Lisa Marie Presley tunes in to her roots with âStorm & Graceâ
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.
With a little help from T Bone Burnett, Lisa Marie Presley gets back to bluesy-country basics in âStorm & Graceâ and breaks free from outside expectations.
Lisa Marie Presley doesnât seem to mind that everyone in the penthouse office of Simon Fullerâs XIX Entertainment in West Hollywood can see her when she extends both of her middle fingers in the direction of a reporter.
She used the gesture to exemplify how she felt about being asked to promote a âsexier imageâ at one point in her career. But for a woman whose life has been defined by public scrutiny, the move spoke volumes. Presley, 44, is done trying to live up to expectations that arenât her own.
More proof? Her first album in seven years, âStorm & Graceâ (out this week) finds Presley singing, âShe got no talent of her own, itâs just her name,â on deluxe-edition track âSticks and Stones,â her voice a painful wail while slide guitars whisk around her like unseen demons. In âUn-Break,â Presley wonders whether she was once a âbackstabbing liarâ and is only getting what she deserves against the sound of shuffling western-gothic grooves.
The album, her first for Universal Republic, may serve as a career reboot, but it also brings her back to her family roots, pairing her dusty, robust vocals with moody country and blues accents made famous by the Sun Studio recording house that captured the voice of her father. The stripped-down affair is produced by T Bone Burnett, an artist with a reputation for possessing a reverential, encyclopedic view of the American songbook.
Itâs a far cry from Presleyâs last album â a polished affair marked by glossy, Top 40 guitars and studio-enhanced vocals. âYeah, I know,â Presley interrupts talk about the slick nature of her last release. âI was behind that. I tried to smooth it over, to hide behind it. I wanted louder guitars. I wanted the vocals tripled. All that.â
âI was insulated,â Presley says of that time, adding that she surrounded herself with a team of friends and employees who told her only what she wanted to hear.
âThere was a scene woven around me that I had helped weave,â she says. âIt was a personal scene -- employees, friends. It was an entourage. Thatâs all a big mistake. Itâs all the stuff that happens to a typical L.A., high-profileâŚâ
Presley trails off and waves her hand, palm up, as if to say, âYou know, that scene.â But no one really does. After all, Elvis, the King of Rock ânâ Roll, had but one daughter, and itâs not many who see their childhood home in Memphis, Tenn., become an internationally renown tourist attraction. That says nothing of Presleyâs penchant for dominating the tabloids in her late 20s and early 30s, largely due to her short-lived marriage to Michael Jackson.
After releasing and promoting âNow What,â Presley embarked on a research project: herself. While certainly not ignorant of what was said and written about her -- specifically the outside expectations of how she was or wasnât living up to her last name -- Presley says she was shielded from much of it.
âI went through a period where I was so upset at how obscured I had been from all of that,â she says. âI intentionally sought out everything bad that was written about me. If youâre looking for it, youâre going to get it.â
âStorm & Graceâ gives it right back. First single âYou Ainât Seen Nothinâ Yetâ is a casual statement of defiance, a tough little saunter of a song in which a spiteful Presley talks about bucking the system. Later, the brushed rhythms and echoing chimes of âSo Longâ seem to emerge from a cemetery fog, with Presley, just above a whisper, telling off âfair-weather friendsâ and churches that âdonât have a soul.â
Ask Presley, who once spoke openly and favorably of the Church of Scientology, for more details on her lyrics, and sheâll keep things vague. The songs, and particularly the first single, she says, are âabout finding out what your mother or your parents or your counselor or your therapist or your teacher or your priest really think about you, and finding out they [donât think highly] of you, actually.â Her words, however, were a bit more colorful.
When Burnett heard the track âUn-Break,â he agreed to produce the album. âI was struck by how real she was in some of the songs,â he says. âIt was sung in an incredibly unaffected way. I love when a singer sings like Sinatra, when itâs conversational. Thatâs the greatest challenge in singing, and she did that.â
The album was brought to Burnett by Fuller, Presleyâs manager who is best-known for creating the âAmerican Idolâ franchise but also works with a host of more idiosyncratic artists, including Annie Lennox and local independent R&B singer Aloe Blacc. It was Fuller who encouraged Presley to retreat to England, where she now lives, and suggested she collaborate on songwriting with Pulp guitarist Richard Hawley and singer-songwriter Ed Harcourt.
Presley says it was a conscious effort to avoid her earlier tendency to âjack upâ the production. Though she likes the songs on her first two albums, she was uncomfortable with everything that came along with selling them, and now regrets having been placed âin some category with other pop/rock stars.â
âIf Iâm pushed somewhere,â Presley says, âIâll go the other way. So when someone came backstage and told me to dress sexy, I went out and wore giant combat boots and safety pins and did whatever I could to not be sexy.â
If the line between Burnett and her father isnât direct, it does exist. Burnett worked with Elvis contemporary Roy Orbison, and recorded with Elvisâ TCB Band on records he produced with Elvis Costello.
âI have to say, I very much wanted to make a record her dad would have dug,â Burnett says. âThat was important to me. I wanted to make a record everybody would dig, but especially him, for some reason. Heâs such an inspirational figure. Sheâs part of our royal family.â
Thereâs no irony, Burnett says, in Presley retreating to England to reconnect with a sound that draws from her roots. He clarifies that she had to âdisconnect with those other American roots,â the ones that encouraged her to chase pop stardom. Presley phrases it as a search for something sheâs never really known: normalcy.
âWhen I moved to England I would hang out at the local pub, and they were such good people there,â Presley says. âThey knew right from wrong. If someone came in and was drunk and acting like a jerk, theyâd get thrown out. There was common sense. I needed to be around people with common sense.â
ALSO:
Norah Jones says âLittle Broken Heartsâ is a ânatural evolutionâ
Exclusive video: Los Lobosâ watershed 1992 âKikoâ album returns
Donald âDuckâ Dunn: Honoring a Stax master -- and âTime Is Tightâ
-- Todd Martens