Theresa Andersson

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Birds Fly Away 03:26 Tools
Hi-Low 03:19 Tools
Na Na Na 03:20 Tools
Innan Du Gar 03:41 Tools
God's Highway 03:14 Tools
Introducing The Kitchenettes 00:45 Tools
Hummingbird, Go! 02:06 Tools
Clusters 01:26 Tools
The Waltz 04:12 Tools
Japanese Art 03:19 Tools
Locusts Are Gossiping 04:29 Tools
Minor Changes 03:48 Tools
Innan Du Går 07:28 Tools
Street Parade 04:32 Tools
Hold On to Me 03:45 Tools
Listen To My Heels 03:45 Tools
Injuns 04:16 Tools
Ruby 02:32 Tools
Fiya's Gone 03:26 Tools
January 03:26 Tools
Endymion 03:41 Tools
Sleepsong For Saoirse 03:02 Tools
Now I Know 03:39 Tools
Plucks 02:39 Tools
Ladies In Blue 04:20 Tools
Na Na Na (Empty Heart) 03:21 Tools
The Waltz (Live from IODA - Courtesy of Basin Street Records) 03:46 Tools
What Comes Next (With Peter Morén) 03:32 Tools
What Comes Next (With Peter Moren) 03:32 Tools
Now I Know (Online Only) 03:39 Tools
Now I Know - Online Only 03:40 Tools
Accustomed To The Dark 03:01 Tools
Lorraine's Song (My Heart Was a Lonely Hunter) 00:00 Tools
I'm On My Way 03:21 Tools
Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You 03:12 Tools
Summertime 07:29 Tools
Waltz 04:13 Tools
Theresa Andersson - Na, Na, Na 07:29 Tools
Theresa Andersson - Birds Fly Away 03:25 Tools
Bluesette 04:49 Tools
Lie To Me 03:27 Tools
Speak Low 05:46 Tools
It's Gonna Be OK 04:32 Tools
Connected 02:50 Tools
Running with Your Eyes Closed 02:39 Tools
I\'m On My Way 03:21 Tools
Swing Low 05:14 Tools
Shine 03:45 Tools
It's Gonna Be Okay 04:32 Tools
Good Girl 03:27 Tools
Carey 04:20 Tools
Well You Needn't 02:40 Tools
I the River 03:28 Tools
Missin' You 04:20 Tools
Don't Disturb 03:00 Tools
Lorraine's Song (Bonus Track) 04:30 Tools
'Round Midnight 06:27 Tools
False Alarm 04:12 Tools
Borderline 04:29 Tools
Brian's Ballad 03:35 Tools
Jackson 03:28 Tools
Break Up 05:09 Tools
Make It Pop 03:00 Tools
Innan Du Går (Featuring Ane Brun) 03:40 Tools
What You Give 04:49 Tools
Fine Line 04:24 Tools
Singer Of Songs 02:42 Tools
God's Highway (featuring Tobias Fröberg) 03:15 Tools
Innan Du Gar (Featuring Ane Brun) 03:40 Tools
What Comes Next (w. Peter Moren) 00:00 Tools
God's Highway (Featuring Tobias Froberg) 00:00 Tools
06_What Comes Next (w. Peter Moren) 00:00 Tools
'What Comes Next (Feat. Peter Moren)' 03:32 Tools
What Comes Next (feat. Peter Moren) 03:32 Tools
The Waltz (Live from IODA) 03:46 Tools
Missin' You/theresa Andersson 04:20 Tools
The Waltz (Live from IODA - Courtesy of Basin Street Records 03:46 Tools
Lorraine's Song 04:50 Tools
Innan Du Gar (feat. Ane Brun) 03:40 Tools
Innan Du Går (feat. Ane Brun) 03:40 Tools
God's Highway (feat. Tobias Froberg) 03:13 Tools
Oh Mary don't you weep 04:31 Tools
Oh Mary Don't You Weep - Exclusive 04:31 Tools
Somewhere Over The Raindow 02:33 Tools
Blue Skies 04:31 Tools
Na, Na, Na 04:31 Tools
God's Highway (feat. Tobias Fröberg) 03:13 Tools
On Your Way Down 02:33 Tools
Na Na Na - Empty Heart 03:22 Tools
Oh Mary 03:20 Tools
Hero 04:24 Tools
What Comes Next 03:32 Tools
Summer Time 07:27 Tools
Delirious 05:13 Tools
Come Along 03:58 Tools
Love Is Colorless 03:27 Tools
City Of Roses 07:43 Tools
City of Roses (Reprise) 02:25 Tools
Something's Gotta Give 04:44 Tools
Right Direction 04:32 Tools
I am I & You Are You 04:22 Tools
New Solution (Evolution) 05:25 Tools
Cost Of Freedom 02:25 Tools
Lorrain'es Song (Bonus Track) 04:30 Tools
Theresa Andersson, 'What Comes Next (Feat. Peter Moren)' 02:25 Tools
See-Line Woman 05:25 Tools
No Regrets 05:03 Tools
Lonely Wasted and Blue 03:32 Tools
Round Midnight 06:28 Tools
What Comes Next (with Peter Morén) 03:32 Tools
What Comes Next (W. Peter Morén) 03:32 Tools
Maybe Maybe Not 03:47 Tools
Injuns - Live 04:11 Tools
What Comes Next - Live 04:11 Tools
Hi Low 04:11 Tools
Oh Mary (Don't You Weep) 04:11 Tools
Lorraine's Song [*] {From a Love Song for Bobby Long} 04:11 Tools
Maybe, Maybe Not 04:11 Tools
What Comes Next (Live) 04:11 Tools
When the Saints Go Marching In 04:11 Tools
The Waltz (Live) 04:11 Tools
I\\'m On My Way 04:11 Tools
Injuns - Live in Bläse, Sweden 04:11 Tools
