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CARLTONS MUSICAL TRAINING BEGAN EARLY. MY MOM WAS A
PIANO TEACHER, she explains. There were always a lot
of other kids around, and a lot of music going on. I was much younger
than most of them, but I was pretty adamant about wanting to be
part of it. As the daughter, I got special privileges, and I loved
sitting down at the piano.
These special privileges included a selective approach to learning
the piano. I was able to get out of the theory and so forth,
admits Vanessa. I loved to play, but when it came to doing
the exercises, Id run upstairs and watch TV instead! I could
always read music, but my mom didnt push me on the technical
stuffand in the end, it was quite all right.
Carltons father provided the pop side of her early musical
education. At home, there was never any pop music on the radioI
only listened to classical music, she remembers. I didnt
have my own stereo or Walkman or anything. But Id go on rides
to the airport with my dad, who was a pilot, and hed give
me another kind of music lesson. So at four years old, Id
be introduced to all these bands. Hed say, Okay, Vanessa,
this is the Grateful Dead. And Id ask, Are they
dead? And hed very patiently say, No, theyre
not dead. I learned a lot about different kinds of music from
him, very early on.
As Vanessa grew older, did she ever want to rebel against the piano?
Never. I had such a feeling of camaraderie with the piano,
due to my mother. She never taught me in a way that made me feel
confined. There are times in life when you have to do things you
dont want tolike in school, you have to do your homework.
But she allowed me to learn piano on my own terms.
Carlton
began composing piano music at the age of eight, and she still does
most of her songwriting at the keyboard. When a melody comes
out, its always first expressed through my hands, she
says. I just sit down and start putting things togetherits
kind of like a puzzle. Since I dont know formally what the
options for chords should be in different keys, when I do find the
chords I want, they might not be the most typical ones. It makes
things more interesting. The process becomes more about hunting
or seeking. So Ill just play around, and then when something
comes together, I start singing over it. I refine it by playing
it over until its a theme, then go on from there until its
a song. Vanessas experience with Yamaha pianos dates
from her early years. We always had a Yamaha at home,
she says. In fact, the Yamaha piano in my apartment in New
York, a C2its the same one I grew up with. Ive
always loved the sound of that piano. Its very pristine and
brightit sounds more alive than a lot of pianos, and its
easier to play.
Vanessa chooses
Yamahas in the studio as well. On my first record, I played
a Yamaha grand that sounds beautiful, she says. But
my second record will have a sound thats not quite so refined
and perfect. Im going for a slightly more beat-up piano with
a distinct personality, like the one I have at home. Theres
a spontaneity Id like to find that I havent yet. I find
recording really grueling, when youre searching for the perfect
sound, as opposed to finding the right feeling and representing
the song in a way thats not so thought-out. I want the music
to come alive as it happens.
As a female
songwriter who plays piano, how does Carlton feel about the inevitable
comparisons with other female songwriter/pianists? By now
Im familiar with the way the media works, she reflects.
Its easier to just say, Oh, shes like Fiona
Apple or Tori Amos than to describe how my music is unique. I guess
it makes it easier for people to find instant familiarity with new
music, though its kind of annoying. There are similarities
between pianists, or guitarists, but comparing people only by the
instruments they play seems a little too easy. |