a theater/pop culture blog
Pataphysical Science: 1) The French absurdist concept of a philosophy or science dedicated to studying what lies beyond the realm of metaphysics, intended as a parody of the methods and theories of modern science and often expressed in nonsensical language. 2) What quizzical Joan studied in the home.
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Q&A with Grace McLean
If you're a musical theater fan, you might know Grace McLean from her performances in musicals like Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Bedbugs!!!, and Brooklynite. She'll make her Broadway debut in the fall in Natasha, Pierre, reprising her role as Marya D. She also has a career as a singer/songwriter, fronting the band Grace McLean and Them Apples. On Friday, April 1, she and her band close out Lincoln Center's 2016 American Songbook series. Last year, they opened the series after winning Prudential's Invest in the Future of American Song contest. She's releasing a new single in conjunction with the American Songbook concert and her first full-length album is out next year.
In college at NYU (after attending Orange County High School of the Arts in California), McLean studied musical theater, then Shakespeare at the classical studio, and then experimental theater in Amsterdam. "I think all of those things have really influenced the way that I work and have given me permission to be myself in the work that I do," she says. Read on to find out more about her influences, the pop opera that she's working on, and why she gives out goodie bags at her concerts.
Q: What can audiences expect from your upcoming American
Songbook concert?
A: I have little goodie bags that I bring for my
audience because I like everybody to be pleased with me when I perform, so [last year] I
made them do little magic tricks and write down their wishes and blow bubbles.
There's going to be more of that this year. I like to call these kinds
of shows that I do Grace McLean lives in concert as opposed to live. Just add
a little s there because it's alive. It's vibrant. I'm going to have
my core band, Grace McLean and Them Apples--bass, percussion, and me and my
looper. We're going to do some reimagining of some old American standards that
we're maybe going to mash up with some American pop songs. I'm talking Beyoncé
and, like, Duke Ellington. I'm going to do a bunch of original stuff. I'm going
to do some things from the musical that I'm writing about Hildegard von Bingen, who's
this 12th century mystic who was a really powerful, amazing, medieval
woman who I'm obsessed with. I'm going to tell some stories. We're going to
learn some lessons together. We're going to make some big old wishes come true
in a big musical, costumed way.
Q: How did the name Grace McLean and Them Apples come about?
A:I thought it was funny. We were trying to name the band for
my boyfriend at the time. We were looking for a name and a somebody. I think
my roommates and I were trying to make each other laugh so "them apples" was out
there, but also "these guys," which we also thought was funny. But Them Apples I
just thought was so funny and cute and I just liked the idea of when you have your name
and the people behind you. And I like it because, "How do you like them apples?" You probably will because they're quite good.
Q: When doing a show like this, how do you come up with the set
list?
A: I definitely think of the arc of the evening and
how the whole thing is going to work because I want to take everybody on a
little journey. Months ago, I started making a list of anything and everything
that I want to play and then I have to whittle it down because I don't have
three hours to play to people. I just think about the different stories that I want to tell and how I
can weave all of those things together, not only in terms of the arc of the
set, but also how and when to get audience involvement, and it's not in a scary
way. I give everybody a goodie bag and there are different
points in the show where we'll do something together that relates to the song
that's coming up next just so there's a communal context for everything. And
then I also think about how I'm going to surprise people. At my 54 Below show, I
had a flash mob of dancers for one song. Last year at the American Songbook, I
had a whole horn section that came on at the end, so I'm going to have
something like that this year as well. You've gone along for this whole
concert, you think you know where you are, and then there's one other big, fun
thing that happens that kind of comes out of nowhere.
Q: You've done a lot of musical theater. How do you balance
your musical theater career with your singer/songwriter career?
A: It's working out pretty well. They're kind of riding
side by side so far, which makes me quite happy. When I have a musical theater
gig, that's where I'm focused and that's where my energy is going and when I
don't, that's when I have more time for my music, which is pretty great because
right now I'm waiting for Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet to start
at the end of the summer, so I have a lot of time to put out these singles and
get ready for the album next year. And the two kind of feed each other. It's
great to be able to work on other people's projects as an individual in the
whole cog and hone your one specific part and then it's great to be able to
take that back when I'm looking at all of my work and being the director of
things, making a whole album or a whole song or a whole evening.
Q: Have you learned anything about yourself as a
singer/songwriter from the musicals that you've done?
