DC: Was there a pivotal moment in your singing and writing career when you said, OK, this is it?
VLO: It wasn’t in my music career as much as it was in my other career, or my “day job.” I was a grassroots organizer full time for about 5 years, campaigning for environmental, social and economic justice. My day job took over my nights as well, so I would work 80 or more hours a week sometimes and had no time for singing or creative writing. I missed it so much (I was in musical theater for about 16 years of my life) that I gave everything else up to give myself a shot at being a musician. It felt as if I couldn’t NOT sing anymore. Now songwriting is my outlet to express myself both personally and politically.
VLO: I am a late bloomer, in music-industry terms. Still, I can’t remember what my first attempt at a song was, though I’m sure it was awful! The first song I actually finished and continued playing for a while is called “Suddenly,” which I probably wrote in 2003 when I was starting a new organizing job after a nice break from “day jobs.”
DC: You’re calling your sound ‘hard folk’—Say more about your sound and influences.
VLO: My biggest influence is Ani DiFranco, and I’ve looked up to her for about 15 years now, because she seems to do whatever she wants regardless of the risk and regardless of whether it’s popular at the time or not. And she’s always been ahead of her time. My sound has taken a life of its own, though, because I work at exploring and defining it, and I also listen to music from all over the world and all different genres: Zap Mama from Belgium, Ojos de Brujo from Spain, Manu Chao, Bjork, and lots of British groups of course, The Beatles, Radiohead, and all difference levels of rock from Tori Amos to Nine Inch Nails, and good political folk music like Tracy Chapman. I grew up listening to Talking Heads, Peter Gabriel, Van Morrison, Indigo Girls and tons of female singer-songwriters. (And, I couldn’t avoid listening to Frank Sinatra in my Italian-dominated household). I also really appreciate the local scene here in San Francisco.
DC You’ve a tight band. Do you write with them from the ‘ground up’ or do you bring them songs and the work out their arrangements?
VLO: I write lots of songs and bring the ones with the most potential into my band rehearsals for arrangements. I have collaborated on a few songs in the past with former band mates and songwriting teachers.
DC You’ve a new CD coming? How has this process compared with your other recording projects? Where would you like to see it go?
VLO: I started working on “Faraway City” in January, 2009. Though it took over a year and a half to complete, it was the best recording project I’ve ever been a part of. Jon Evans, my producer (Tori Amos’s bass player) was a big part of that happiness, since, like a good teacher, he worked with me exactly where I was at — which was, basically, at the beginning. He’s an incredible musician who helped re-arrange all my songs, and we brought in the best musicians in the Bay Area —Scott Amendola (Charlie Hunter) on drums, Jon on bass, Julie Wolf (Ani DiFranco, Indigo Girls) on piano. What an honor to have them rock out on my songs! I also had a blast creating and singing tons of background vocals on most of the songs on the record.
I want to celebrate this new album that I am so proud of with everyone! I’m so excited for the night’s line-up with Emily Wells and Kindness & Lies. So, come to Slim’s (one of my favorite venues in San Francisco!) on Saturday, August 28, 2010 – Tickets are available now!
Deborah Crooks (www.DeborahCrooks.com) is a writer, performing songwriter and recording artist based in San Francisco whose lyric driven and soul-wise music has drawn comparison to Lucinda Williams, Chrissie Hynde and Natalie Merchant.
Singing about faith, love and loss, her lyrics are honed by a lifetime of writing and world travel while her music draws on folk, rock, Americana and the blues. She released her first EP “5 Acres” in 2003 produced by Roberta Donnay, which caught the attention of Rocker Girl Magazine, selecting it for the RockerGirl Discoveries Cd. In 2007, she teamed up with local producer Ben Bernstein to complete “Turn It All Red” Ep, followed by 2008’s “Adding Water to the Ashes” CD, and a second full-length CD “2010. She’s currently working on a third CD to be released in 2013.
Deborah’s many performance credits include an appearance at the 2006 Millennium Music Conference, the RockerGirl Magazine Music Convention, IndieGrrl, at several of the Annual Invasion of the GoGirls at SXSW in Austin, TX, the Harmony Festival and 2009’s California Music Fest, MacWorld 2010, Far West Fest and many other venues and events. She toured the Northwest as part “Indie Abundance Music, Money & Mindfulness” (2009) with two other Bay Area artists, and followed up with “The Great Idea Tour of the Southwest in March 2010 with Jean Mazzei.