Categories
Culture Entertainment Music

Storm Large is ready for 54 Below on Dec. 19, talks about Pink Martini, The Limelight & more

Storm Large / Photo: Laura Domela
Storm Large / Photo: Laura Domela

Singer, songwriter and author Storm Large first found notoriety as a finalist on the singing competition show Rock Star: Supernova. In the 10 years since her reality TV tenure, things have been non-stop for the Portland resident. Beyond touring with Pink Martini, Storm has become an in-demand vocalist with many of the world’s top orchestras, performing recent engagements with the New York Pops, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Houston Symphony, RTÉ Dublin, and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. She has also released three full-length albums and a plethora of singles since appearing on CBS.

The theatrical world also embraced her, as she starred in Portland Center Stage’s production of Cabaret with Wade McCollum. Such led to a touring version of the show playing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Adelaide Festival in Australia, and Joe’s Pub in New York. Around that same time, Storm’s 2012 memoir Crazy Enough — a Simon & Schuster release — was an Oprah’s Book of the Week and was awarded the 2013 Oregon Book Award for Creative Nonfiction. Thus, success in music, theater and literature.

In support of her Dec. 19 show at Feinstein’s/54 Below, Downtown had the opportunity to do some Q&A with Storm. Not only is Storm talented and driven, but she is also very personable. Her Manhattan show is set to include holiday favorites — including “2000 Miles,” “Hallelujah” and “Sock It To Me Santa” — and, as she hinted at, some special guests. Storm can be followed on Twitter via @StormOf69 and visited online at www.stormlarge.com.

A lot of people first learned about you from Rock Star: Supernova. The aftermath of that show was said to be a disaster as far as the supergroup went, but was it a pleasant experience for you?

Storm Large: It was an insane experience, but I learned a lot in those three months. I still have a few fans — here and there — from that show, but thankfully, the fever pitch of intense TV fame I had has passed. That is some scary energy, television fame.

Since a lot people discovered you from the CBS show, but you now do a lot of work in theater and with orchestras. How did you bridge the gap from rock to a more upscale world?

SL: I had been a rock/cabaret performer for 15 years before the show –hashtag: old — so the theater wasn’t much of a leap. Symphonies were a surprise turn because of the amount of music education I lack. I cannot read music, only have an anecdotal understanding of theory, would rather listen to The Clash than Cole Porter, etc. If I had to guess, it would be my experiences on club stages, telling stories and being a natural ham type of showman gave me the gall to step in front of my first orchestras. Then it took people smarter and more talented than I — Thomas Lauderdale, James Beaton, Leonard Slatkin, Steven Reineke, Michael Feinstein — telling me I was actually great in the genre, and need to keep exploring it.

Pink Martini is said to be one of the harder gigs for a vocalist, given all the genres and languages involved. What sort of audition or test was needed to get in with them?

SL: (laughs) Audition? Thomas MADE me do it! I told him at least 17 times, “NO, I can’t, too hard, China [Forbes] is brilliant, I can NOT do what she does,” and so on. However, China had injured her vocal cords, and the band was in a serious situation. I only did it, at first, because I love China and Thomas. I did it as a favor, thinking I would be a miserable failure, China would get better, come back and we just could chalk it up to a learning experience.

So I learned…crammed, actually…10 songs in five languages in four days, for my first ever concert with them. Four sold-out shows at The Kennedy Center. Never was I more terrified as a performer. I don’t remember much, but afterwards, Thomas asked me to be a lead vocalist, swapping tours with China.

You sing, you act, you write…How do you usually go about describing what you do for a living?

SL: I usually say, “I sing, and talk a lot of shit.”

What do you remember about the first show you ever performed in New York? Where was it?

SL: Limelight, 1989, sang “Happy Birthday” onstage to my friend Tommy — who was playing that night — and the place went nuts. Afterwards the owner nicknamed me “Janis” and I never paid a cover there again.

For your upcoming show at 54 Below, what should be expected? A mix of songs from your career?

SL: Yup, plus some new holiday favorites, and some snazzy guests if I can talk them into singing on their night off…

Do you have a favorite song to perform live?

SL: It changes all the time. Right now I’m loving a French song Sean Lennon wrote for the film, A Monster In Paris. The song is “La Seine.”

Beyond the show at 54 Below, what’s coming up for you in your career?