Injuns - Live in Bläse 04:11 Tools
Just As Far As You Run 05:11 Tools
On Your Way Down (feat. Allen Toussaint) 05:11 Tools
Orpheus (Bonus Track) 03:46 Tools
Injuns (Live) 03:46 Tools
What Comes Next - Live in Bläse 04:05 Tools
Missin You 04:05 Tools
Now I Know (feat. Allen Toussaint) 03:39 Tools
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Andersson came to New Orleans in 1990 to play violin with fellow singer-songwriter and Swede, Anders Osborne. Nine years later, she left the band. Since then, Andersson has performed and recorded with several well-known New Orleans musicians, including Allen Toussaint, The Neville Brothers, The Meters and Betty Harris. In 2007, she accepted an invitation to participate in Goin' Home: A Tribute to Fats Domino, where she performed "When The Saints Go Marching In" with The Preservation Hall Jazz Band. Andersson has performed Late Night with Conan O'Brien and The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, and has been a performer at the Voodoo Festival in New Orleans. Andersson in 2006 One-woman show Inspired by a one-man-puppet-show (Blair Thomas, Chicago), in which the puppeteer played multiple characters and the drums, Andersson overcame the financial impracticality of touring Europe with a band by learning to play with a loop pedal. She began by looping just her violin, voice, and guitar. Wanting to create a richer sound live, however, she began thinking about adding another loop pedal and more instruments. As a result, Andersson currently travels with two loop pedals, which she uses simultaneously, along with her record player, drums, dulcimer, guitar, and violin. Melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre; these are the traditional building blocks of pop music. Yet although you will find them in abundance on Hummingbird, Go!, the new album by Theresa Andersson hardly sounds like conventional pop. That's because the New Orleans singer-songwriter chose to approach her craft from different perspectives before she even began composing. "I stopped thinking in terms of traditional songwriting," Andersson explains. "I worked on shapes, forms, and textures, scents and colors. Elements which are more earthy and organic inspired me." She would walk along the Mississippi River, or relax in her garden. As ideas emerged, she caught them in her butterfly net – or rather, on her laptop – and let them converge, then blossom. Produced by Swedish songwriter and recording artist Tobias Fröberg (who also helmed The Last Tycoon for Peter Morén, of Peter Bjorn and John fame), and featuring lyrical contributions from poet Jessica Faust, Hummingbird, Go! evokes a distinctly unique universe via its inventive songs. From the funky backbeat, pizzicato plucking, and vocal leaps of "Birds Fly Away," to the smoldering "Locusts Are Gossiping," with its interwoven vocals – as haunting as any Bulgarian choir – and percussive clicking reminiscent of chattering insects, each cut vibrates with polychromatic detail. Three very different geographic locations played pivotal roles in the genesis of Hummingbird, Go! First and foremost is Theresa's kitchen, where she not only recorded the demos, but, ultimately, the finished album, too. Working alone on the former, she took a D.I.Y. approach to creating sounds to match what she heard in her head: The vibraphone on "The Waltz" is actually soda pop bottles filled with varying amounts of liquid, while the slide guitar textures on "Hi-Low" were coaxed from her primary instrument, violin. Mouth percussion doubled for drums. A classical guitar, tuned down, stood in for conventional bass. "I did all this crazy stuff," she continues. "Instead of a keyboard, I filled up wine glasses with different amounts of water, and rubbed the rims, to get different notes; I'd seen a clown do that when I was a kid." Even the room itself is audible, particularly on the vintage R&B of "Introducing the Kitchenettes." "The kitchen sounds amazing, it has wonderful, natural reverb," Andersson admits. Her adopted home, which