A: I've really learned about succinct, clear storytelling.
Sometimes as a songwriter, I really like to be quite personal and poetic
and metaphorical and I think that works for songs sometimes, but then sometimes
it's like, "How can I be as simple and clear about this moment and make it about
one moment as opposed to five within a song? How can I stretch this one feeling
over this whole arc and be very clear and have everybody understand really
simply what's going on?" Working in musical theater, that has to be done. When
I'm writing a song, sometimes that's a whole play. But inside of a whole play,
every song has to be its own little moment and there's a little bit of
different clarity of storytelling that's necessary. And it's been a good thing
to learn that it's ok to do that.
Q: When did you discover your sound?
A: It's always being discovered. I've been working with this
looping station since 2012, which is a little box that records my voice live
and then I layer harmonies on top of it or beats or whatever and it's sort of
like a little one-man band situation. That's really shaped the direction that
the band has gone. But before I had that, it was very pop
singer-songwritery. I think you could hear Nellie McKay Regina Spektor. Since I got the looper, it's gotten a little more
dance-y or fun and a little bit darker maybe. I'm also influenced by Joanna Newsom and her
really idiosyncratic, long-form poetic storytelling. I love the lady
storytellers. But also I want to be Robert Plant. I like a good scream
sometimes.
Q: Can you tell me a little bit more about the pop opera that
you're developing?
A: Also in college, I studied medieval art, just because I
liked it and you can do those things in college. So I came to know this woman
Hildegard von Bingen through her artwork. Once I graduated, I kept buying all these books
about medieval history and she kept coming up and I was like I want to know
everything I can about this woman and I started delving into her and her story.
And she's just such an important woman that not a lot of people know about. You
know about her if you're in the classical music world. In addition to the crazy
artwork that she made, she wrote songs and poetry. She basically wrote the
first opera in the west, predating others by like 400 years. She wrote the
first mystery play. When you go to theater school, they say theater in
Europe started in the church. She did that 100 years before anyone else was
doing it. She just had a crazy, amazing, creative, abundant life. But what I'm writing is about the first 40 years of her life
where we don't know that much about her because she was locked in a cell with
another woman called Jutta von Sponheim. Jutta was an anchoress, which means she decided
she was far too holy for this world, so she was going to live her life inside
of her own tomb.
Hildegard was given to the church at the age of eight. You're
supposed to give 10% of your income to the church. She was the tenth child, so
her family was like, "Just take our kid." And the church was like, "Great. Jutta
needs a handmaiden. Go live in this cell with her." So they did. It was these
two ladies in a tomb. There was one window through which they could participate
in mass and get food and basically your open grave is in there and you
just meditate on that and just hang out in there because your body is tied to
this world, but as a nun, you're engaged to Christ and death is the best possible
thing because you're going to be united with your bridegroom. And we know that
Jutta really loved hurting herself, self-mortification, because that sort of
pain and denial of the body brings you closer to spirituality. So Hildegard
grows up around and becomes a women around this other lady who eventually died
when Hildegard was in her early 40s. And Hildegard comes out and then she lives this totally explosive, individual life
with this individual voice at a time when individuality doesn't exist. Nobody
signs their name on anything. You don't know who anybody is. Especially if
you're a woman. I'm interested in what happens in this
period of time for 30-some years when these two ladies were together
just being quiet and crazy and in darkness. I read this quote
somewhere that I loved that Hildegard's life was one splendid vision of
dying. And Jutta's was too, but Jutta's life leads her to a literal death and
Hildegard's leads her to a life of creativity and celebration of death in life.
Q: Where are you in the process?
A:I was just at the Johnny Mercer Writers Colony at Goodspeed Musicals in February and
we finished the first draft of it. I have a concert on May 5 at Greenwich House
for their Uncharted series to perform all the music as it is now to see what
it sounds like all in context.
Q: If you could have anyone come see your American Songbook
concert, who would it be?
A: Hildegard! My mom and dad are coming, so that's good.
I have a master's degree from the Goldring Arts Journalism program at Syracuse University. I love to write about theatre, music, musical theatre, and pop culture. The opinions expressed here are my own and do not represent any of the companies I work or write for.
In accordance with the FTC, I should note that I receive complimentary tickets for most of the shows I review, but I approach reviews the same way (with honesty) whether or not I paid for my ticket.
1 comment:
Interesting post, I enjoyed read this.
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