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Who is LENKA ?

March 13, 2013

LENKA Biography

“I’m really in my element,” says Lenka as the wind chimes sound and she surveys the forest outside the Woodstock, NY recording studio where she laid down the final tracks of her self-titled solo debut and is now noodling around on a few other tunes. The natural setting clearly reminds her of home – not her adopted home of Los Angeles, but the Australian bush, where she grew up.

“My parents were hippies and my dad built a house on the south coast of New South Wales,” she explains. “I’m still very attached to that part of the world, even though we moved to Sydney when I was seven.”

In Sydney, Lenka went on to become a teen actress who trained with Cate Blanchett, thereafter landing leading roles on stage, television and in indie films, a self-described “punk-ass art school student” and vocalist/keyboardist for acclaimed indie electronic/ambient outfit Decoder Ring. Now she has flung herself into two new worlds simultaneously: she’s moved to California and become a solo artist. But no matter where she ventures, those early memories follow. Others may struggle to get in touch with their inner child; Lenka never lost hers.

Her sinuous vocals drape around her lyrics with the ease of a child hanging onto its mother’s legs…or of a serpent wrapping itself around the neck of its prey. Whether channeling our long-repressed terrors (“Trouble Is A Friend”) or long-lost innocence (“We Will Not Grow Old”), her music evokes primal emotions, unblemished by pretense or cynicism – and unashamed of cracking a smile occasionally.

“Trouble is a friend but trouble is a foe/And no matter what I feed him, he always seems to grow,” she sings over an ominous piano vamp in “Trouble Is…” A vibraphone – one of numerous instruments she plays on the album – conjures up eerie visions of a deep, dark woods, but Lenka’s spine-tingling “ah-ah-oo” howl suggests that Trouble really is the one in trouble now.

“It’s a mood-enhancer,” she says of her record and mood enhancing is something she’s a bit of an expert at, having provided the “strangely haunting” (Rolling Stone) vocals for Decoder Ring’s evocative soundscapes over the course of two albums. “I don’t like it when people are depressed. I want to cheer them up,” she says, giving Trouble a swift kick in the ass.

Although the album is rife with broken romances (“Wrote Me Out,” co-written with AFI’s Hunter Burgan, strangely enough), self-loathing (“Anything I’m Not”), difficult relationships (“Dangerous & Sweet,” with – stranger still – Howie Day on guest vocals) and long distance longing (“Skipalong”), it is nevertheless uplifting.

In characteristic Lenka fashion, lead single “The Show” takes a dour premise – that life is a show, and sometimes a pretty bad one at that – and delivers it with unexpected aplomb, erupting into a bold, brassy closing refrain of “I want my money back!” “I decided I should just get all my friends to come in and be like the drunken tavern chorus,” she explains. “Australian folk singer Missy Higgins joined in on the bit.”

“Don’t Let Me Fall,” with strings conducted by composer/arranger David Campbell (otherwise known as Beck’s father), began as a neurotic love song inspired by the work of filmmaker/performance artist/author Miranda July (Me And You and Everyone We Know), but evolved into an exquisitely soothing song that borders on lullaby. Producer Mike Elizondo (Fiona Apple, Jay Z) aided Lenka in this bit of alchemy, arranging for the session to take place in one of the historic Capitol Records studios.

“It was just extraordinary, being in a studio with nine string players and David conducting,” she says. “I’m normally in a grungy garage making my music so this was pretty posh.”

Lenka’s fresh sensibility extends to every element of her music, as the whimsical, paper art, stop-motion animated videos she creates with fellow Aussie James Gulliver Hancock, a visual artist, demonstrate. “We’re sort of an art duo. I’m really into craft styles, things looking a bit badly done and childlike on purpose – rather in the vein of Michel Gondry,” she says.

Although her father is a jazz musician, Lenka’s early musical efforts were strictly a means to an end. “I was forced to learn piano and trumpet, but I really hated it,” she recalls. “My parents bribed me by saying that I could get my ears pierced if I got a B on my music exams. As soon as I got a B, I got my ears pierced and I quit.”

In her early teens, she became consumed by acting, inspired by her studies with Blanchett at the Australian Theatre for Young People. “Cate was extremely passionate, really inspiring and fun. She made me fall in love with acting completely and got me my first professional job,” says Lenka.

Alternating between art school and acting (including roles in well-received independent films such as “The Dish” and “Lost Things”), Lenka eventually came round to music when a role in a play required her to sing. She began recording demos in Sydney and her drummer, who was a member of Decoder Ring, suggested his band mates consider her as a vocalist on the soundtrack they were recording for the indie film Somersault. The film and soundtrack went on to receive numerous awards and Lenka and the band traveled to the U.S. in 2006 for an appearance at South by Southwest and a short tour.

She recorded a second album with Decoder Ring before going solo and becoming, as she puts it, “a gypsy,” shuttling between the States, Europe and Australia, as work and her visa permitted. Relocating to Los Angeles in 2007, her first night in L.A. was a memorable one, coinciding with the airing of “Follow,” one of her early compositions, on the FX network series “Dirt.” “It was in this scene of Courtney Cox masturbating with a vibrator,” Lenka recalls. “So we had a really good laugh.”

Lenka was pursued by numerous labels, but felt that Epic was the best match. “When I told them my vision for my career, they were really into it, and said ‘We just want to help you do that,’” she says. “They’re a major label, but have the philosophy of an indie.”

She began recording her debut last December in Montreal before the contract was even signed. After sessions there and in Los Angeles, Lenka wrapped up the album in Woodstock. With a little time on her hands, she was free to lay down an unlikely assortment of cover songs (including Modest Mouse’s “Gravity Rides Everything,” “My Favorite Things” from The Sound of Music and M. Ward’s “Vincent O’Brien”) and muck about in the forest, making little videos that will undoubtedly wind up on YouTube once she gets around to editing them. Woodstock may not be home, but it’s close enough for now.

Source: http://www.lenkamusic.com/us/biography

@donibar

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