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The Aesthetic Cotillion of Barbara Nesbitt
Written by Simeon Flick
You walk into a certain Mission Valley Hotel on a Friday night because you've heard they have live music there a few times a week and won't for much longer. The lounge is called "Postcards," and you chuckle to yourself because most hotel bars and restaurants seem to have sentimental, touristy monikers like "Memories" or "Reflections."
You pass through the lobby into the lounge proper and see gig flyers for a guy named Christopher Dale fanned out on the long bar counter and luxuriating on tables of myriad height and design throughout the room. The lighting is low-key and sultry, and you're wondering what record they're playing over the hotel PA.no, wait - the music is actually emanating from a stage off to the right, in the deep heart of the lounge alcove!
There's a blondish woman up on the small riser flanked by two gruff and capable-looking musician dudes who probably roll out of bed in the morning and eat music for breakfast. Blondie croons strong and true, with a voice like a steam train whistle resounding down a long valley; the two gentlemen occasionally sing along, creating tight three-part harmonies reminiscent of Crosby, Stills, and Nash in their seventies heyday (no wonder you thought you were hearing a record), but less pretentious, more believable in this day and age. No bones about it: the acoustic trio in front of you is performing in a way that makes you feel like you're watching a sunset on the South rim of the Grand Canyon with your lover at your side and your favorite alcoholic beverage in your hand.
The music you still can't quite believe you're actually hearing is monolithically strong in its vulnerability, highly personal but somehow universal at the same time, familiar and yet hard to place like the name of that A-list actor on the tip of your tongue who cameo'd in that great indie film. The sound is memorable, full of hooks like a veteran stream fisher's hat, but without overstaying its welcome. You want to call it country or Americana but that wouldn't be entirely true. You want to compare her to other American female artists like Melissa Etheridge or Emmylou Harris, but that would denigrate the singularity of what you're hearing. And calling it Joshua Tree-esque arena rock isn't quite accurate either. The bottom line is, it's just good music, plain and simple, and you can imagine these songs going over just as well at Qualcomm stadium as in this lounge or late at night around a campfire. And you can also imagine this woman being rich and famous.who knows, maybe she already is.
The blonde banters between songs with a mixture of humility and sass, grabbing a drink from a special caddy that hangs off her mic stand and taking a hearty swig. She and one of the guys - the hand drum player - drop less than subtle hints that any "donated" Patron tequila shots and/or beers would not be turned down. Off-color jokes and sly innuendo inspire honest smiles and spontaneous laughter in the relaxed, appreciative crowd, and short but revealing stories about the next song surprise you with their illumination of an element of your own life experience. She is confident, a consummate professional who for all you know has been doing this since she was in diapers. She's making this look ridiculously easy.
You detect something southern in her demeanor, the kind of hospitable charm and engaging verve you would expect of someone from that part of the country. She seems to be the same person offstage as she is on: a brightly smiling spark plug emanating an innocuous salaciousness (at one point, you seem to overhear her cleavage entering the conversation) and an ease of being that would seem to inspire a feeling of simpatico with anyone she might meet.
Before she leaves the stage, she introduces the band and discretely mentions the CD of original music for sale and then convinces you to sign the mailing list.
She says her name is Barbara, Barbara Nesbitt...
A cotillion in the American sense is a long-standing tradition wherein young debutantes celebrate their societal coming-out in a formal setting, usually after a series of instructional classes on manners, social graces, and the like. It's essentially a rite of passage or coming of age party for the benefit of the celebrants, who are seen as full-fledged adults from that moment onward; sartorial frocks are donned and hair is done up and fancy dancing happens with potential life partners. These suarets still occur in many states of the union, and some of them once brooked the subtext of elevation to high(er) society.
Since Barbara Nesbitt moved here from Virginia roughly three years ago, she has experienced a kind of aesthetic cotillion as a songwriting performer.
"It wasn't until I moved to San Diego that I began to REALLY write my own songs," Barbara relates. "I had written a handful of songs over a handful of years, but something happened when I moved here. I don't know if it was because of my relationship troubles, or the culture shock of moving across the country, or the support San Diegans seem to have for original music-the ones I've met, anyway-but I just started writing more than ever and have been lucky enough not to have stopped. I finally feel like I am expressing my own true voice."
She has quickly made a name for herself here in San Diego with these wonderful new songs and powerfully consistent live shows; first briefly on her own with solo gigs (props to Listen Local SD's Cathryn Beeks for getting her plugged into the scene) and a guitar-and-voice demo EP recorded at svengali producer Sven-Erik Seaholm's Kitch & Sync Production, then gradually bringing in other musicians (including percussionist Billy Coomes and guitarist Mike Spurgat of Deadline Friday--the two "music dudes" mentioned earlier--and ubiquitous bassist Marcia Claire, all three of whom Barbara is immensely proud to know, even just as friends) for full-band gigs and a fully produced CD out of producer/engineer Jeff Berkley's Miracle Recording studios.
A Million Stories is remarkable for a debut in that it contains such an individuated sound as to virtually create its own sub-genre. Nesbitt sounds only like herself on these recordings, which makes accurate comparisons virtually impossible. The pathos of some of her life experiences is laid bare in the album's lyrics, but gently softened and exalted by the music-songs like the title track, "Broken Girl," "Don't Bother," and "It Is What It Is" transform moments of sorrow and frailty and longing into tracks of uplifting, poetic and anthemic fortitude. Instead of wallowing in self-pity or playing the victim card, Barbara catalyzes a universal connection by conveying a coping strategy through the transmutation of her suffering into art.
