LeAnn Rimes debuts in the Top Ten on Billboard’s Top Country Album chart with new album SPITFIRE
Wraps up whirlwind LA and NY media tour with appearances on The Tonight Show, Chelsea Lately, GMA and The View
THE TRUTH IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER
Most
bios for albums talk about the artist’s achievements and accolades, but
you all can Google that. I don’t want to do that at this point in my
life. I’ve been making music for eighteen years, but I’ve never felt
like people really saw me as a person. They saw me as a prodigy with a
big voice. I felt like an alien child. I don’t want to be “LeAnn Rimes,”
a name in lights. I want people who listen to my music to see me, know
me, recognize me, as a normal human being who can sing and write and, I
hope, connect with me through my music in a deeper way than ever before.
That’s
what this album is about for me. I took a step back from the years of
work and came back to the essence of what music means to me. I made this
album for me, for the pure joy of making music, and I think the power
of that shows. I looked as this record as making a film. Every song that
I wrote and every song I recorded by another songwriter fit the whole
vision and story that I wanted to tell. In this album, I’m speaking more
honestly than I ever have, from the truth and pain and love in my life
and hoping that people connect with those emotions.
I’m not just a
voice—I have something to say. I met my husband Eddie under complicated
circumstances, and you can Google that too, but if you really want my
truth, just listen to the music. The experience of meeting him, falling
in love with him, and weathering the resulting fallout has taught me and
changed me. It opened me up to being myself and not what everyone
wanted or expected me to be. The last three years have been a time of
taking things apart and putting them back together on my terms. I’m
grown up, but I still had a child in me that hadn’t been able to
develop. Now it has. Writing songs from such a personal space is part of
that growth. I’m learning to let go of myself and just feel the emotion
of what I’m doing. On this album, I feel like people are going on that
journey with me. We’re embarking on it together.
Spitfire covers a
range of emotions that I’ve experienced in my lifetime, from anger to
love, from frustration to letting go. My co-producer and co-writer
Darrell and I talked about telling that story in chronological order,
but that didn’t work sonically, so Darrell said, “It’s the truth…in no
particular order.” And isn’t that what life is about?
Darrell
Brown and I have been writing together for ten years. Over the years he
has taught me so much about the writing process. He’s my writing
soulmate. I trusted Darrell to bring in some co-writers that he knew I
could be just as honest with. He brought in Dan Wilson and David
Baerwald. I had faith in Darrell, but I had no idea that when it came to
songwriting I’d click with those two the way we did. I used to be
afraid to say what I was thinking. I worried that if I threw out an idea
that sucked, people would think less of me. Now I just dive in! We all
throw out ideas that suck, and then we find something we all like.
With
me and Darrell, David co-wrote “What Have I Done?” one of the most
soulfully transparent songs on this album, and he also co-wrote with us
“Spitfire” and “A Waste is a Terrible Thing to Mind.”
My favorite
moment of recording this album might have been working on “Borrowed.” I
didn’t know Dan Wilson at the time, but he’d written “Someone Like You”
for Adele. There are so many songs on that record that I love so much.
Explaining to Dan what I wanted to express in “Borrowed” was a special
moment for me. I went to a deep, dark place that I’ve never shared with
anyone, but one that so many of us have experienced: waiting around for
someone to call, watching TV, alone, lonely, wondering if it was going
to end or was already over. That period wasn’t a memory I wanted to
revisit, but I think I had to face it. And to be that open with someone I
didn’t know was very cathartic and a revelation for me as a songwriter.
Dan also co-wrote with us the song, “I Do Now.”
When I first met
Niko Bolas, who engineered the record, I told him that I couldn’t stand
having the microphone hanging down in front of me. I always wanted to
sing with the microphone in my hand, but all the engineers I’d ever
worked with told me I couldn’t do it. They’d say, “You won’t sound the
same. It’ll bleed.” But Niko is fearless. He said, “Whatever you want,
we’ll make it work.” Somehow he figured it out. I stood there in the
middle of everyone and experienced live music instead of being in the
booth. Holding a mic, I felt like I could do whatever I wanted. I
recorded “What Have I Done?” lying flat on my back.
We initially
recorded with as simple a band as possible. We wanted acoustic
instruments and steel as the focal point. We added electric guitar on a
few songs, a little B-3, and background vocals, but we tried not to
build too much on the original tracks. Willie Weeks plays bass and
upright. Steve Jordan is on drums. Dan Tyminski is on acoustic,
mandolin, and background vocals. Paul Franklin plays steel guitar. Waddy
Wachtel and Dean Parks are on acoustics as well.
I was lucky that
Dan Tyminsky, who plays with Alison Krauss and Union Station, was
teaching himself “What Have I Done” on the bus while they were on tour.
Alison called Darrell to ask to sing on it. I was awestruck. She and Dan
Tyminsky sing backup together.
We experimented with a couple
mixers, and we weren’t getting exactly what we wanted. Then we went to
Vance Powell, who mixed the last several Jack White records. I knew I
loved his stuff. So Darrell played him some of the basic tracks we
recorded, and Vance said, “I have to do this.” We gave him “Spitfire” to
try mixing first. It kicked down the walls!!
Al Schmitt, the god
of all mixers, works down the hall in Capitol Studios, where we were
recording. One day he popped his head in and asked, “Can I mix that?” He
ended up mixing three or four songs for us.
Alison, Dan Tyminsky,
Dan Wilson, Rob Thomas, Jeff Beck, Vance Powell, Willie, Steve Jordan,
so many people moved their lives around to work on this record. Every
time I reached out to someone whose work inspired me and they said yes, I
was blown away. Nobody had heard any of the music yet, but they wanted
to come create together.
As a kid, I used to get easily tired of
working in the studio. I have a short attention span. But now that I’m
writing my own stuff and it has meaning, it’s a completely different
experience. The people I worked with felt like a family, and I didn’t
want our time in the studio to end. I don’t think anyone did.
This
album is a peek into my world; who I am, what I’ve gone through, what
my emotions are. It’s an intimate conversation between myself and
whomever’s listening. I hope I’m saying things that are hard for others
to express. It certainly took me a lot of work to get to this point. And
it’s still easier to sing these thoughts than it is to say them out
loud. The intimacy in my music is just beginning.
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