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of the Class: Andrea Klas Sings Her Heart Out
By Holly Day, MusicDish.com
Canadian-born
singer/songwriter Andrea Klas brings a taste of the divine
to her music. Her voice is filled with an almost palpable joy as
she sings, with lyrics reflecting the whole range of the human condition
from love, to love lost, to just getting through the day. Her debut
album, Orion,
is fittingly named after the title song of the same name. Even at
their saddest, Klas' songs are about finding the silver lining and
hope.
"The
whole album is a message of getting within yourself" says Klas.
"Particularly for me, this album was about the journey that has
made up my life thus far. I was partly dealing with breaking away
from my family and what they wanted for me and partly dealing with
doing this music thing full-time, making the break from actually
quitting my day job and saying, 'Okay, I've had it with this life
that I was supposed to lead - I'm going to lead the life that I've
always wanted to lead.' That's really what the whole album is about;
getting all the stuff I've felt for the last year of my life out
on paper. Every song is about something in my life that's happened,
or didn't happen."
Klas,
originally from Edmonton, Alberta, grew up in a household full of
business professionals. Even so, she acted on her interest in music
early in life, performing in local musical theater productions as
early on as seven years old. "I was in plays, and took acting, dance,
and theater," says Klas. "I was 21 when I realized that I wanted
to go beyond that, so I actually started to write my own stuff.
When I came out to Vancouver I continued to play piano and experiment
in songwriting."
Even
though she was an economics major at university, she began spending
more and more time out of class performing at local clubs with her
band. After graduation, she worked in sales for a pharmaceutical
company by day and played music by night, until one day deciding
that all she really wanted to do was be a musician.
"I
met Holly Kemp, who's one of the partners at Freedom to Groove,
a musician's online management and marketing company. She said she'd
listen to my music and her feedback was "You've got a great voice,
and you have a great musical talent, but your songwriting needs
work". She asked me if I'd be willing to co-write with someone new
and I said 'Absolutely'. From there she put me in touch with Adam
Popowitz and we arranged to meet and work on my music."
"Basically,
we'd get together, he'd play some chords on his guitar and I would
sing a melody line just over the top of his chord progressions -
I love good, complex harmonies and melodies - we'd then get the
melody line, at which point I would go home to write the lyrics,
which Adam would tweak a bit." The first time we met, we got a melody
line, and he said, 'Okay, you go home, you write what you think
this song should be about. I'm going to go home and write what I
think this song should be about, and we'll put it together and see
if we mesh.' So we split for two days, came back and it was amazing.
"'Ride',
the first song on the album, was a serious collaboration" she laughs.
"That was the very first song we wrote together and it seems to
be the most popular song. We both wrote about exactly the same thing.
We just took one verse from his song, one verse from mine etc. and
turned that into the song. It was amazing. It just fit. We just
sat there and said 'This was meant to be.'"
'Ride'
pretty much set the precedence for the rest of the songs on the
album. Klas put more melodies down while she and Adam worked out
lyrics and fleshed out the music for the rest of the album. "The
way I work is to just listen to the melody line over and over and
over again, and I just start writing lyrics to go with it. I usually
write a story before I write the lyrics; I could write up to ten-pages
of what I think the song should be about, and then I break it down
into lyrics."
She
adds, laughing, "It's funny how people get their inspiration. It's
almost like a cathartic experience, you know? You get it out, and
then you have to make sense of all the gobbledygook that's written
down. I wouldn't show anyone any of the stories I've written on
their way to becoming songs. Though I accidentally once sent the
story instead of the lyrics to my label, and they responded with,
'What's this? This is really off the wall. This is not the direction
we think you should go in.'"
These
days, Klas is busy with another project along with her music-her
new son, Jake. "I got pregnant at little earlier than I wanted,
but that's turned out to be a huge blessing in disguise. The way
it's worked out, we've been able to spend more time marketing this
album and really focusing on the new material we've been putting
together. It's taken awhile, but Orion's starting to get a lot of
momentum. The stores are ordering it, I've got distribution now
across Canada, and it looks like we're going to go out on tour this
fall." Which is exactly the direction she wants to be heading in.
"There's a saying that you'll love what you work at, if you work
at what you love. I've made it happen; I'm leading the life I've
always wanted to lead."
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