you have an experience but it’s a human experience; it’s not just you and
your personal muddle that you can’t seem to
transcend.”
As
well, Brown says that while the record is still in the works, she and
D’Amico – now joined by Vince Rice on drums and multi–instrumentalist Dave
Feschuk of the Toronto–based Bucolics – have already been performing the
finished material live while continuing to simultaneously finish the rest
of the album and shop for a deal. “We’re recording it as we go along and
we’ve still got a few more songs to do and then we’ll decide which ones
make the cut,” says Brown of the progress of the record. “We’re actually
not too sure what we’ve got – we’ve got a whole lot of stuff recorded
already – and we’ll see which songs work off of each other the best. We’re
not sure which label it’ll come out on yet, but we’re trying to suss that
out too. We put the last one out on our own little label, but right now
we’re seeing what other opportunities are available. Who knows? Maybe
another indie label will have more to offer us than we can do on our own.”
[Bill Adams] [photos by Michael D'Amico] www.myspace.com/bunnybrownmusic