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Longtime fans of Beth Nielsen
Chapman will notice that the black & white portrait on the cover
of her new CD, Back To Love, bears a
striking resemblance to the artwork on her self-titled 1990 album. Happily, the
similarity doesn't end there. Over the course of 11 stunning new
compositions, Back To Love brings the
acclaimed, Nashville-based singer/songwriter full circle, back to the
soul-deep songwriting style that made her famous and provided big hits for
herself and covers by an impressive and eclectic group of artists
including Faith Hill, Bonnie Raitt, Willie Nelson, Trisha Yearwood, Neil
Diamond, Patty Griffin and Emmylou Harris, to name but a few. And while
the soaring melodies, bell-clear vocals and heart-penetrating lyrics
are reassuringly in place, there's a new depth to the
singer and to the songs, reflecting every turn in the
tragic-and-triumphant road Nielsen Chapman has traveled.
For legions of tried-and-true fans, this new release represents an
exuberant return to the style that distinguished some of her best work
and produced some of her biggest hits. For newcomers to the magic and
the music of Beth Nielsen Chapman, Back To
Love is a bright new chapter in her songbook of life’s revelations.
"After the rigorous work that went into my
last project, Prism, this record
felt like something pure, sweet and natural, a feeling like coming home,
back into a place that feels deeply familiar. It's been a joyful
record to make," Nielsen Chapman says. (2007’s Prism: The
Human Family Songbook was a culturally rich double CD sung in
nine languages.)
And
joy permeates the proceedings from the very first notes of "Hallelujah," the album's
leadoff track, a collaboration with singer/songwriter/Americana stalwart
Darrell Scott that rocks headlong into love's central dilemmas. The
same duo delivers "I Can See Me Loving You," the
freewheeling romp that follows. With Nielsen
Chapman wielding her recently acquired bouzouki and Scott supplying
on-the-fly harmonies and lightning swift licks, the playful musical
repartee between these two world-class artists is one of the real
highlights of Back To Love.
"You can hear me laughing, because just before we launched
into the song, as it was being counted off, I said, “Darrell, sing the
harmony live!” Since we hadn’t rehearsed it, Darrell wasn't sure where
exactly I was going with the melody and he just slid all around
completely off the top of his head, careening around
the corner on the racetrack of the tune," Beth says. "I was
just cracking up."
Those kinds of unedited, spontaneous
musical outbursts lighten up the weightier moments on Back To
Love and serve to highlight the poetic potency of her lyrics.
Music City iconoclast Danny Flowers, co-writer of "More Than
Love," tosses a woozy slide guitar into that song's mix, setting up
the dig-down-into-love’s-hard-work-to-its-silver-lining lyric against a
sly, hip-shaking groove. Though she wrote six of the album's songs by herself
– including two of the album's most powerful songs, "How We Love" and set-closer "The Path Of
Love" – Beth has certainly chosen some of the most respected
writers to collaborate with on the remaining five tracks.
Born in Harlingen, Texas, smack in
the middle of a family of five children, to an Air Force Major and a
registered nurse, Beth grew up all over
the place – a self-described “geographical mutt.” Her family
finally settled in Alabama in 1969 when Beth was just going into the
ninth grade, moving there from Munich, Germany.
Crossing back over the ocean with her came her first guitar, a German
made “Framus” that, though intended as a gift for Father’s Day, ended up in
her room. Writing songs was immediate for her from the first chords she
picked out by ear. “With the Vietnam war blazing, Martin Luther King, Jr.’s death still
fresh in the news, and my heart reeling from the shock of a school
trip to Dachau (a concentration camp in Munich), the bubble of
my childhood’s view of the world burst and I started to sense the
existential depth of human suffering for the first time,”she
recalls. “Then my Dad came home with the orders that we were moving to
Montgomery, Alabama, the hotbed of the civil rights movement! I held onto
that guitar for dear life!”
Alabama
proved to be a place of much richness for Beth.She lived
in Montgomery until she married in 1979 and relocated to
Mobile, Alabama. (She has since received a special award from The
Alabama Music Hall Of Fame and was recently the recipient of The
Distinguished Artist Award from the Alabama State Council on the Arts.)
Hearing It First, her debut album, was recorded in
Muscle Shoals and produced by Barry Beckett. Alas, it was
released by Capitol Records in 1980 – in the midst of the disco craze.
So Beth took a few years off and gave birth to a son,
Ernest Chapman III. In 1985, with the help
of music legends Mac MacAnally and Barry Beckett, her young
family made the move to Nashville.
By
1990, she was writing #1 hits for Tanya Tucker
and Willie Nelson and was signed as a pop artist to Warner/Reprise. Her first two albums for the
label were critically lauded, sold respectably
and spawned eight AC pop hits, earning her a devoted fan base at home
and overseas, particularly in the UK, where she has consistently been embraced by
the vastly popular BBC Radio 2.
