Showing posts with label Dave Simpson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Simpson. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Suzanne Vega's teenage obsessions / 'Taxi Driver captured something awful but made it beautiful'

 

Suzanne Vega … ‘I’ve started dancing at my shows, but yet to go full disco.’ Composite: George Holz

TEENAGE KICKS

Suzanne Vega's teenage obsessions: 'Taxi Driver captured something awful but made it beautiful'

In the first of a weekly series where film and music stars discuss their youthful fixations, the US singer recalls silly walks and Saturday Night Fever dance classes


Interview by Dave Simpson
Thu 3 Sep 2020 16.30 BST


Songs of Leonard Cohen

After 1967, when this came out, if a stranger asked: “What’s your name, little girl?” and I said: “Suzanne,” they’d go: “Oh, like the song?” And I’d stare at them thinking: “What song?” Then I heard this beautiful version of Cohen’s song Suzanne by Judy Collins. I was so relieved that the song was beautiful and … weird! In 1974, when I was 14, I saw the album in the record store, took the risk and fell in love with it. All the songs were so beautiful, interesting and intimate, and he used a nylon string acoustic guitar which I’d just started playing. I didn’t realise how funny Leonard was until I got to know him. In 1988, I went to see him at Carnegie Hall and met his sister, a big woman in a brightly coloured dress. When she said: “He’s been dying to meet you,” my inner teenager was thrilled. The next time we met was for a very well-known photoshoot when he had my head in his hands, mashed up against his chest, which was … [laughs] very exciting. That was the photographer’s idea, but Leonard didn’t complain, let’s put it that way. I still listen to the album, and consider it a good friend.

Friday, October 16, 2020

Carla Bruni's teenage obsessions: 'Francis Bacon shows our confusion, desire, madness'

 

Carla Bruni

TEENAGE KICKS


Carla Bruni's teenage obsessions: 'Francis Bacon shows our confusion, desire, madness'

As she returns with a new album, the French chanteuse recalls the genius of the Clash and Henry James, plus encounters with Balearic naturists


Interview by Dave Simpson
Fri 16 Oct 2020 10.00 BST


The Clash

As a teenager in Paris all I wanted was travel, freedom and independence. I started working [in modelling] right after my high school exam and didn’t go to university because I wanted to be an adult. I was a bit of a rebel. For me, growing up was about discovering where the boundaries were and breaking them. Like the “terrible twos”, but in adolescence.