"My writing has been my therapy," Nesbitt confirms, "and it hasn't exactly sprung from the most relaxing and happiest moments of my life. My songs are about relationships and overcoming hardships and thank yous and loss and leftover s from my childhood and crap that came out when I was drunk and telling people off. For the most part, my songs include a positive note. a strength that I hope comes through. I am happy most of the time, but when I am happy, I am too busy enjoying myself to sit down and write about it."
"I'm grateful that I have the outlet I have in music and in writing," Barbara continues, "because my other career choice was to be a hooker. Seriously though, music for me is a need I have, a catharsis.and I would be a lost little girl without it."
A Million Stories garnered a 2007 San Diego Music Award nomination, and Will Edwards' HAT (Honoring Acoustic Talent) awards have also honored her with two nods so far since its inception three years ago. Barbara also entered and won the San Diego Music Scene Cream of the Crop singer/songwriter competition soon after rolling into town, which was an auspicious beginning to the Southern California segment of her career.
Barbara Nesbitt seemed to appear out of nowhere in 2006, fully formed like Venus de Milo emerging from her shell. And if you're entering her life at this particular point in time, this will indeed seem to be the case. But every comet has a trailing tail, and every artist has a long road of trial-by-fire development behind them. Because of, or perhaps despite her difficult formative years in the Petri dish of hardship, and the self-doubt and struggle inherent in anyone's early aesthetic development in obscurity, Nesbitt emanates a comfortableness in her own skin and a sureness of purpose derived predominantly from internal validation. Like any relatively fresh face, but especially one so vivacious and charismatic, Barbara arouses curiosity. The San DIego Troubadour recently succumbed to this curiosity and interviewed her briefly via email to find out a little more about this dynamic artist in her own words.
Tell us a little about your formative years and influences.
My first musical influence would have to have been my mother. She sang and played guitar and they're some of my earliest memories. and I loved what she loved, and therefore I loved the Carpenters. Does that make me a bad person?
My formative years were difficult. My mother went to prison when I was young, and after she was gone, music became something that linked me to her. I would listen to the Carpenters and have daydreams of her rescuing me from what was an unhappy home.
In the basement, I found a box of old 45s like Righteous Brothers, Sam Cooke, and Elvis. I would put on shows in my bedroom for no one, singing and dancing and thinking, "maybe I can't sing, but I can remember the words really well!"
There was no rescue. Eventually I rescued myself and left home at 15. I lived on the street, went from shelter to shelter, and eventually wound up in Virginia where I met a keyboard playing Deadhead named Alfred. He had inherited a pretty decent-sized house in Virginia Beach and a bunch of us lived there, where he and his friends would jam in the living room.
When I was 16, I met Bernie Lee [who joined Barbara onstage at Tim Flack's birthday gig during a recent visit]. He would play music with my roommates, and he eventually was the one who gave me my first guitar, and gave me the courage to get up and sing in front of people for the first time. I don't think I actually believed I could sing until many years later.
"It's kind of funny. for a while, we [a group of would-be hippies living in this inherited house, with little or no source of income] were so broke, the only food we had was a 15-lb bag of waffle mix and a waffle iron. So I would make waffles for everyone to eat, and I would sing along in the background while they were jamming.
"One night, Bernie started playing "Vincent," by Don McClean. Knowing it was one of my favorites, and having heard me shyly singing it to myself before, he convinced me to come into the living room and sing it through the microphone. Two weeks later I was singing backups at our first gig as Rare Daze at a bar called Cogan's in Norfolk, Virginia.
After years of playing and touring with Rare Daze, our guitar player, Keith Hudgins, tragically passed away. Keith was very much the glue that held Rare Daze together. and though we tried to play for a couple years following his death, Rare Daze finally ran its course, as most bands do. I also spent many years in a money-making duo called the Perpetrators [with Bernie], playing cover songs in pubs and sports bars to pay the rent. It was fun, but not exactly creatively satisfying.
Bernie Lee and Rare Daze were very much the pivotal point in my musical career. he and the band brought me out of my shell and helped convince me that I was good enough to do in public what I had secretly been passionate about in private: singing.
What does the future hold for Barbara Nesbitt?
I don't know what the future holds for me, but as long as it holds music in some regard, I can't complain too much. Don't get me wrong-I would love a big pile o' money and stadiums full of people singing the lyrics to my songs [if anyone knows how to do that, feel free to email me at any time: Barbara@barbaranesbitt.com]. But I already feel like I'm a pretty lucky person. I'm looking to get more gigs, I would like to tour [email me], and I'm getting ready to go in the studio again.
I will be working with the amazing Mr. Berkley again. I think I might do it a little different this time. I'm torn between two approaches to making this record. The first would be a record that would be easy to replicate live, at my shows, with my band [which, by the way, is called the Barbara Nesbitt Band]. The second would be a record with my fantasy instruments and things that would be difficult to replicate live; for example, a cello, a timpani, or me harmonizing with myself. So, who knows? Maybe I'll do a little bit of both, but I haven't really fleshed all that out yet.
Ultimately, I would like to see me writing and touring and performing for people who value my music until I can't walk on stage by myself anymore. And then you can bring me out in a wheelbarrow.
Perhaps the best note to end on, and the best way to illustrate the resilience underlying her now flourishing art, is to share an anecdote Barbara related a few days after the interview.
"The song `Fly' from A Million Stories was written after I had gotten my heart broken," Nesbitt recounted. "I was fairly devastated, and after some time passed I decided to do something for me, something to improve my life and my attitude and get me out of my funk. I got a second job and saved up the money and went and took flying lessons. By the time I got my pilot's license, I was over the heartbreak and had a great new passion in my life."
www.barbaranesbitt.com
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