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Tanja Martisa

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Tanja Martisa Interview

(page 2)

19th January 2010

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 I suppose it's a message to women, you know, it doesn't matter what age you are you always have some good in you and it's about how you are inside and I think it's a message to the girl on the train who looked upset, so that's how it evolved really. I don't sit down to write a song as such it tends to be experiences or things that I've been too and then it just comes to me.

It must be like really exciting when it hits you like that, too?

Yeah, I think if you have a melody in your head and you remember it as well I think and you know its going to be memorable for other people it really works like that – if you do it in an artificial way it doesn't really work. If you sit down and say 'I'm going to write a song today' it just doesn't happen much.

Yeah, I suppose it needs to be organic?

Yeah, exactly, it'll happen at 3 o'clock in the morning when you're trying to get asleep!


Obviously, emotions seem to play a big part into how to make your music, is that what it's like when you're performing it, does it really take it out of you when you're in the studio maybe, or if you're performing live?

Yeah I think that's the ultimate aim and thing I do really. I want to be able to convey about how I feel about something and I think that's how you relate to other people so I think that's really really important to be yourself in what you do and to try and relate to other people and that's certainly the feedback I've had. My audiences really like that I have got that emotion in my songs and I suppose that is the essence of where I'm coming from.

Obviously jazz is a very emotional genre, your music seems to look back at that forgotten era. I was listening to 'Living for Today' off the new album and it sounds really authentic to that kind of jazz era – very Ella Fitzgerald. Who is your biggest influence when you're composing and performing?

I think in terms of jazz, if I had to name one jazz artist it would probably be Nina Simone because I think she has got that complete mix between, because everything that she did, she went through such a horrendous time when trying to be recognised as an artist so she had that emotion there already and believably as it were. I would say from a Jazz genre, probably my key idol from a composition point of view I suppose I really like Cat Stevens who I suppose is all on the folk-y side but again I really like his work cos I think he talks about things that mean something to him. You only need to look at 'Where do the children play', you can see, it's all about his real life reflections.

You mentioned earlier that it's not just jazz that you're into, what kind of bands or musicians are you listening to at the moment?

I am a big Madeleine Peyroux fan and I guess she has that sort of jazz feel as well.

What's the worst music purchase you've ever made?

That's really hard! To reverse the question, I think that's why I like artists like John Martin and Cat Stevens because you pick up one of their albums and every single song is just like brilliantly written .

So then, what kind of music have you really enjoyed buying?!

Solid air by John Martin is probably one of my favourite albums and on my previous album I did a cover of one of his songs too. It was his perceptions of life – 'May you never' is about how he hopes he never ends up without a bed, and on the streets and I think that's really lovely because you don't often get artists who write about that sort of thing. I think that's probably one of my favourite albums.

And how about the future for you? Any exciting plans beside the release of your new album in February?

We're going to be doing a tour which is starting in London and then doing a tour hopefully of the UK so I think that's the main thing coming up!

Well good luck Tanja, see you soon!

Bye!

FemaleFirst – Carla Pearce

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