SL: Flights, snacks, naps, SING! Flights, snacks, naps, SING! I’m taking some time off next year to write and rest a bit, reset my creative head/heart. I’m due to write another book. I am also writing lyrics and some music for a musical about a storied brothel in Chicago at the turn of the 20th Century. True story about a gentlemen’s club run by women called, The Everleigh Club.

Is there a field you haven’t yet worked in but still hope to?

SL: Politics.

When not busy with your career, how do you like to spend your free time?

SL: Get some sleep, do some yoga, get laid…Not easy seeings as my only free time happens on airplanes.

What’s been your favorite album of 2016?

SL: LEMONADE — OMG — LE.MO.NA.DE. Ungh!

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

SL: Currently, I’m a huge fan of Blue Ribbon Bistro, but also love Epistrophe and Ippudo.

Finally, Storm, any last words for the kids?

SL: If you can’t be a good influence…at least be a good cautionary tale. Follow the yes, you little bastards.

Categories
Events Fashion

Fashion Icon Pat Cleveland To Speak At WNYC’s Jerome L. Greene Performance Space On Sept. 9

walking-with-the-muses-9781501108228_hr

On Friday, Sept. 9, The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space kicks off its new Icons & Innovators series with international supermodel and fashion icon Pat Cleveland.

Hosted by award-winning author and television producer Susan Fales-Hill, the series features one of a kind, in-depth interviews with groundbreaking artists and thinkers who have shaped the cultural landscape. Cleveland will discuss the world of fashion today and tell anecdotes from her new memoir, Walking With The Muses.

Born in Harlem to an African-American artist and a white jazz saxophonist, Cleveland conquered the fashion world, serving as inspiration and muse to some of the 20th century’s most legendary figures: Halston, Vreeland, Warren Beatty, Stephen Burrows. She was part of the group of African-American models who revolutionized the staid cat walks of Paris couture in the legendary fashion show at Versailles in 1973.

Tickets are $25 and can be purchased through www.thegreenespace.org.

Categories
Culture Events Living Music Travel

Laurie Berkner to headline a NYC cruise on Jun. 25, talks to Downtown Mom (TM)

Photo by Jayme Thornton
Photo by Jayme Thornton

Kids (and parents), our favorite singer Laurie Berkner will be performing on the Circle Line sailing along the Hudson River and singing along to her greatest hit songs on Saturday, Jun. 25.

Laurie’s music evokes an authentic, fun but yet teaches responsibility in a soft way to a child’s life. A song like “My Family” explains how a household consists of anyone giving unconditional love to a child –- shepherding away from your “neutral” household of mother and father -– making a mixed household more accepted in our society. These are the lyrics children need to hear, which will in turn help build tolerance when a child only has a grandma or an aunt raising them.

As for teaching those kiddies responsibility, what better song does that then “One Seed?” “One seed, two hands, dig a hole, start to plant / Watch it grow, pass it down, one Earth spins around.” These are such simple lyrics about protecting and nurturing our beautiful planet, and children connect to this simplicity.

Below is a one-on-one interview with Laurie, which includes information on her new album for our kids to continue the love of music with. Join us June 25th on the Circle Line at 11:00 AM, as leaving from Pier 83; this is located at West 42nd Street and the Hudson River, adjacent to Pier 81, North River Landing. Tickets start at $39, with a limited number of $99 VIP tickets still available. I, for one, can’t wait to take my daughter Julia and for us to have a day filled with Laurie Berkner’s tunes with the Manhattan skyline as our backdrop.

Photo by Steve Vaccariello
Photo by Steve Vaccariello

Are the lyrics all your lyrics?

Laurie Berkner: Yes, if you’re asking about my original songs. I sometimes sing traditional songs, or songs that band members have written, but I write all the lyrics to my original songs.

How do the words come to you when writing a song for children that vary in age from about two to seven years old?

LB: Often I think about what I would have wanted to sing about when I was that age, or I listen to what I hear kids saying and turn those words into song lyrics.

Nick Jr. and Jack’s Big Music Show gave you such a platform for all kids to fall in love with your music and you…how was it for you before this opportunity? 

LB: It actually wasn’t so different in content, but the scale was very different. I had a small but fantastically-loyal and excited fan base before being on Nick Jr — some from being known locally and some from having performed on The Today Show — and then I had a large, but fantastically-loyal and excited fanbase afterwards. Before Nick Jr., I played smaller gigs and sold many fewer albums and got recognized on the street less often.

Will you be writing another picture book? 

