Suzanne Vega grew
up in Spanish Harlem and the Upper West Side and began to write poetry at the
age of nine. She picked up a guitar at age 11 and wrote her first song at age
14. She later majored in English literature at Barnard College by day and began
performing in the Greenwich Village folk revival circuit by night. Vega had an
international hit with a song from her second album, Solitude Standing, "Luka," which she wrote from the point
of view of an abused child. The a cappella "Tom's Diner" from this
album was later a hit, remixed by two British dance producers under the name DNA, in 1990. Since then, some of Vega's
albums introduced industrial sounds to her folk roots and became more critics' favorites
than commercial successes. Vega's eighth album, Tales from the Realm of the Queen of Pentacles, is her first new
studio album in seven years, and will be available on February 18.
Vega tonight performed a 45-minute set at Chez Andre, introducing eight songs
from her forthcoming album and revisiting three older songs. Accompanied by Gerry Leonard on guitar, she opened
with "Marlene on the Wall," an oblique autobiographical song about
coping with loneliness and finding comfort by looking at a poster of Marlene Dietrich on the wall. Vega
then performed eight of the 10 songs from her forthcoming album, pretty much in
order, and closed with "Luka" and "Tom's Diner." Vega sang
the songs in her trademark soft and vibrato-less voice. She did not bare the
emotions of her heart, but rather her lyrics made her appear as if she were an
old world philosopher trying to explain the workings of the world from her
poetic perspective. Meanwhile, Leonard did the experimental work, starting Vega's
songs by playing a bass line or rhythm on his guitar, capturing it on the electronic
gear by his shoes and then playing lead guitar lines over the just-recorded backtrack.
Leonard's feet pushed an array of buttons as much as his fingers played the
guitar. This sometimes led to an eerie effect. Vega has never stayed within the
safety zone, however, and her presentation tonight furthered her unique modernization
of the traditional singer-songwriter folk genre.
Visit Suzanne Vega at www.suzannevega.com.

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