/>
musicOMH
home | features | albums | tracks | live | classical | blog
Facebook Twitter
search:

Interview: Marianne Faithfull

by Darren Harvey
Marianne Faithfull
Marianne Faithfull

buy Marianne Faithfull MP3s or CDs

Spotify Marianne Faithfull on Spotify

Aside from that unmistakeable voice, Marianne Faithfull's new album Horses And High Heels is a very different beast to 2009's Easy Come Easy Go. It's laid-back where its predecessor was grandiose, devoid of celebrity duets, and even features some Faithfull originals. But how does Marianne herself see it?

"It is a more relaxed album, yes. Easy Come Easy Go we did as a treat for my audience, and for me and Hal (Willner, her long-term producer) - we just recorded the songs we liked best with the people we wanted to work with. It worked out very well but in truth I went down that route because I couldn't write, I had a block."

Now she's a little less blocked. "This one is more my album. In my own songs I'm writing about my real life, my daily life in Paris or Dublin, whereas Why Did We Have To Part is a break up song. Which is drawn from reality, yes. And the covers weren't hard to choose this time: I have to choose songs that I feel for personally, there has to be a chord it strikes. The lyrics are very important, something I can feel. I learn it, I listen to it a lot, and suddenly I start to inhabit it and it becomes very real to me."

Does she think there's more respect these days for the art of interpretation? "I think there probably is, yes. But I am lucky in that I can do it - it is hard to do, but it's just something I have."

Marianne Faithfull - Why Did We Have To Part

With her hoarse, cracked voice, legendary past and devoted following it's tempting to think of Faithfull as a chanteuse in the tradition of Judy Garland or Edith Piaf. But she resists the temptation to pigeonhole her. "Chansons? No, this is a pop record!" Isn't she getting on a bit, though, to still be considered as a pop singer?

"Well, it's a fine line. Past Present And Future (originally recorded by '60s girl group The Shangri-Las) is a song about teenage angst and broken hearts. But of course this can still happen at any age. But I deliver it in a very grown up way - well it would have to be if I did it, wouldn't it? But rock and roll is such a teenage thing. After a while you have to realise that it's not all about testosterone, being the best on the block and all that stuff. There are bands who are still doing all that, but I think that's a bit retarted. It's perfectly normal at 21 but if you're in your 60s it gets a bit stupid."

Just as the pop music she releases these days is markedly different from the pop music of her youth, so her 2011-model voice has a different character altogether. She describes it as limited, and yet - surely - her voice is a major draw for old and new fans alike. "I suppose it is, but sometimes I do regret that I don't have the range that I did. Of course without the drugs and drink it would be better, but it wouldn't be my voice, would it? It has to be mine. In any case I do think my voice has got much better on this record."

It's certainly richer that it was in the late '70s, when her pivotal Broken English album was released. "Well, back then I was still taking drugs - not too many by then, but enough to thin my voice."

"I look forward to the day that I'm not in the papers at all." - Marianne Faithfull

Marianne Faithfull has a tendency to reveal a lot in interviews; to be highly candid about drugs, depression and disease, to name a few talking points. Does she ever wish she hadn't opened up quite so much?

"I do wish sometimes that I hadn't been so candid. I look forward to the day that I'm not in the papers at all. My ability to chat on almost anything is nice in certain settings, but it can go horribly wrong. I'm too frank, too honest." What are the repercussions of that? "Well, I don't want to talk about it. But it is difficult. People make things up, I think I am going to sue" - insert name of well-known music magazine - "they've made something up about me. Yes, people are still making things up about me."

Nonetheless, she's still full of enthusiasm about making music. "I love all stages of the process, I like finding the right songs, I love recording them, I love performing too." And we're not making that up.

Marianne Faithfull's album Horses And High Heels is released on 7th March through Dramatico. She performs at the Barbican, London on 24th May. For tickets and further information see mariannefaithfull.org.uk.

Comments

related articles
INTERVIEW: Marianne Faithfull
ALBUM: Marianne Faithfull - Horses And High Heels
ALBUM: Marianne Faithfull - Easy Come, Easy Go
ALBUM: Marianne Faithfull - Kissin' Time
GIG: Marianne Faithfull @ Barbican, London
recent features
    1. INTERVIEW: The Walkmen
    2. INTERVIEW: 2:54
    3. Q&A: Electric Guest
    4. OBITUARY: Donna Summer
    5. INTERVIEW: Tom Jones
    6. WHY I STARTED: Independent Label Market
    7. SPOTLIGHT: My Bloody Valentine reissues
    8. RADIO: musicOMH Cloudcast #1
    9. FOR KEEPS: New Order - Technique
    10. INTERVIEW: Cate Le Bon
    11. INTERVIEW: Sweet Billy Pilgrim
    12. FOR KEEPS: Lifter Puller - Fiestas + Fiascos
    13. INTERVIEW: Marina And The Diamonds
    14. INTERVIEW: Loudon Wainwright III
    15. INTERVIEW: Ladyhawke
    16. Q&A: Crushed Beaks
    17. INTERVIEW: Paul Weller
    18. Q&A: Dry The River
    19. Q&A: Toy
recommended
Tom Jones
INTERVIEW
Tom Jones

On his new album Spirit In The Room, judging on The Voice and why he's a royalist.
Donna Summer
OBITUARY
Donna Summer

The Queen Of Disco's music, remembered in videos and words.
Independent Label Market
WHY I STARTED...
Independent Label Market

Founder Joe Daniel on the origins and inspirations, ahead of this weekend's event.
latest album reviews
    1. Dexys - One Day I'm Going To Soar
    2. Marilyn Manson - Born Villain
    3. The Walkmen - Heaven
    4. Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros - HERE
    5. Paloma Faith - Fall To Grace
    6. Daniel Land & The Modern Painters - The Space Between Us
    7. Regina Spektor - What We Saw From The Cheap Seats
    8. Zombie Disco Squad - Brains
    9. ∆ (Alt-J) - An Awesome Wave
    10. Husky - Forever So
    11. King Tuff - King Tuff
    12. Soulsavers - The Light The Dead See
    13. The Enemy - Streets In The Sky
    14. Sigur Rós - Valtari
    15. Marissa Nadler - The Sister
    16. Dale Earnhardt Jr Jr - It's A Corporate World
    17. Fun - Some Nights
    18. Tom Jones - Spirit In The Room
    19. Rumer - Boys Don't Cry
    20. Advance Base - A Shut-In's Prayer
    21. PS I Love You - Death Dreams
    22. Kathryn Williams - Presents... The Pond
    23. Narasirato - Warato'o
    24. Astrïd - High Blues
    25. EL-P - Cancer For Cure
    26. trioVD - MAZE
    27. Gaz Coombes - Presents... Here Come The Bombs
    28. Exitmusic - Passage
    29. Paul Buchanan - Mid Air
    30. Willie Nelson - Heroes
    31. Public Image Ltd - This Is PiL
    32. Cornershop - Urban Turban
    33. Silversun Pickups - Neck Of The Woods
    34. Guillemots - Hello Land!
    35. Will Dutta - Parergon
    36. Josephine Foster & The Victor Herrero Band - Perlas
    37. Anna Ternheim - The Night Visitor
    38. Squarepusher - Ufabulum
    39. Jay Brannan - Rob Me Blind
    40. Oriole - Every New Day
    41. Saint Etienne - Words And Music By Saint Etienne
    42. Dead Mellotron - Glitter
    43. Beach House - Bloom
    44. Garbage - Not Your Kind Of People
    45. Best Coast - The Only Place
    46. Fixers - We'll Be The Moon

    47. more album reviews