LB: I recently signed with Simon & Schuster to develop three picture books. The text is the lyrics to each of the songs we’ve chosen to base the books on. The first one is We Are the Dinosaurs, and it is coming out in March, 2017. I can’t wait!

Is it equally as enjoyable to write books as is to write music?

LB: It’s definitely enjoyable, but also very different for me. For the books I’m working on now, the words are my lyrics. That means that before we even start creating the book, the writing is done. Instead, I get to work on ways to add a story to those lyrics that will manifest itself in the illustrations. I also work with my editor on dialogue for the characters, the direction the illustrations will take, and what the look of the book will be overall. It’s extremely cool to watch the songs I write expand into a visual world that I couldn’t even imagine before.

The song “My Family” is one of my favorites, and my daughter’s favorite as well…When she was three years old, she was understanding the dynamics of her family being from a single family household, and the song “My Family” in her mind meant it doesn’t matter if her family is just her mom. The words transcend to a family just consisting of child and grandma, child and aunt, etc. It makes it okay in their life for it not to be the traditional neutral household of mother and father. Is this where you were achieving in the song? 

LB: I was asked by Nick Jr. to write a song about family, and I decided the only way it feel good to sing it would be if it represented the reality of what I think family actually is. There are so many different kinds of people in our lives who nurture us, love us, raise us and give to us unconditionally. I wanted to write a song that celebrated and reflected that, especially because I personally have a strong feeling of family with many different kinds of people in my life, many of whom are not related to me by blood. I’m so glad to hear that it felt like it was representative of your family, too!

Your videos are so creative, colorful…Do you work with a set designer, stage designer that works through the concept or is this all you and your band?

LB: Thank you! The early videos were done by different production companies who came up with a lot of the ideas and then hired prop people and set designers to manifest them. 

My more recent videos — that I have been filming at the YouTube Creator Space and posting on our LaurieBerknerBand channel — are all designed by the wonderful ladies who run my Two Tomatoes Records office in New York City, with some input from me.  

Photo by Steve Vaccariello
Photo by Steve Vaccariello

How did the word Mahalo come to you?  It’s a very easy word to say for children and it flows so beautiful.

LB: It is, isn’t it? It was really my husband, Brian, who inspired me. We were in Hawaii on our honeymoon and had brought ukuleles. Every time I turned around he was strumming his and singing “Mahalo, mahalo, mahalo,” because everyone said it to us so often. At one point while we were there, I ended up in the emergency room after I stepped on a sea urchin. While I was there I had to wait two hours for someone to see me. I really wanted to find something positive in the experience so I would have good memories of my honeymoon — even in the hospital! — so I decided to write a whole song around the word “mahalo,” starting with being thankful that I had the time and inspiration to write a song.

You also have someone speaking in sign language in your video. Was this more of a request from parents of children who have a hearing disability? 

LB: Not at all. It was just happenstance that one of the people in my office had a roommate who could sign, and offered to come in and do it for us. I thought it was an awesome idea, so we did it!

Your songs teach responsibility as well “seed” about keeping the ocean clean. It comes down to basics with kids and kids can naturally be nurturing. Do you find the kids connecting to this and acting upon it? 

LB: I don’t really know. I hear a lot of stories of kids liking the song and wanting to sing it, and also about it being used in classrooms to teach that kind of responsibility and connection to our planet. I certainly hope they are connecting to it!

What is the most requested song from your fans? How about their parents? 

LB: Some of the biggest kid favorites are “We Are The Dinosaurs,” “Victor Vito,” “Rocketship Run,” and “I’m Gonna Catch You.” Parents tend more toward songs like “Under A Shady Tree” and “My Family.”

You have a section on your website about sustainable food and you mention how much Monsanto controls the seed company.  Is Non-GMO something you practice in your household?

LB: Yes, definitely. I try to never buy foods that I think could have been genetically-modified and do most of my shopping either at places where I can buy organic, or at the local greenmarket where I can talk directly to the farmers about how they grow their food. 

Do you read labels to everything you buy?

LB: Religiously.

What makes the Circle Line different for a children’s performance?  

LB: It will certainly be different for me. I don’t think I’ve ever performed on a moving boat before! I also hope it will be fun for the families who come to sing and dance to be able look out at the Hudson River, New York City and amazing landmarks like The Statue of Liberty. 

What’s next for Laurie? You have a new album coming up? What will it highlight for children? 

LB: I do! It’s called Superhero, and it’s 21 brand new songs about things from bubbles to fireworks to pajamas.