Although
she laughs as she says it,
Petra Jean Phillipson isn’t
joking when she says she “wants
to pull people all over the
place emotionally” with
her music. Listening to ‘Notes
On Love’, this 32-year-old
singer-songwriter’s
exceptional debut album,
you can see what she means.
Records this honest and affecting
are rare, but records which
ensnare you from the start
and leave you craving more,
as this one does, are rarer
still. Make no mistake; ‘Notes
On Love’ is a dark
and bewitching album from
a major new talent set for
great things.
Petra
is the first to admit it’s
a “heavy” record,
not just because of its
intimate, defiant tone
and deeply personal lyrics,
but because she’s
had plenty of experiences
to draw from. Music was
her first love and at 8
she formed a band at school
in Ashford, Kent. Over
the years she’s honed
her craft in countless
combos across the country,
providing vocals for like-minded
musicians such as Martina
Topley-Bird, The Beta Band,
Mad Professor, David Holmes,
Marc Almond, Grand Drive
and assorted hip hop acts
in New York and London. “I’ve
always been around really
interesting people who
are good at what they do.”
Writing
constantly and determined
to one day carve a solo career,
Petra has built up a stunning
body of songs which form ‘Notes
On Love’. Recorded
at the end of last year in
London’s Mayfair Studios
with her pal Si Tong, once
guitarist in The Verve, the
album closes an eventful
chapter in Petra’s
life. “When I started
writing this record eight
years ago, the same time
I moved to London, it was
just voice and guitar with
another guitar… and
that was it”.
If
her soul-rich purr sounds
familiar (there are shades
of Billie Holiday) that’s
because three years ago she
found a kind of fame fronting
The Free Association, that
psychedelic punk-funk ensemble
helmed by her producer friend,
David Holmes, who lately
scored Ocean’s Twelve.
She met him through Martina
Topley-Bird, a close friend
who lived round the corner
from her London home. One
day he phoned her to ask
if she fancied recording
some vocals in LA with him.
She went for a week and ended
up staying three months.
The
Free Association didn’t
sell stacks of records but
the group promoted the LP
heavily on TV and the road.
Petra appeared on Later… With
Jools Holland and played
Glastonbury and football
stadia in Europe. As much
as she enjoyed the attention,
after a while it sent her
loopy. “You’re
in this bubble, getting driven
everywhere and you’re
not treated like a human
being because people think
you’re a pop star.
Your family goes weird, your
friends go weird, they fall
out with you. Everyone goes
weird.” In-between
touring and still suffering
the effects, Petra retreated
to a studio in Devon with
producers Rob Ellis and Head
to record a version of her
album, however, she wasn’t
happy with the results and
the sessions were aborted.
Ellis,
of course, came to prominence
as the producer of Polly
Harvey’s debut, ‘Dry’,
a record that some might
propose shares certain qualities
with ‘Notes On Love’:
a raw, bluesy, confrontational
approach to song writing,
for one. "The most important
thing I learnt at the time
was that no one gave P J
Harvey that sound apart from
Polly. It taught me that
I needed to play more of
the instruments myself. It
was the only way I was to
find my authentic sound and
Si really helped me do that. "
In
her childhood Petra lived
for a spell in Australia,
on returning to Ashford,
she found she didn’t
fit in with the kids she’d
grown up with. As a teenager
into hip hop – KRS-1
was a favourite – she’d
nip up to London to check
out what was going on in
the clubs and who was wearing
what, then catch the milk
train home. “I think
music really saved me in
my teens. It takes you out
of yourself, it’s a
great distraction.” Mainly,
like most inquisitive teens,
she just wanted to escape
her hometown. She took a
year’s art foundation
course at St. Martin’s
but loathed her pretentious
peers, then enrolled in an
art degree in Bath where
she produced installations.
Today she works as a conservator
at St. Paul’s Cathederal.
While
in Bath she ran a hip hop
night called The Swamp where
she would play a difficult
mix of music, from Hazel
O’Connor and the Beastie
Boys to Blondie and The Specials,
then going back to America
for a Horse with No Name.
She then learnt her trade
in “all girl punk funk
line ups” attracting
interest from Fierce Panda,
nailing vocals in one take
and perfecting her guitar
playing while travelling
across the globe.
Falling
particularly in love with
New York, she tried to move
there in order to make a
record with the credible
indie label Mush records,
however, it wasn’t
to be and her adventures
across the Atlantic only
fuelled her desire to write
her own material. Once, on
her 23rd birthday, she asked
a stranger for directions
to a restaurant for a celebratory
meal. That person turned
out to be that quintessential
Englishman, Quentin Crisp,
whom she adored. Five years
on in the same city, she
decided to ring him up and
take him to lunch, as was
customary for Crisp aficionados
during his penurious twilight
years.
“I
got his number from the phone
book. Hello my name’s
Petra, would you like to
have lunch? And he’s
like, ‘Oh my dear darling!’ and
then gave me the diner address
and said, ‘I’ll
be on parade like a Dutch
prostitute!’ He goes
to the same place every day
and you just pay for his
lunch, very cheap. He was
really humble and lovely.”
Ask
Petra why she thinks other
artists like working with
her, she says: “Because
I just get really excited
and enthusiastic. I like
work, I love music and film,
all those things, I really
love them. And I love making
things and I’m a bit
crazy. I have to keep doing
things otherwise I go totally
mad, which means a lot gets
made.”
Now,
with ‘Notes On Love’,
a record that easily eclipses
all she’s done before,
Petra can finally enjoy success
on her own terms. |