|
Visit Michael Buffalo Smith web
Listen to Zola Moon or visit her web site
|
|
New Live CD Available Now
The Savoy Truffle read our CD review 1 & CD review 2 and visit their web site
|
Susan Barth's "Wonderland," A Hollywood Dream
"I'm in the pursuit of the perfect pop song," says musician Susan Barth, who has recently released her third solo album, "Wonderland," on her own record label, Pink Sox Songs. "I believe in the magic of the perfect pop song."
While Barth was (and is) very interested in having major record label representation, she was more concerned with getting her album out on the streets while it was still fresh than waiting to be discovered. She decided to release the album on her own under the publishing name, 'Pink Sox Songs'. "I tried an awful lot of company names, but they were already taken," she laughs. "For a period of time, I used to like to wear these pink lace socks when I played shows, so that's why I called my company Pink Sox Songs."
"As a kid, I started mimicking the songs on the radio," says Barth of her musical beginnings. "I started singing the harmonies to the songs on the radio, and I started making up different melodies. I wrote my first song when I was about 12 years old." While Barth's East Coast family was supportive of her personally, there was always the thought that she would eventually give up her artistic pursuits and join the family business "I was a very sensitive kid, so it was kind of a weird business to have my family involved in," says Barth. "But that's okay. My brother did get into the family business, and runs it today. It's more like a specialty grocery now, a gourmet grocery store where he smokes all his own meat. It' s a kind of upscale suburban kind of existence."
In many ways, "Wonderland" is a reflection of Barth's own struggles to get a toehold in the Hollywood dream. On the surface, the album is a wonderful collection of pleasant-sounding pop songs, with Susan Barth's distinctively sweet yet edgy vocals being the focal point. When you dig a little deeper, though, you find yourself smack dab in the middle of a story about disillusionment. In the opening track, "Wonderland," the story begins with the narrator still thinking "I'll just go on thinking everything is going to be all right," only to be disappointed by life and the pursuit of the Hollywood dream as the album goes on. In "Almost Did It", the narrator chides herself that she almost sold herself out in order for that dream, still clinging to the idea that she can make it her own way. In "Over There," the narrator reflects on another person's stardom, wondering how that person became so famous so fast. And then, in "Grammys," the narrator talks about watching the Grammys on television and wondering what one has to do to get on that stage and on TV.
The songs all fit into each other so well and beautifully that they just couldn't be arranged any other way, with each song put in the exact place it needs to be, as though one was following the path of a novel. And, though the subject matter and the palpable disillusionment are both so heavy and melancholic, it never gets too heavy or melancholic, never crosses into being maudlin or too depressing, and always retains a bright ray of hope that keeps one cheering for the narrator to just keep on trying.
"And then I went to the dry cleaner for the first time, and there was this wall of photos there of customers. They were all these second-rate soap opera actors and actresses. And smack in the middle of them was this Robert Blake picture, with the parrot on his shoulder, from when he was Beretta? I just remember thinking, 'Oh my God, look at that.' Years later, I was just sitting around one night, and I was remembering that moment, when the bubble burst when I saw that. I wrote 'Wonderland as a reflection of my experience here in LA, and sort of what I supposed others' experiences had been like. And then the other songs just fell into suite. It became kind of an autobiographical album."
|