You
could say Kate Voegele is an overachiever. At 22 years old, the
Cleveland, Ohio native has spent the better part of the last two
years juggling life as a full-time singer-songwriter, part-time
actress and a college student, rarely pausing to take a breath.
"Multi-tasking has always been my thing," she says. "For my first
album, I somehow scheduled my classes around recording sessions, and
still got a 4.0 grade point average. Then I took a break from school
and went on the road, but halfway through, I got offered One Tree
Hill completely unexpectedly. That was when life got
ridiculous."
Ridiculous in the sense that Voegele went from being a complete
unknown to a TV star, and from a girl writing songs in her dorm room
to a bonafide recording artist with legions of loyal fans, all in
less than a year. Voegele is still pinching herself just to make
sure it's really happening. "Sometimes I look around and wonder what
I’ve done to deserve all this," she says with a laugh.
It was by virtue of her talent, vivacious personality and sheer
determination that Voegele scored the tie-in of a lifetime: playing
the spunky Mia on popular teen drama One Tree Hill, but
performing her own music. Thanks to that confluence of events, her
MySpace Records debut, Don't Look Away, sold close to a
quarter million copies, climbed to No. 4 on the iTunes chart and
sent Voegele upstream to Interscope (which has a distribution
partnership with MySpace). Now Voegele is seeing her musical wish
list come true with A Fine Mess, her second serving of
undeniable pop-rock charm, produced by Mike Elizondo (Maroon
5, Fiona Apple) and scheduled for release in May 2009.
Brimming with optimism, first time independence and the wisdom that
comes from one too many broken hearts, A Fine Mess is the
continuation of a road Voegele was destined to travel, and, like
every milestone in her career thus far, she navigates it with gusto.
"It's easy to get caught up in trying to write hit songs when you're
working on a second record," says Voegele. "But for me, it's about
remembering why I started expressing myself through music in the
first place — how it came from a need to write and there was nothing
mechanical about it. Those are the best songs, when I'm not thinking
about it, which usually means that I write at really inconvenient
times."
In Voegele's nomadic world, that means songs penned on airplanes and
tour buses, cafés in Wilmington, North Carolina and hotel rooms in
Los Angeles. "I got all this inspiration and a bunch of ideas from a
year and a half on the road," she explains. "I've traveled to so
many different places and had all these unexpected adventures with
great people — that's where this body of work comes from.
Case in point: "Manhattan From The Sky," a song which inspired the
album's title. The piano-driven pure pop number, says Voegele, came
to her from 30,000 feet above New York City. "I was just thinking
about how Manhattan looks like a little piece of Lego," Voegele
recalls, "but once you' re inside, it's totally crazy and messy and
there's a wonderful chaos going on all around the city." The song
debuted on the March 23rd episode of One Tree Hill, in what
Voegele calls, "the most amazing set-up ever." She explains: "The
coolest thing is how they worked the song into the show so that it
enhanced the scene, and how the scene enhanced the song. So the
viewer can watch Mia and a character named Chase talk about what
it's like to see a city from the sky one week, and the next week see
Mia sing 'Manhattan From The Sky' in the studio, then they can go on
iTunes and buy the song. It's great to be working with people who
are so genuinely excited about the music."
Voegele had her pick of producers for A Fine Mess, but was
fixated on one in particular. "I told the label that I'd love to
work with whoever did Fiona Apple's Extraordinary Machine,
and I’m also obsessed with Rilo Kiley's Under The Blacklight.
Turns out, Mike Elizondo worked on both of those records. "To work
with somebody who's able to execute what you’re hearing in your
head, it’s not an easy thing to find," she says. "But when Mike was
done, I was like, 'Oh my God, this is exactly what I had in mind
when I wrote it on a napkin!'"
The album introduces itself with “99 Times,” a gritty, hard-driving
song that sees Voegele lashing out at the common frienemy. "It's
about the different emotions you experience after finding out
somebody you're close to has been feeding you a story that isn't
true," she says. "You end up feeling stupid and pissed off and I
guess I dealt with those emotions by putting on some black boots,
messing up my hair, turning up the distortion on my guitar and
getting in front of the mic to pretend I was Chrissy Hynde. That was
pretty much all it took."
On the sweeping "Sweet Silver Lining," she sings of finding hope in
times of grave misfortune. "Once I got out into the world, I saw
that bad things happen to really good people — people who were close
to me," she explains of the track and its delicate clockwork rhythm.
"I wrote it for myself, but hope it will inspire others." Voegele's
attempt at a love song is the ballad "Forever and Almost Always,"
which she says matter-of-factly, is "one of most depressing songs on
the record. It's about being in a relationship with somebody where
you know their heart's not in it as much as yours, and how you're
fed this story your whole life about everyone living happily ever
after, but there's always that little bit of doubt. It's like that
scene in the Sex And The City movie, where Carrie tells
Charlotte's little girl, 'You know this is just a fairytale, right?'
Its true!"
Among the album’s many highlights is "Angel," which disavows
peoples' perception of Voegele as an eternal good girl with a
pounding piano melody that brings to mind Tori Amos' "Cornflake
Girl" and Fiona Apple's "Criminal." "The whole idea that you have to
be tortured to be an artist, it drove me nuts," she declares. "That
frustration is what the song is about, where I say, maybe I didn't
have a coke addiction or spend my nights getting hammered and
dancing on tables, but I'm not this untouchable perfect girl on a
pedestal." Along similar lines, Voegele strikes back at the smarmy
pickup with the country-esque, "Talkin’ Smooth," on which she snaps:
"Did you replace the last two dozen names with mine? / Was I love
you, baby, second nature by now? / Because it sounds awful rehearsed
when it leaves your mouth." Ouch! "It's a fun song that's kind of
sexy," she says. "It's saying, 'I'm on to you, in case you're an
asshole.' Because so many guys are really good at B.S.-ing you, but
I’m always suspicious of anyone that's talking smooth. It takes a
lot to convince me that someone's genuine."
But don't worry, Voegele hasn't completely abandoned her
good-natured side or her optimism. She's simply come to terms with
the fine mess her world has turned into. "I could come up with a
million reasons why that’s an appropriate title," she says, "but
really, it's just about how unpredictable life can be. It’s a total
rollercoaster that's out of your control and you have to be able to
embrace the crazy ups and downs. That’s your only option, pretty
much, so you might as well enjoy it."
10/20 Memphis, TN - Hi Tone Cafe
10/21 Little Rock, AR - Juanita's Cantina Ballroom
10/22 Oklahoma City, OK - Diamond Ballroom
10/23 San Antonio, TX - White Rabbit
10/24 McAllen, TX - Buddha Mansion
10/26 Austin, TX - Stubb's Bar-B-Q
10/28 El Paso, TX - Take 2
10/29 Albuquerque, NM - Launchpad
10/30 Mesa, AZ - Mesa Arts Center
11/1 Tucson, AZ - Club Congress
11/3 Bakersfield, CA - Narducci's Cafe
11/6 Reno, NV - Grand Sierra Resort
11/7 Salt Lake City, UT - Kilby Court
11/8 Fort Collins, CO - Hodies's Half Note
11/9 Boulder, CO - Fox Theater
11/11 Lawrence, KS - Granada Theater
11/12 St. Louis, MO - Fubar
11/13 Dekalb, IL - The House Cafe
11/14 Des Moines, IA - People's Court
11/15 Chicago, IL - Park West
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