Kt Tunstall
KT Tunstall is a sparkling new songwriter with Chinese blood, a Scottish
heart, great legwarmers and a cool name - "well, it's got a bit more
attitude than Kate which just says farmer's daughter to me," she laughs. KT
celebrates classic singer-songwriting in the tradition of Rikki Lee Jones,
Carol King and Fleetwood Mac with an articulate, accessible, immediate brew
of rootsy sass, wistful quandary and after-hours atmosphere. The latest in a
line of outstanding contemporary Scottish songwriters including Texas, Fran
Healy, Teenage Fanclub and The Beta Band, KT's unique perspective offers a
rare emotionally connecting intensity through it's gripping lyrical bite and
heartfelt melody.
She grew up in the university town of St Andrew's ("beautiful but sheltered,
a little bubble"), always knowing she had been adopted at birth. "I grew up
knowing I could have had a million different lives. It makes your life
mysterious and your imagination go wild."
Her debut album 'Eye To The Telescope' is the creative consequence of that
inquiring imagination. "My songs examine and explore little specific
emotions or situations or stories," she explains. "They're kitchen table
songs, like a conversation between me and one other person. It's almost like
an alien has been sent to get emotional samples from human beings and put it
all together on a record."
KT spent her childhood up hills and under canvas with her outward-bound
parents. Music was never really part of the equation until her older brother
discovered the joys of hair metal. "I would sit outside his room and record
his music through his door."
Her first album was the Never-ending Story soundtrack, but her favourite,
reassuringly, is David Bowie's 'Hunky Dory'. "Its sound really touched my
love for songwriting and spacey stuff," she says. "I was really into sci-fi
books as a kid. My dad is a physicist and he used to take my brothers and I
into his lab when we were little. We played games with liquid nitrogen and
Van de Graaff generators. He had the keys to the observatory at St Andrew's
University and he'd get us up in the middle of the night to show us Halley's
Comet. That's partly why the album is called 'Eye To The Telescope.'"
The young active KT took up piano, then flute and gradually her singing
voice developed its earthy individuality, "I'm pretty certain that I learned
how to sing because someone gave me an Ella Fitzgerald tape - she was my
singing teacher."
By her mid-teens, KT had started writing her own songs, "but I was just
coming out with this schmaltzy love nonsense. It was a complete vomit of
puppy love. But I thought I was rocking." At 16, she took up the guitar,
teaching herself from a busker's book. Schmaltz was junked; a musical
epiphany ensued.
Hungry for experiences and independence, she gained a scholarship to Kent
School in Connecticutt, New England and absorbed gigs by The Grateful Dead
and 10,000 Maniacs. She also formed her first band, The Happy Campers, and
played a host of informal gigs. "By the second week of playing an open mic
slot I was their 'special guest from Scotland!'," she recalls.
Next stop on her personal odyssey was a music course at Royal Holloway
College, where she tried and failed to form another band. "I managed to win
Battle Of The Bands with one mandolin player! It was me and eleven goth
bands and I won."
After vanquishing the goths, KT returned to St Andrews and became immersed
in the grassroots scene which spawned The Beta Band and the Fence
Collective, forming a group with Fence's Pip Dylan and honing her tastes
with an ambrosial diet of James Brown, Lou Reed, Billie Holliday, Johnny
Cash and PJ Harvey.
A few years and bands later, it was crunch time for Tunstall. She hit London
again where, finally, things started to fall into place. Working
relationships were forged, deals were secured. She began writing projects
with Swedish songwriter/producer Martin Terefe and London-based Orcadian
Jimmy Hogarth and London's Tommy D. With over a hundred songs in her
pocket, set to work on her debut album with her new band and legendary
U2/New Order/Happy Mondays producer Steve Osborne at the helm.
"Steve was producer and engineer - he did everything. He even invited me to
stay with him and his family so we could work longer. We recorded the album
in this gnarly little studio in the woods in Wiltshire. It was this disabled
guy's house. The vocal booth was the wheelchair ramp between his bedroom and
the control room. So you could either sing going downhill or uphill. It was
perfect, so raw. He's got this little shack in the garden where all the
local bands rehearse. It was like Deliverance."
Minus the psychopathic locals, presumably. And no duelling banjos either. "I
didn't want to take too much equipment into the studio because it's when you
have to be inventive that you get interesting music. Tom Waits said if you
want something to sound like a cardboard box being hit with a boot, then hit
a cardboard box with a boot."
This lo-fi, visceral, boot-wielding approach was inspired by KT's recent
conversion to the hiss and crackle of early blues. "On the whole, I'm a
positive, skippity-la-la person but I love the dark side of music and I will
always want to explore that. It's a positive-sounding album but there's
stuff underneath for sure."
Since completing 'Eye To The Telescope', life has been a blur of gigs, first
as support to Joss Stone, then a tour of Europe, singing with 'klezmer
hip-hop' band Oi Va Voi, who ignited the Avalon Stage at Glastonbury.
"It was blazing sunshine and I went on in a turquoise neck muff, glamorous
dress and muddy boots and just had the best gig, really emotional. I've had
emails from people saying that they cried. They promised it wasn't the
drugs."
Now KT is raring to channel all her infectious energies into her own music.
"I'm not exactly sure what has driven me so hard," she says. "I've never
questioned it. I've never had a back-up plan. I was never going to do
anything else."