There are no products in your shopping cart.
Serena Ryder Rides High on Success
It’s
a couple of days after the
“I
was watching the election on my computer, because I don’t have a TV. I thought,
Wow, for kids born into this, it won’t be history, it will just be.”
And
when those same kids are cognizant of music, Serena Ryder won’t be this year’s
breakout artist, she’ll just be.
With
a harmonious relationship with a major label and talent supported by solid
performing skills, Ryder is well-prepared.
She’s
already been featured at the massive Lollapalooza and Bonnaroo festivals. At a
time when many young artists are turning towards independent production and
distribution, the 25-year-old
This
talented multi-instrumentalist wrote her first song at 13 and released her
first indie record at 15. Talking to Ryder, it becomes apparent that this wasn’t
a vanity act of a musically precocious teen, but rather an inevitability, and a
way to test the waters. Her first gig was an impromptu song at a family wedding
when she was two. By the time she was eight, she was occasionally performing
publicly at places like the Miss Diana Motor Hotel.
“It
was a kind of shady place on the side of some highway. It was the Halloween
Howl and I got up and sang Buddy Holly dressed as vampire.”
Around
that time, Ryder was taking piano lessons, but her teacher was much more
interested in her singing than her playing ability. For this self-confessed “AM
radio kid,” it was in discovering Alanis Morrisette that she found vindication
for the emotional storm that accompanies most young women through adolescence.
“I
was 13 when Jagged Little Pill came
out. It said in words and music things I couldn’t yet describe.”
Listening
to the album was like listening to someone bursting out of her body.
“When
you’re becoming a woman and going trough this period of dramatic growth,
everything feels much closer and more intense,” she says. “The beautiful thing
about being a woman is the connection with the emotional part of yourself.”
Accessing
the emotional part became essential to Ryder when she began writing her own
songs and realizing just how important music was to her.
“It
was my medicine,” she recollects. “Nothing else could make me feel myself.”
After
she’d almost worn out her copy of Jagged Little
Pill, Ryder found herself motivated by a host
of other women who were changing the definition of popular music while working
on their own terms. Among her other influences were Tracy Chapman, Ani DiFranco
and Melissa Etheridge.
“Their
music felt very intuitive. They sang about things that aren’t easily put into
words.”
Other
influences in Ryder’s life include her parents.
“My
mother was a good example of a powerful woman. When I was growing up she was a
graphic designer at
A
strong sense of security has allowed the musician to take control of her career
and make changes as necessary. For example, when Ryder eventually found the
indie road to be paved with lots of sweat and not a lot of reward, she signed
on with Hawksley Workman’s label, Isadora Records. This pairing resulted in
2005’s Unlikely Emergency.
While the CD showcased Ryder’s considerable abilities as a songwriter, it was
her a cappella version of the 1941 standard “At Last” that was the standout.
Ryder proved herself capable of taking on Etta James’ signature tune and making
it her own.
Among
the people who took note of Ryder’s exquisite vocals was Frank Davies, founder
of the Canadian
Songwriters’
Hall of Fame. Singing at a press conference for the organization, Ryder so
impressed the organization’s executive director that the two soon found
themselves working on If Your Memory Serves You Well.
The 2006 album, her debut on EMI, consisted of 12 covers and three original
compositions. The covers range from the AMfriendly remake of “Good Morning
Starshine,” from the Broadway musical Hair,
to the stellar remake of Paul Anka’s “It Doesn’t Matter Anymore.” While
unmistakably diverse, the selections were all from the Great Canadian Songbook.
For
a major-label debut to be a collection of covers is rather unusual, even risky.
But If Memory Serves You Well expanded
Ryder’s audience and made the critics stand up and take notice.
For
Ryder, recording covers was oddly liberating.
“You
can do covers for fun,” she says. “You don’t have to have that intense personal
investment when it’s someone else’s words. The performance comes from a
different place, you can play dress-up.”
If
Your Memory Serves You Well effectively
laid the groundwork for her
sophomore EMI effort, the newly released is it o.k.?
While
the title track refers to the eternal question that plagues many women, the
resulting album is much more than okay, it’s fantastic.
Ryder
has three distinct talents that should ensure the type of longevity enjoyed by
few musicians. First, there’s her voice, a distinctively raspy instrument that
has been compared to artists as diverse Janis Joplin and Aretha Franklin.
Second is the rare quality of that voice, a three-octave wonder that is a beautiful
contrast to the thin-voiced, factory-produced popsters who currently dominate
pop music charts. Third, she writes songs that somehow seem wiser than her
years. But after a couple of listenings, they really do sound 25, in much the
same way Morrisette’s Jagged Little Pill spoke
to Ryder’s generation, or Joni Mitchell’s Blue spoke
to young women of her mother’s generation—in their own, unique voices.
Released
in November and pending a
is
it o.k.? is not all about painful ballads,
although there are other soul-rippers here, including “
But
it’s the bluesy “What I Wanna Know” that has a truly soul-stirring vocal
delivery. Featured as the closing number on the Bravo-produced concert that
accompanied the release of is
it o.k.?, “What I Wanna Know” is
astounding.
With
both a percussion arrangement and a melody that wouldn’t be out of place on a
K.T.Tunstall album, this song plays to all of Ryder’s strengths. Ryder’s a
damned fine poet, player and singer who operates with the minimum amount of ego
(she refers to ego as the root of all evil) required to do the work.
“The
more that I’ve lived, the more I realize it’s really about coming from the
inside out. That’s when you connect with people,” she says. “You have to honour
those little voices inside.”
Realizing
that half of Canadian schools have no music programs, Ryder has partnered with
other Toronto-area musicians to work on Music Monday, a project of the
Coalition for Music Ed in
“I
think the biggest piece of advice I can give other young women is to really
figure out what your message is. Figure out your purpose.”
With
the release of is it o.k.? Ryder
has found her purpose—crafting songs that will surely make their way into the
Great Canadian Songbook.




![Expand cart block. []](/sites/all/modules/ubercart/uc_cart/images/bullet-arrow-up.gif)
Comments