Those with broken hearts should consume Rachael Yamagata's latest album in small doses. The young songstress has packaged her intimate struggle of lost love and reclaiming of personal power into a haunting, two part record. While her music bears the scars of life and all of its tribulations, her honey-warm voice brings to mind better days, and metaphorical lyrics paint a picture of a place where it is safe to be vulnerable. In that fleeting moment of weakness her dark and textured, yet wonderfully raw sound is sure to provoke, you may feel the urge to place a brazen phone call to an estranged lover - just keep pouring the wine.
Rachael Yamagata: Official Bio
A few rounds of heartbreak
a broken wrist
eight stitches
a blown-out eardrum
and label realignment.
It wasn't easy getting here for Rachael Yamagata. Three years after
she began to appear on the public's radar with her self-titled debut EP
and full-length album Happenstance, Rachael will release
Elephants
Teeth Sinking Into Heart, a single record in two parts, on
October 7th, 2008.
"I didn't set out to make a two part album," Yamagata says. "We just
followed the songs' lyrical lead and built them up with textures and
sounds that served the story. The beautiful ones were darker and worked
with lush arrangements. We used the sounds of rain, tree branches
falling on the roof whatever kept the mood true to this haunted
studio in the first stormy days of spring. The second part became more
anthemic, like a reclaiming of personal power. There's something raw
about it. To me it sounds weathered, but not broken or cynical."
The nine tracks on Elephants are darker and more vulnerable than the
five gritty, defiant rock songs on Teeth Sinking Into Heart. Taken
together, the two halves present a complete timeline of the emotions
that revolve around complicated relationships and the accompanying
fallout. "Elephants is much more intimate," Yamagata says. "It's about
being willing to take a risk even if it's not going to end up well.
Teeth is like rediscovering your backbone after you've gone through the
loss."
Yamagata sometimes worries that her need to analyze heartache in her
songwriting is too often mistaken as depressed obsession. After all,
her songs are famously populated by breakups. "I see it more as a
fascination with human relationships and behavior," she says, "the
struggles we create and the strength we gain." Her lyrics display an
ability to draw new wisdom and confidence from every devastating
experience in the hope that the next time will be different.
Elephants
Teeth Sinking Into Heart, reveal a woman not only undaunted
by such losses, but smart enough to know she deserves a lot more than
she's been asking for.
"My mother said recently that Happenstance is the beauty of your
'20s, this one is the richness of your '30s of someone who's been
through the mill and is trying to make the choice between optimism and
defeatism," she says.
Of the two CD's 15 tracks, 12 were produced by the Nebraska-based
multi-instrumentalist and producer Mike Mogis, known for his work with
Bright Eyes and Rilo Kiley. Two tracks, "What If I Leave" and
"Horizon," were produced by John Alagia (John Mayer, Dave Matthews
Band), who also produced Happenstance. The bulk were written during the
two-year touring cycle that followed Happenstance and, especially, the
nine months afterward that Yamagata spent holed up in her Woodstock
refuge a period that saw her turn out some 160 songs. "I wasn't being
very social, so I didn't have many distractions," she says, laughing
about her ridiculously prodigious output.
Twenty-five tracks were eventually recorded for Elephants
Teeth
Sinking Into Heart, most of which Yamagata demoed herself in Woodstock
on various instruments. It was clear to her that the title song
"Elephants," as well as "Sunday Afternoon," "Horizon," "Don't," and
"Duet" (with Ray Lamontagne) would make the final cut.
"Elephants" opens the first part; she ran down a mountain in
Woodstock and, by the time she ran back up, the song was written. "I
don't really know where it came from," she says. "When I went back and
reviewed the lyrics, they said so much more than I could have wished
for. "Elephants" also sets up the record, its lyrics pinpointing the
potential for heartache when entering a relationship, and
metaphorically relates us to the base natures of animals and their
reactions. "Horizon," by contrast, closes out the first part.
"Somewhere along the way, the love died, your world has turned upside
down, and you're left searching for balance again," she explains.
"Sunday Afternoon" is about accepting your part in the demise of a
relationship and allowing yourself to be depressed and maybe even
obsess a little, "but don't stop your life because of it," Yamagata
adds. The song was written at the tail-end of recording her first
record and she's happy to have given it time to grow by playing it live
on tour. Another highlight, "What If I Leave," is one of the first
songs Rachael ever wrote, more than ten years ago. "Everybody has that
purgatory where you know in your gut it's not right, but you haven't
mustered the courage to leave yet," she says of it.
By the end of Elephants, Yamagata's ability to find hope in anguish
is feeling taxed, maybe verging on cynicism. Teeth Sinking Into Heart's
up-tempo grittiness is the answer to that. "Sidedish Friend" takes on
the perils of being someone's part-time lover, while "Pause The Tragic
Ending," is about "a vampire who knew me so well, it almost drew blood
from me," Yamagata says. "I could probably name every album Pause The
Tragic Ending." The second part closes with "Don't" a calling-out and
warning, but tongue-in-cheek at the same time. Again, an epilogue to
lost love, but this time from someone who knows what she wants, who
acknowledges her responsibility in all that's happened, and who will go
on.