In
1993, Nielsen Chapman's world was turned upside down when
her husband was diagnosed with cancer. Three years after his death, the
singer released a third album, 1997’s Sand And Water. The album's
title song, a highly moving meditation on living, dying and surviving,
took on a life of its own, bringing hope and comfort to countless people
struggling with grief. It was performed by
Elton John on his 1997 U.S. tour to honor the memory of Princess
Diana. Then, in 2000, just as she was finishing a new record called Deeper Still, incredibly, Nielsen
Chapman faced her own battle with breast cancer. Deeper Still, though not
released until 2002, after her treatments and recovery, is
filled with songs that seemed to foreshadow her diagnosis.
"It’s happened so many times in my writing - the songs have
preceded the events," says Beth, who was named
Nashville NAMMY’s 1999 Songwriter of the Year. "Seventy percent of Sand and
Water was written a year and a half before my husband was
diagnosed. I often just follow these lyric wisps and shadows until
things start to form and take shape. So I can be working on a song with
lines that are just coming together and not really know yet what I’m
writing it about. It was amazing to me when it happened again with Deeper Still.”
Beth’s music has been used in
numerous television shows and appeared on the soundtracks for movies such as “The Prince of
Egypt,” “Message In A Bottle,” “The Rookie,” “Where The
Heart Is” and “Practical Magic.” A renowned and
in-demand songwriting teacher and creative coach, Nielsen
Chapman has taught at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music & Drama,
The Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts and Berklee
School of Music. So she knows more than a
little about writer's block and how to deal with it. But when, after
eight months of effort, she found herself unable to complete lyrics for
some of Back To Love's key songs, her
best friend and most frequent co-writer, Annie Roboff
(with whom she co-wrote the Faith Hill chart-topper "This Kiss," which garnered a
GRAMMY® nomination and was ASCAP’s 1999 Song Of The Year), sensed that
something was very wrong.
"I
was sitting and waiting, but lyrically, the writing was not
happening," she remembers. "It was Annie who said, 'Something is not
right.'"
One of Back To
Love's solo-written songs, "Shadows," that reads as a
kind of mirror image of Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now," seemed once
again to portend trouble. “I remember telling Annie after finishing ‘Shadows’ how I was
thinking ‘Wow, I almost sound like…I don’t know…like I’m under
a rock or weighted down by something.’”
Doctors subsequently discovered that a fast growing but benign brain
tumor was affecting the language center of her brain. After a
successful operation, Beth’s creative muse
returned in a rush.
"I woke up the morning after surgery
and got the two lines I’d been struggling to figure out for 'How We
Love,' just like that,” she says. “It was like my
spirit was saying, 'Okay, we're back in business.'
“And one of my favorite songs on this collection, a song
Annie and I had been working on for several years, “Even As It
All Goes By,” just fell into place
following my surgery. After countless hours of rewrites and brick
walls between me and finishing that lyric….once the pressure was
relieved, the creativity rebounded!” she explains. (“Even As It
All Goes By” closed out 2009 as BBC Radio 2’s “Record of the Week” and was the only new
single added to the “A List” of BBC Radio 2’s playlist at the top of
2010.)
"Happiness," one of the
centerpieces of Back To Love, also has a history that spans the years.In 2000, during the most difficult time of her chemo treatments
for breast cancer, and in the darkest of moods, she started to write
this song.
"I was totally exhausted from the
treatments, so I thought, 'Well, I'm just going to personify happiness.
If it walked through the door, what would it look like?’” she says.
Nine years later, she scrawled the final lines
of “Happiness” on a paper towel in her kitchen, during that
creative burst following her surgery.
Despite the ups and downs and twists and turns, Nielsen
Chapman's spirit is stronger than ever. These days she's happily almost
married, and, not surprisingly, her longtime love affair has provided
plenty of grist for the creative mill, including two of Back To
Love's standout songs, the sublime torch ballad, "I'll Give My
Heart" (co-written with Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers’ keyboardist Benmont Tench), and "I Need You
Love," which eloquently details the singer's quirks and flaws while
celebrating and honoring the man that loves her anyway.
"There's this beautiful thing that happens when two people
stay together, each one showing up for the other when it most matters,"
she says. "That is an amazing thing, and I write about it at the same
time I’m learning how to dance in the middle of it."
Resilient in the face of tragedy, buoyed
by hope and healed by the music she's constantly creating, Beth Nielsen
Chapman is happier (and healthier!) than ever, and – as Back To
Love vividly attests – doing the best work of her life.
"Having been off on these different musical journeys, I’ve
loved this deep dive back into songs about human love and the human
heart," says Nielsen Chapman, who serves on the
Advisory Board for Peacejam as well as on the Board of Directors of
Healthy Child Healthy World. "I've always been drawn to
songs that are three-minute peepholes into the depth of our being
human, the attraction and the tragedies and the thirst for humor and how
we grow and learn and recover from it all; to me it all comes back to
love."
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