she moved to at the age of 18, also infused the record with special attributes. "When I first came to New Orleans, I really felt something inside of me was awakened." Like most residents of the Big Easy, Andersson is a music lover, steeped in the vintage sounds that have made the city famous. As a performer, her résumé includes dates with Dr. John, the Neville Brothers, Betty Harris, and members of the Meters. "All of that has filtered into me," she observes. "You can't help it when you're here." Listen closely to the aforementioned "Birds Fly Away," and at its heart, you will hear a sample of renown New Orleans drummer Smokey Johnson, one of her favorites. Regional legend Allen Toussaint even dropped by, ferried in his champagne-colored Rolls Royce, to perform on the bonus track "Now I Know." And yet, while living and making music in her kitchen, and throughout New Orleans, Hummingbird, Go! also brought Andersson full circle, back to her childhood home: The Swedish island of Gotland, in the Baltic Sea. It began when she noticed a small ad for a performance by Fröberg at a New Orleans club; with a name like that, she reckoned, he had to be Swedish. "I went to see him play, and it was like I'd found my brother." Not only did they click musically, and personally, they discovered he came from Gotland, too. His father had even been her music instructor at one point. Via Tobias, Andersson found herself plugged into the current wave of Scandinavian indie pop. Consequently, not only is Andersson joined by Norwegian artist Ane Brun for the bittersweet duet "Innan du går," but the final album was mixed by Linus Larsson (Peter Bjorn and John, Mercury Rev) at his studio in… where else? Gotland. While mixing the record in Sweden, Andersson also needle felted 1,500 individual CD jackets for the teaser EP "I the River." This daunting craft project offers another example of her highly integrated aesthetic. "My mother has always been creative, with sewing and making things," Theresa reveals. "She has a spinnery that makes yarn from the local sheep. And that is something else I really brought into this record; I'm fascinated with textures, and love the feel and look of things. When you color wool, the final results depend on how you sort your natural colors to start. It's the same in music." Despite initial plans to use "real" instruments, outside musicians, possibly even a recording studio, in the end Andersson and Tobias made Hummingbird, Go! entirely in her home, with no outside performers (except Toussaint and Brun), and the same homemade sounds that graced the original demos. As a result, Theresa had to find a suitably unique way to perform these pieces live, too. The solution? A one-woman band set-up, using two looping pedals and a variety of effects. With her toes turning knobs, as her hands strum guitar or bow a violin, and she sings with a charismatic smile that belies her intense concentration, Andersson's performances are little masterpieces of functional choreography. Working out a single arrangement can take upwards of two months. Inspired in part by the puppet theater of Chicago's Blair Thomas and Company, her shows provide daredevil thrills for Andersson and her audience alike. "The crowd are as excited as I am," she admits. "There is definitely that feeling of, 'Oh my God, is it all going to fall apart?'" In the late 19th century, linguists minted a word, synesthesia, to describe the effect of two or more senses crossing wires; when textures register as colors, sounds as fragrances. The term could have been coined for Hummingbird, Go! Like Keren Ann, Feist, and Jane Siberry, Theresa Andersson maps out musical terrain all her own, while simultaneously beckoning listeners to come explore, too. Kaleidoscopic as it is, her music may not inspire critics and fans to come up with wholly new words, but Hummingbird, Go! will nevertheless demand that they flex their imaginations to describe it – just as Andersson did to make it. By Kurt Reighley Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.