Jenny Gillespie’s new album Chamma out now via Narooma Records

Jenny Gillespie

After writing for a year and coming up with ten or so songs, thinking she wanted to record live in the studio with session musicians in Los Angeles, Jenny realized in early 2013 she was doing more of the same she’d explored on 2012’s folk-prog EP Belita and completely changed directions. Inspired by bands such as The Books and Ela Orlean, Jenny began capturing found sounds on her iPhone, walking around in her former hometown Chicago’s Humboldt Park—groups of children and natural objects, as well as snippets of conversations with friends and family. She also started to see her iPhone as a creative tool—using the iMaschine app to create ideas for beats, and constantly recording melodic ideas on her voice memo app. From these early experiments, Chamma was born.

For 2010’s Kindred and 2012’s Belita, Jenny worked in studios with producers. Belita was recorded in NYC with Shahzad Ismaily and featured guitarist Marc Ribot. For this project, she felt compelled to return to her own producing skills which she first exhibited on the delicately wrought chamber-folk 2008 album Light Year.

Working mostly in her Lake Michigan home north of Chicago, Jenny wrote music in a whole new way—writing as she was recording. This technique allowed Jenny to feel out the essence of the songs, cutting and pasting parts, in a collage manner similar to Jenny’s mixed media paintings, some of which grace the design of Chamma. She invited guitarist Emmett Kelly (Bonnie Prince Billy, The Cairo Gang) and percussionist Joseph Adamik (Iron and Wine, Califone) to add their own unusual instrumental voices to the proceedings in surprising turns such as Vietnamese horn to ‘Lift the Collar’ and marimba to ‘Child of the Universe’.

Lyrically, Jenny drew from the emotional experiences of the last two years of her life, which included much personal upheaval, both positive (getting married, discovering meditation and Buddhism) and negative (a miscarriage, a few betrayals by friends), as well as a month-long trip she took through Thailand, Nepal, and Bhutan.

Months into the recording process, Jenny recognized the electro-folk palette of the record was missing something—some kind of cinematic “oomph.” Already planning to call on her friend Arnulf Lindner for bass, who was based in London and the long-time bassist for singer Heather Nova, the two decided to take the collaboration even further. Lindner had been wanting to create orchestral arrangements for a record, and this seemed to be the perfect fit. Working with London engineer Steve Cooper, he imbued the record with a haunting, muscular orchestral backbone, with harp, trumpet, viola, and cello. Across the Atlantic, a friend was brewing the perfect touches for an album close to Jenny’s heart. Chamma is the culmination of years of musical and personal exploration, layered and heartfelt, born from a place of loving songs into existence.

“Chamma is refreshingly original and beautifully sung by a musician not afraid to take liberties with her own songs” – MOJO

Artist’s website: https://jennygillespie.bandcamp.com/


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