A GoPride Interview

Amy Ray

Love her Tender: an interview with Amy Ray

Thu. April 24, 2014  by Gregg Shapiro

About 10 years ago I started writing songs and putting them in a pile and filing them away in my mind...
Amy Ray
Indigo Girl Amy Ray's fifth solo studio album Goodnight Tender (Daemon) fulfills a promise Ray has been hinting at throughout her music career. A country record through and through, the traditional sounds on Goodnight Tender have a history of popping up on the Georgia native's recordings, either on her own or with fellow Indigo Girl Emily Saliers. But here, on Goodnight Tender 's dozen exclusively country songs, Ray is, to quote Paul Simon, "shining like a National guitar," backed by an all-star band playing pedal steel, dobro, banjo, fiddle, mandolin and stand-up bass. I spoke with Ray about the new record in the spring of 2014. [Amy Ray performs at Double Door in Chicago on May 3.]

Gregg Shapiro: Amy, how long have you wanted to record a country album such as Goodnight Tender?

AR: About 10 years, maybe a little longer. About 10 years ago I started writing songs and putting them in a pile and filing them away in my mind, (thinking) "When I get enough songs and when I'm ready to do this, I'm going to make a traditional country record." Over the years, as I've made my other solo records, sometimes I've thrown the more rockabilly/mandolin/fast songs on the punk or rock records. I didn't have the amount of songs or content that I wanted.

GS: So, did any of these songs start out in a different musical genre and you realized that they were better suited for country arrangements or were they all written specifically in the country style?

AR: "Hunter's Prayer" is the main one that went through that. It changed drastically. It was more of a folk song; even the chord arrangement was different. I tried it that way, I even tried suggesting it for Indigo Girls, but it just wasn't working. So I bagged it for a few years. I was working on something, some other song, and I just started singing the lyrics to "Hunter's Prayer" to a different chord progression and I was like, "Ah! This is supposed to be a country song" [laughs]. Other than that, the other stuff I pretty much knew as I was writing it, I was sure of what the genre was.

GS: Who would you cite as your greatest influences in country music?

AR: From the earliest time, Townes Van Zandt and Steve Earle are two writers I took inspiration from. Even for songs I was writing for Indigo Girls. As far as strictly traditional country artists – Hank Williams and George Jones and Patsy Cline and Dolly Parton and Merle Haggard; all the greats. I like that era from the Carter Family, gospel mountain music, a whole lot. To me, they're the parents of folk music. (Ethnomusicologist) Alan Lomax's recordings played a big part when I was writing a song such as "Johnny Rottentail" and more of the storytelling kinds of songs. As far as production goes, the earlier 1950s stuff, (such as) Lefty Frizzell. I like (it) heavy on the pedal steel, and the drums to not be the center focus of the project, but still have the groove.

GS: Where does Duane Allman, who is feted in the song "Duane Allman" on Goodnight Tender, figure into your influences?

AR: [Laughs] Southern rock was the earliest thing I listened to as a kid. It had its roots in some country. That's something I was brought up on – the Allman Brothers and Lynyrd Skynyrd – that was in my house. Allman Brothers were one of my favorite bands from second grade on. My sister, who's five years older than me, definitely influenced that. I'd listen to her records and she had a lot of Allman Brothers. We listened to Marshall Tucker and Charlie Daniels Band [laughs]. That's what a lot of people were listening to when I was in high school in the south. But the Allman Brothers have stayed a favorite for me. There are some old records that I go back to and listen to all the time for pleasure. Not for songwriting tips or anything like that. To me, their music is more about the melodic sense between the instruments and the vibe; the passion of it. That's culturally how I understand it.

GS: Heather McEntire, the out lead singer of Mount Moriah, can be heard singing on "When You Come For Me." How did that come about?

AR: Maybe seven years ago, she was in a punk band from Durham, North Carolina called Bellafea, and she wrote me an email as I was getting ready to go on the road with The Butchies. She asked if she could come out and open for some shows. That's how I originally met her. She told me she was going to start doing different music with side projects. She started Mount Moriah and they had a lot of country influences. I think they're a cross between Björk and Americana. They have a weird pollination going on.

GS: Insurgent country.

AR: Yes. I love that project and we kept in touch. She said she was starting to write some songs that were country songs and sent me some demos. She asked me if I wanted to put any of them on the record. I said (about "When You Come For Me"), "Maybe you should just sing lead on it and I'll sing harmony and it will be like a duet." That's how we ended up doing it. She's someone I do Writers' Nights with and toured with. She's opened for Indigo Girls. She's been in my life a lot.

GS: The inimitable Kelly Hogan, who has also toured with Indigo Girls, can be heard on "Time Zone" and the title cut. Why did you want to have her sing on the album?

AR: On (my first solo record) Stag, I had (Hogan's band) the Rock*A*Teens do something and she was on there. But it wasn't in the way that her voice is that classic Patsy Cline torch singer. I've always wanted have her [laughs] on this record, actually. As I was writing, (the song) "Goodnight Tender" especially, I was thinking that I wanted it to have those close, Everly Brothers harmonies, and she's the person I had in mind. I made sure I had a time when I could capture her when she was off from (touring with) Neko Case. I got lucky! I was in Chicago with Indigos. It was sheer luck. We went to Jeff Tweedy's Wilco loft and we recorded those vocals. I would have waited and flown to her wherever she was, but it was lucky that it was so convenient. She's one of my favorite vocalists and an amazing person. We have a long history. She's an ally in the music business for me.

GS: Attitudes continue to evolve in Nashville, albeit slowly. What would it mean to you to have this album embraced by the Nashville music community?

AR: It would be huge. But that would mean something bigger than me. (Lesbian country artist) Brandy Clark is being embraced. Kacey Musgraves has that "Follow Your Arrow" song that was embraced. It might be slightly different for someone such as me to be embraced because I'm so obviously left-of-center and gay and out and political and masculine and all that. It'd be a pretty big deal [laughs] on another level, but I would love that. But I don't have any expectations in that arena whatsoever. I spend more time in Nashville than I used to. I have a lot of friends there. I would say that over the years I've noticed discernible changes in the culture there. It used to be, 12 years ago, if I played in Nashville, there were always derogatory remarks from the bartenders and even the club-owners. It was hard. I had a hard time and I was always surprised by it. That was when I first started touring solo and I have seen a noticeable difference. The contrast is stark. The last time I played there, people and the club-owner were super-friendly and I had a big crowd. I didn't expect to have a crowd at all. And I was with The Butchies. It wasn't like I had toned it down at all or anything [laughs]. I would at least like to make inroads in the Americana scene. I have a lot of friends in that scene. To break into any scene at this age is very hard. I just have to put the music out there and hope that it finds its way.

GS: Over the course of your four solo albums, you have touched on genres ranging from punk rock to riot grrrl to R&B, to mention a few. Are there other musical genres in which you would like to work on future solo releases?

AR: Nothing radical. I probably wouldn't try to do a soul or hip-hop record or something that would be a little bit co-opting [laughs]. I'd probably like to explore country a little more and do some country-punk, like Waco Brothers, with more of that punky side. I didn't have it in me for this record. I just wanted to do something with an easy feeling to it. You could drive down the road to it and nothing was going to shake you up too much.
 

Interviewed by Gregg Shapiro. Gregg Shapiro is both a literary figure and a music and literary critic. As an entertainment journalist, his work appears on ChicagoPride.com and is syndicated nationally.

MORE CONTENT AFTER THESE SPONSORS