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To hear Sara Bareilles' hit "Love Song" and watch her video, please Click Here
Singer/Songwriter Sara Bareilles Breaks Through With Hit Single “Love
Song” and iTunes Success
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| SARA BAREILLES |
By Jonathan Widran
The success
of Sara Bareilles’ irresistible, piano pounding “Love Song” is proof that
sometimes, the most compelling songs break through after a singer-songwriter’s
worst dry spell. Late in the process of recording Little Voice, the
artist’s debut album for Epic, the label was still looking for a hit single to
launch the project and she was having a difficult time trying to enter a
creative space. She caught herself critiquing her own ideas as she imagined the
A&R folks might do and literally freaked out.
“I got mad at myself for letting
those doubts creep into my brain and swore I would write something totally
honest, whatever it may be, good or bad,” she says. “And I did. ‘Love Song’ was
my response to all that, my little ‘stick it to ‘em.’”
Based on its impressive run as
iTunes’ Single Of The Week on the U.S. site from June 19-26, the song’s hook
has been sticking in the minds of a lot of people. It also prompted thousands
of listeners to check out the rest of Little Voice, and the album spent
July 8-17 as the iTunes #1 selling album. It also debuted on the Billboard
album chart at #45, selling over 15,000 copies its first week - strong opening
numbers for a breaking new artist. Bareilles, who performed on the Late Late
Show with Craig Ferguson on July 11, says that sales stood at almost 30,000
units after two weeks. “Love Song” has also had a huge presence on her MySpace
page, where it currently has over 200,000 spins. Another of her songs, “Bottle
It Up,” was featured in Lifetime’s new show Army Wives in June.
“It’s a really cool thing to have
this new movement for unknown artists to get all this love from the iTunes
crowd,” she says. “I feel this is where the industry is headed. A lot of
established artists and record company people get frustrated that things aren’t
old school anymore, but I think using the internet as a resource adds a new
kind of feeding ground for new music to be exposed. There’s so many great
artists emerging all the time, that it’s easy to get lost in the shuffle.
Honestly, I don’t know what it is about ‘Love Song’ that’s catching on with
everyone. I think it’s just a cool and sassy uptempo tune and people are ready
for a female artist in that range.”
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| Sara Bareilles |
Even before the release of Little
Voice, Bareilles’ label and management were hooking her up as an opening act on
some of this year’s highest profile tours. Fresh off early and mid-2007 dates
with British singer/songwriter Aqualung and London-based pop singer Mika,
Bareilles hit the road in July and August with alt-rocker Rocco DeLuca. After
that, she’ll be hooking up with Grammy winners Maroon 5 for a string of fall
dates starting in Detroit.
Although she signed with Epic in the spring of 2005,
Bareilles didn’t get rolling in the studio until early 2006, when she started
working with producer Eric Rosse, who is well known for his work with several,
notable female singer/songwriters, including Tori Amos, Lisa Marie Presley and,
most recently, Anna Nalick. At first, Bareilles loved the fact that he was
soft-spoken, not overbearing and made her feel comfortable sharing what she was
writing. But along the way, she reports countless hours of deliberation,
fighting and seeking compromise on what would make the music the best it could
be. In the end, she says, they both walked away with some “gnarly battle
scars,” but an album they could be very proud of.
The singer, who considers
songwriting to be “the most sacred thing in my life,” tried to hook up with
numerous co-writers, but in the end, co-wrote only tune, “Love On The Rocks,”
with her guitarist Javier Dunne. “Little Voice is a collection of songs
that pretty much mean the world to me,” Bareilles says. “They chronicle my
life, my relationships, my basket-caseness, and my utter devotion to trying to
write honest stuff down and share it. This record was really about me learning
to trust my own instincts and more importantly, recognize how desperately I
needed to learn to listen to myself.”
Elaborating on her songwriting
process, she adds, “The songs came in all different ways to me, either by
sitting at the piano with hours of nothing to do or choosing to forget
everything else to sit there and see what might happen. Every song starts with
doodling, finding different chord progressions on the keys. I have hundreds of
cassette tapes with little snippets of songs I collected, and generally the
ones that stay in my head the longest develop into songs more quickly than the
others. Usually it’s music first, lyrics later. I usually don’t sit down with a
specific agenda. Songwriting for me is a mostly cathartic process.”
Bareilles grew up on several acres of Redwood Forest
in the small Northern California city of Eureka, where she sang in high school
choirs and appeared in local community theatre productions. Moving down to Los
Angeles to attend UCLA as a communications major, she spent her spare time
working on her songwriting and also joined a campus a capella group called
Awaken. She also spent one year abroad studying in Italy, and as much fun as
she had there, a whole year without doing anything musical took its emotional
toll. She came back and started performing at as many open mics and small clubs
as possible.
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| The CD cover of Sara Bareilles new album, Little Voice, on Epic Records. |
While building a loyal, local
following, she released several indie demo albums over the past few years; six
of the tracks on Little Voice, in fact, are re-recorded studio versions
of songs from her 2004 CD Careful Confessions. She met her current
manager, Jordan Feldstein, through a mutual friend, and he facilitated
discussions with various labels, including Epic. Pete Giberga, the A&R rep
who eventually signed Bareilles, first saw her perform one of her small gigs at
the Temple Bar in Santa Monica.
“Everyone at the label has been
really cool about respecting what’s unique to me as an artist, and not trying
to change me into something else,” she says. “A lot of singer/songwriters have
mixed feelings about signing with major labels these days, and that’s the first
thing Pete asked me, whether I was willing to go that route. For me, being with
Epic has been a great experience because they have provided a strong network of
marketing resources that would not have been available to me with an indie.
I’ve gotten a lot of exposure in a relatively short amount of time. But I try
not to focus on the pressure of following up the success of Little Voice.
I’m focused instead on what’s happening right now and hopefully when it’s time
to develop new material, I will be in a good creative space.”
Asked what advice she would share
with up and coming singer/songwriters currently traveling the long road she had
to stardom, Bareilles says, “The best advice I could give anyone is to trust
your gut. Follow your instincts about moving forward. A lot of things happened
to me early on, some opportunities presented themselves that just didn’t feel
right…certain management offers, some people who wanted to record with me…and I
turned them down. Somehow I just knew I was making the best instinctive
decision for myself. So just trust that voice and you’ll know when something is
right. And always be sure to make decisions based on what’s best for the music,
because that’s the centerpiece of everything you’re doing.”
Jonathan Widran is a free-lance music/entertainment
journalist who contributes regularly to Music Connection, Jazziz and All Music
Guide. He can be reached at Few522@aol.com.
Special Feature: Streaming Audio and Video
You can listen to Sara Bareilles' hit single "Love Song," by clicking one the links directly below:
You can watch the video of Sara Bareilles' live performance of her hit "Love Song," by clicking the link directly below:
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