Cat Power

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
/wiki/Cat Powercreator

"Once a song is recorded, it's taken for granted that that's what the song sounds like. I feel like that's not true. Once you've played the song a thousand times, your life experiences affect the way you perform the song and the way the song actually grows and lives. The recording should actually come after – it just seems weird that you record the song and then play it afterwards. I don't know how to feel good about recording. It's strange – it's like trapping ghosts. It's like math. Or trapping the meaning of life. That doesn't really feel right."

Chan Marshall, on recording music

Chan (pronounced "Shawn") Marshall is a Southern-bred girl. Her family often moved frequently. This constant travelling helped prepare Chan for the touring life she would have as a musician. Chan's known for having unpolished live shows, with songs beginning and ending abruptly or blending into one another without clear transitions. She has also cut short performances without explanation.

After dropping out of high school, she started performing with a live band. In 1992 she moved to New York City with one of her live band members, Glen Thrasher. Glen introduced Chan to the experimental and free jazz scene. She saw an Anthony Braxton concert, which gave her the confidence to perform in public. While opening for Liz Phair in 1994, she met Sonic Youth's drummer Steve Shelley and Tim Foljahn, who played on her first two albums and encouraged her to continue her music career.

In late 1996, after a three-month tour in support of her third album What Would the Community Think, Chan disappeared from the music scene. She worked as a babysitter in Oregon at first, then moving to a farmhouse in South Carolina with her boyfriend at-the-time. Her plan was to permanently retire from performing live, but during a sleepless night resulting from a nightmare she wrote several new songs. These songs would be the bulk of Moon Pix. After later tours Chan was tired of her songs. This resulted in shows where she performed musical accompaniment to The Passion of Joan of Arc, which consisted of original songs and covers. Many of these covers would be on her first cover album The Covers Record.

By the start of the 2000s, Chan's live performances became random and unpredictable. She blamed this on a drinking problem. Chan cancelled her tour for the 2006 album The Greatest because she had relationship problems. It eventually became good that Chan didn't tour, because she needed to recover from something she described as a "psychotic break" that was the fault of mental exhaustion and her alcoholism. This left Chan feeling suicidal. As part of the recovery, Chan was admitted to the psychiatric ward at Miami's Mount Sinai Medical Center but left after a week, stating "being in there wasn't me." She later likened the experience to "a pit of hell."

In the winter of 2006, Chan put together a new backing band, the Dirty Delta Blues band. She also declared herself to be sober, which she defined as having "seven drinks in seven months." Now her live performances are much more enthusiastic and professional. Chan claims that her newfound musical collaborators and sobriety are the reasons why.


Discography:
  • Dear Sir (1995)
  • Myra Lee (1996)
  • What Would the Community Think (1996)
  • Moon Pix (1998)
  • The Covers Record (2000)
  • You Are Free (2003)
  • The Greatest (2006)
  • Jukebox (2008)
  • Dark End of the Street (2008; EP)
  • Sun (TBA)
Cat Power provides examples of the following tropes:

There's no space here to get into the morality of diamond-buying in general —- there are plenty of books on the subject, as well as that Leo DiCaprio movie —- but it's the pairing of Cat Stevens' poignant "How Can I Tell You" (sung in the commercial by Cat Power!) with a goopy diamond commercial that ups the ick factor. A song of longing and searching for the right words to express emotion is given this simple answer: "Don't describe your feelings, let these shiny rocks do that."