Kirsten Morrell is taking a sabbatical from Goldenhorse. She talks to Gary Steel about her debut solo album, Ultra Violet.
Witchdoctor โ Why? What? Where?
Kirsten โ Yeah, well during Goldenhorse I got messed around a little bit, so I picked up my pen, wrote and recorded this album, and it started from there, to turn things around, really, and recorded this album in London lounges, and the Lab in Auckland. Jol Mullholland produced, played keyboard and guitar and drums, Geoff Maddock played guitar and drums, I played keyboards and guitar, a little, and vocals.
WD โ How long did it take to do?
K โ 18 months.
WD โ How did you record it in lounges?
K โ Happily! You donโt have the same problems you might get in a studio, a relaxed environment where youโre surrounded by gear. I wrote all the songs and mused upon their meanings and it went from there. Hmm. Um, some of these songs, you could say this is an album of songs I wrote for myself, Iโd say thereโs songs on there that I wrote specifically for people and a couple of environmental songs on thereโฆ
WD โ Is that part of your Greenpeace ambassadorial role?
K โ No, itโs got the usual themes of love, unrequited love, and life. I got invited to Copenhagen during the climate summit and attended a culture futures workshop, and it was loads of fun playing โBetterโ, which is one of my songs off the album.
WD โ That specifically alludes to the environmental situation, does it?
K โ Yeah. In East London, I was living in Hackney at the time, and I was sitting in a park writing songs as you do, and that one came about. And โMarianneโ too, is sort of imagery of oceans and another song that I feel isnโt just the usual theme, soโฆ
Do you know in the 21st Century, thereโs about 360,000 whales โ this is what Iโm thinking about at the moment โ 360,000 whales were killed under harpoon.
WD โ In the 20th century?
K โ In the 21stโฆ in the 20th century, yeah. These are issues that are relevant to us, now.
WD โ What do you think about the boats going after the Japanese fleet?
K โ Itโs atrocious. The whole Japanese thing is appalling.
WD โ So you think itโs a good idea to chase them?
K โ Iโm sorry, I didnโt listen to your question, did I (laughs). Iโm reading a book called Leviathan, which is fascinating, itโs the history of whale. Itโs awful to think that someone could bite into a piece of whale steak and go โyumโ. And that starts off a whole industry. The issues are there andโฆ hmm (laughs). Are you going to ask me about the super city next?
WD โ No, itโs just that they kill race horses when theyโre past their best, and nobody cares about the poor race horses.
K โ Well they do, and I think itโs not enough to turn a blind eye to these issues. No I find that kind of fascinating that thereโs that kind of statistic, I think it was the blue whale, that was killed in the 21st century ย by hunting.
WD โ Uh, 20th. Do you consider yourself a major environmentalist?
K โ I think itโs a natural pursuit. I grew up on a self-sufficient farm, my parents moved from London and started a โ you wouldnโt call it organic now, because itโs all become certified โ it was an organic, self-sufficient farm.
WD โ Were they hippies?
K โ Umm, more intellectuals. And the name Ultra Violet is based on violet, the flower, and thatโs another endangered species. In Britain youโre not allowed to pick bluebells, because theyโre dying out.
WD โ How would you describe the difference of the music on your solo to that of Goldenhorse?
K โ The same bold beautiful music, the difference is that itโs 50 percent me writing. Um. Folk electro pop. Um. Same lilting vocals [laughs].
WD โ So before your contribution was more the vocals and melody line, and now itโs more that plus aspects of the music itself?
K โ Yeah, this isnโt interesting to people in interviews, but in Goldenhorse the writing was always 50-50 mine and Geoffreyโs. So I would sit there with a guitar and put the song across, and the band would take it up, and Geoff would do the same thing. And that happened with the recording of Ultra Violet as well. It was just geographically shared between London and, um, Auckland. Yeah.
I donโt want to meet Lemmy from Motorhead again. [laughs]. Or Alice Cooper.
WD โ In London?
K โ No, in LA and Germany.
WD โ How did that happen?
K โ We were on tour in Hamburg and Lemmy and I bumped into each other. Theyโd just soundchecked, weโd just played and we met each other in the alleyway, and he pointed me towards the bathroom and shower. He was coming out with his towel. Rockโnโroll.
WD โ And you donโt want to meet him again?
K โ Just introducing a new theme.
WD โ Heโs a really intelligent guy.
K โ Yeah. He is, yeah. He bought five albums of Out Of The Moon. He said they would listen to it on their tour bus.
WD โ Are you living in New Zealand?
K โ Iโm living in New Zealand. The Kiwi land. My New Zealand family is based in Wellington. They were all born in Lyall Bay.
WD โ So you went to England for a whileโฆ
K โ My English family live in England, obviously. No, ย Iโve been here. Overseas stuff is all to do with touring. We filmed the video to โGhostsโ in London in the top of Hamstead Heath which is good, because thatโs where I was born, so it was really exciting to get the opportunity to do that.
WD – Did you feel honoured to make it into the 100 Essential New Zealand Albums book?
K โ Yes, I read Nickโs book, well I havenโt read the whole book but, brilliant.
WD โ Did he choose the right album? They should all have been in there, right?
K โ Yeah, thatโs right, they should have all been in there [laughs]. Riverhead was a great album, sonically beautiful, yeah. I tried to do a little bit of that with Ultra-Violet, songs like โLet Me Goโ, we wrote a groovy kind of handcrafted beat to begin with. Riverhead we did a lot of unusual recording โ we reversed the order of recording, and it made a beautiful sound.
Iโm enjoying Auckland at the moment, I can see myself one day when Iโm older sitting at the opera and falling asleep happily while being lulled by the performance. I think itโs another city where the rules are beingโฆ driven out. Interesting timesโฆ [laughs]
WD – You started out singing opera, didnโt you?
K โ No, I started out doing a solo band. I didnโt start opera until I was 22, and I sang in the New Zealand Opera for two years, a national singer.
WD โ So why donโt you sing like that on your pop records?
K โ [laughs]. Iโm not going to answer that question. Itโs not my fach. That means my voice type. Itโs the opera term.
WD โ Voice trainers would say you could damage your voice by singing in the pop style.
K โ People do damage their voices. I got the technique sorted.
WD โ So your voice doesnโt get tired?
K โ I get tired, but my voice, I havenโt damaged my voice.
WD โ No special way?
K โ Opera training.
WD โ Two cigarettes before the performance.
Kย – [laughs] Iโm not autonomous about it, but yeah. Do you want lessons? [laughs] No, I donโt smoke.
WD โ But you donโt have any special technique to make sure you keep your voice.
K โ Yeah I do. Actually this afternoon Iโm going to be singing some opera, Iโm doing a piece out of Turandotย at the moment.
WD โ For?
K โ Just studying.
WD โ Do you see yourself, as you get older, getting more and more into that.
K โ Well this is what Iโm working on now. Ultra-Violet is an album Iโm really happy with, and it would be great to have an audience, but then do it again.
WD โ What kind of audience are you envisaging for this?
K โ The New Zealand audience. I suppose the audience I already have.
WD โ If you got the opportunity to work with any musicians in the world โ to put together a supergroup โ who would your choices be?
K โ [big pause] Thatโs a really tricky question. The lead singer of the Jesus & Mary Chain, and Geoff Maddock from Golden Horse. I could say Puccini, who wrote Turandot, and various others. You choose and you work with whoโs friends and whoโs there. But thatโs the great thing about it, music. I flew Jol Mullholland over to London, and rang him up and said โhey, do you want to produce an albumโ, and I said โcool, how about in the next two weeksโ, so thatโs how these things start.