Bringing the outside in: How one songwriter finds creativity
With the arrival of a new album, 鈥淚gnorance,鈥 Tamara Lindeman of The Weather Station talks about embracing the unencumbered times of her childhood.
With the arrival of a new album, 鈥淚gnorance,鈥 Tamara Lindeman of The Weather Station talks about embracing the unencumbered times of her childhood.
Tamara Lindeman has been singing as long as she can remember. As a child, she liked to venture alone after school into the 25 acres of woods near her home in Shelburne, Ontario, and sing. She鈥檇 serenade the trees, plants, and barely glimpsed creatures. Her own secret garden, filled with song. Then the bittersweet peal of her mother鈥檚 bell would beckon her home for dinner.
鈥淚 could be a shy kid,鈥 says Ms. Lindeman, who now lives in Toronto, in a phone interview. 鈥淭he natural world was like a friend to me and it was a real relationship.鈥
It鈥檚 fitting that when she began her career as a songwriter, she adopted the moniker The Weather Station. The outdoors figure prominently on the fifth Weather Station album, 鈥淚gnorance,鈥 debuting on Feb. 5. Ms. Lindeman鈥檚 writing was galvanized by a 2018 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that suggested a 1.5 degree Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) increase in global temperature will affect sea levels, biodiversity, and ecosystems, which she found alarming.听
Yet the artist eschews the preachiness of so many protest anthems in favor of a more personal outlook on the environment. The album exemplifies why Ms. Lindeman is revered by music critics as a lyricist. Whether she鈥檚 writing about friends, parents, lovers, or the natural world, she explores why those relationships are meaningful.听
鈥淪he鈥檚 a generational talent,鈥 says Grayson Haver Currin, a music writer for outlets including Pitchfork and NPR. 鈥淚鈥檓 always very drawn to songwriters who are very specific ... where the details can, instead of feeling specific just to the writer 鈥 which they are 鈥 make you feel as if the song is about you.鈥澨
Find a way to be carefree
Ms. Lindeman first started recording music at the end of a brief but successful acting career. (Her credits, using the stage name Tamara Hope, include playing the titular queen in HBO鈥檚 鈥淭he Royal Diaries: Elizabeth I 鈥 Red Rose of the House of Tudor鈥 and starring alongside Tilda Swinton in 鈥淭he Deep End.鈥)听Creating songs was intuitive, effortless. But the critical acclaim for her second record, 鈥淎ll of It Was Mine鈥 (2011), had an effect on her that was akin to when a tightrope walker suddenly looks down midstep. Because the songwriter didn鈥檛 understand how she鈥檇 come up with those compositions in the first place, she had no idea how to do it again. Ms. Lindeman eventually realized that the secret was to reproduce the carefree state she experienced in the forest during her childhood. Now she spends mornings with the guitar or piano, just singing whatever comes to mind.
鈥淭here is this beautiful thing that happens in playing an instrument where it just suddenly turns off your mind,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 might sing a bunch of things that feel unrelated and not understand how they connect until months later.鈥
When she hits on something worthy, the work of honing the idea begins. The challenge is finding a narrative balance between telling a story and expressing thematic ideas. There鈥檚 also the tricky negotiation of folding a lyric into a melody.
鈥淎 lot of writers go for the sound of the word in the song over the meaning of the word,鈥 says the artist. 鈥淚鈥檒l go for the meaning of the word over the sound every time.鈥
Ms. Lindeman admits she isn鈥檛 a听powerhouse vocalist 鈥 on karaoke night she鈥檚 not going to select Mariah Carey 鈥 but she has an appealing, naturalistic delivery that鈥檚 emotionally authentic.
鈥淪o much beauty in the world鈥
Weather Station albums,听produced with a coterie of musicians, offer listeners the ability to eavesdrop on the songwriter鈥檚 most intimate thoughts. It鈥檚 one of the reasons Ms. Lindeman's work has been endlessly compared to that of another Canadian songwriter.
鈥淭he economy of her language reminds me of Joni Mitchell,鈥 says Mr. Currin, adding that her precocious gift for lyric-writing was evident from the very start.
But Ms. Lindeman, who says she wasn't influenced by her iconic predecessor, sees herself charting her own course.听On 鈥淚gnorance,鈥 the Weather Station sound has been upgraded from lo-fi folk-rock to high-fidelity art rock.听The musician complements her piano, organ, and guitar with saxophone, flute, strings, and percussionists playing propulsive patterns.听That lush sonic palette augments the song 鈥淎tlantic鈥 in which the songwriter watches a sunset near the ocean. Her thoughts keep returning to the doom-laden headlines about the environment. 鈥淚 should get all this dying off my mind,鈥 she sings.
鈥淚 felt this joy,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淎nd I was like, 鈥榃hy do I keep myself in such a dark place when there鈥檚 so much beauty in the world?鈥櫶
鈥淔acing the climate crisis and starting to become involved in some very modest measure of activism has allowed me to re-reconnect
a little bit.鈥
The search for connection crops up often in Ms. Lindeman鈥檚 conversation 鈥 it鈥檚 also an underlying theme on the album. 鈥淪ubdivisions鈥 describes leaving someone without telling them by embarking on a spontaneous road trip. On 鈥淩obber,鈥 she compares capitalism to an impersonal relationship with a heist artist. 鈥淧arking Lot鈥 finds the touring musician marveling at a bird singing the same song repeatedly when she鈥檚 dreading the prospect of baring her soul at yet another show that night. For her, writing these songs is cathartic.听
鈥淪ometimes I write songs without fully knowing what I need to say,鈥 says Ms. Lindeman, adding that she鈥檚 had the experience of songs telling her things that she didn鈥檛 want to know.听
鈥淭he songs,鈥 she says, 鈥渁re places of mystery.鈥澨