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Diane Birch (SXSW Session)

Diane Birch (SXSW Session)

Like You Were Walking Onto A Yacht

May 21, 2009

Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound engineering by Mike Gentry

  1.  
    Welcome to Daytrotter
  2.  
    Fools original version appears on Bible Belt This song is a sort of ode to the bullshit that I put up with while living in LA.  As much as I love the city in many respects, l also had repeated incidences of flakiness and false promises... as well as the typical dealings of people trying to put me into a mould in which I couldn't fit.  It also refers to a similar feeling I had growing up in which I didn't fit into the mould of my parent's world.
  3.  
    Ariel original version appears on Bible Belt My boyfriend was in China late summer for quite a while and skyping was our only form of contact.  Because the connection was always so bad it was hard to tell what his expressions were and what he was feeling sometimes.  He can be hard to read in general, so this only magnified that.  We had set an alarm for 11:59 on our phones so that at that moment we would both think of each other no matter where we were or what we were doing.
  4.  
    Don't Wait Up original version appears on Bible Belt When I was a teenager I was a pretty hard-core Goth girl.  I would sneak out of the house in a somewhat toned down version of my outfit and when i would get to my friends' houses I would lay on the crazy makeup and garb!  When I'd return home my parents would often be waiting up for me.  Because they were so conservative I knew they were gonna freak if they saw what I really was going out looking like!
  5.  
    Nothing But A Miracle original version appears on Bible Belt One of my greatest fears is to be in a relationship with no love, just the memory of it.  It's a song about that feeling of hopelessness once the flame has gone out.  It's easy to get so run down and lose sight of who you are....

Welcome back to the Brill Building, for the first time. It's been a long, long while since we've seen the insides of these hallowed office building walls, but Diane Birch has made them as vivid and alive as they could ever possibly be for people who've never been. She might be a squatter in the building as we speak, the most experienced tour guide, knowing where the creaky spots are in the floor, where it's the warmest and where it's the draftiest. She might have taken the time to familiarize herself with the tapestries, with the carpeting, with the specifics of in which chair each of the heavy hitters were in when they wrote certain lines or certain songs. "This is the very seat cushion that Carole King sat in, across the table from the very chair that Gerry Goffin sat in when they wrote 'Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?' Too much right? I know," she'd say with starry eyes and a crush forming again in her hands and chest and face. With some merely half-cooked attempt at research of photographic evidence of what those writing offices that King, Goffin, Neal Sedaka, Neil Diamond and others used as the laboratories for some of America's most resplendent acts of pure pop, the task was aborted with findings of just a few exterior shots of the New York City building and one interior photo of the lobby. It's better left to the imagination to get the rest of the aesthetic of that place, where gallons of coffee was drunk during those 9-to-5 days of punching in and punching out, cartons and cartons of cigarettes were flamed through as the words or melodies were coming to surface or struggling to be cooperative, becoming as numbing and frustrating as numbers that aren't crunching right or a pain in the ass customer who wants way too many ketchup packets. Songwriting as a job isn't such a dirty thought. It's how anyone improves at the craft and for being such a tender young writer, Birch is something to witness and behold, already with a handle on how to make the masses salivate, then drool without needing to patronize anyone or dumb it down. The pretty, string bean of an early 20-something from New York - the daughter of a preacher man - Birch sounds accomplished and delightful on her debut full-length, "Bible Belt." It's an album that sounds like a situation where champagne is being imbibed in a room already filled to the ceiling with champagne. You half expect there to be people walking into the party like they were walking onto a yacht. You expect there to be lots of accessories colored apricot and you expect there to be no way that this girl could pull it all off so easily, so heroically. It all sounds authentically golden, without the simple hint or indication that it wasn't coming from a very pure place of its own. It's not an homage to those songs that were penned in sterile rooms with beige (had to have been beige) walls and industrial strength carpeting, but a true understanding of the work that was done and a heartfelt attempt at being better. She's got the voice and she's got the writing chops to do that - even if it should be too early to say.

Diane Birch Official Site

Session Comments

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  1. Beautiful soulful sound. Unique sound that captures your soul! Keep em' coming! Visit the Cleveland area! Please! rt66runner Wednesday, March 10, 2010 6:23 pm
  2. funny about goth stuff about 6 years ago the lady and i were in new orleans and walkied into a club full of folks in black clothes and white faces being a bit over 50 we were suspect but as we were not parents we were "allowed" through the evening we described the 60's hippies long hair bell bottoms tie dye etc we have always found that listening to the young people and not giving advice is the best way to co exist how did we learn this through our kids hating to live with us, be seen with us, etc. oldtoad gil and the lady now just drift around making comp cd,s of indie folks and sending them to troop folks FREE around the world Imagine all you need is love (and a lot of time waiting for your parents to learn things from your age 14 to 21 lol) oldtoad gil Sunday, June 28, 2009 2:34 pm
  3. i cannot express...not even through interpretive dance...how much i love db Anonymous Wednesday, June 10, 2009 8:42 am
  4. I really love this stuff! I hope, her album will be available in Germany Schnappodil Friday, June 05, 2009 11:50 am
  5. I am a huge huge huge fan. i didn't have musical crush like that for a long time. Thank you! Anonymous Saturday, May 23, 2009 8:41 pm
  6. I love what she is doing. Just perfect! Anonymous Saturday, May 23, 2009 8:40 pm
  7. When is she coming to Ohio!!! This stuff is AMAZING.... hunterxtc Saturday, May 23, 2009 5:07 pm
  8. yeah this is ace! keep it up!! ericwelles Friday, May 22, 2009 1:33 pm
  9. well written! a new star is born. Can't wait to see her on June 4th in new york. i've just bought tickets. Anonymous Friday, May 22, 2009 7:45 am
  10. Wow. this is brilliant. thank you. Anonymous Friday, May 22, 2009 7:44 am
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