Tom
Odell is one of the more compelling singer/songwriters to
emerge from England since the early 2010s. Discovered by Lily Allen, he put out
debut album Long Way Down - which
went to No. 1, sold more than 300,000 copies and spawned the top 10 single
“Another Love” at home - in 2013.
Long
Way Down also netted the young pop/rock pianist prestigious
BRIT and Ivor Novello Awards. It wasn’t long before Odell’s emotional and
poignant songs were regularly being heard in American television dramas like
“The Vampire Diaries,” “The Blacklist,” “Reign” and “The 100.”
On excellent third album Jubilee Road, Odell stripped the production down slightly, so the
music centered more on piano. He often took an observational lyrical approach (much
like cited influences Elton John, Randy Newman and Bruce Springsteen), with some
situations gleaned from former neighbors at an East London house. The results
ended up being what the musician calls his most honest recording to date.
We caught up with Odell, 27, in Portland, Ore. amid a
brief solo acoustic jaunt through North America.
Question: While looking over your past tour itineraries, I saw some far-flung
locations like China and Russia listed last year. Was that your first time
performing in those places?
Tom
Odell: In China, we’ve done two tours now. One last year and
one in 2014. It’s a really interesting place to tour and a very different
experience from touring Europe or the States. Ultimately, I think what’s so
fascinating is how universal music is - how it transcends languages and
cultures. We were right at the center of China. I remember being some place
where you wouldn’t expect people to know the music for miles and they knew it.
I think that’s what’s so wonderful. We’ve gone so many places. We did our first
show in Africa last year as well. I think we’ve done six of the seven
continents now.
Q: You co-produced Jubilee Road with
Ben Baptie, who worked on your first album. Did you want to be more “hands on”
in the studio this time around?
TO: Yeah, I think that’s just the way I like to work. I trained
[in classical piano] for many years and have a fairly good grip on music. I say
that in terms of being different from being an artist. There’s a knowledge one
has to have if they’re going to produce - understanding how harmony and rhythm
works. It just feels natural for me to do that.
I was more involved than ever with this new album and
I was playing, if not in the room, every single note. Every single bit of this
album feels inherently mine. In some ways, that is quite indulgent, but this
was the album I wanted to do that on. It feels very personal, this album.
Q: Was using less instrumentation a reaction to the dense soundscapes on
your last album Wrong Crowd?
TO: I certainly wanted to get the song across. In some
ways, it also focuses more on the piano and the drums and let the band I’ve
played with for many years shine through. I think there was a [feeling of] ‘OK,
we’re gonna really set some rules here.’
On all the tracks, it’s pretty much just the four-piece
playing, if not just piano and vocal. I didn’t want it to be distracting. I
wanted the production to not be the [first] thing that people remember. I
wanted the thing that people remember to be the songs, the lyrics and the
melodies. That’s ultimately what I want people to take away.
Q: Were many of the new songs initiated from a piano melody?
TO: Pretty much all of them. Whereas on the second album,
there were a few songs written on guitar. I tend to write always a bit on
guitar as a bit of a change. If I’m working on lyrics, I might play the song on
guitar. But mostly on piano. A huge part was I felt that the songwriting was
steered by the piano. The songs are as much about the vocal melodies as they
are melodies immersed within the piano. Which is an interesting experience. I
spent a huge amount of time in the studio really working on a piano part, much
like one would a lyric or a melody. I spent a huge proportion of the time doing
that.
Q: Hearing brass for the first time on some of these songs was a pleasant
surprise. Even Dave Guy, trumpeter from The Dap-Kings, contributes. How did you
decide to augment your sound with those type of instruments?
TO: I wanted a particular texture that would not be in
the way but could help with the rhythm and with the harmony slightly. I’d never
worked with horns before. It was completely unknown to me how they worked. That
excited me - the idea of something new. I’d done quite a lot of work with
strings, but I wanted to try something different. I’d say it’s very light, the
horns. We recorded far more. I ended up taking a lot of them out. They were on
a few other tracks. The one that probably inspired the whole thing was ‘You’re
Gonna Break My Heart Tonight.’ I wanted this big saxophone solo. It felt like a
very dramatic moment and when I wrote the song, I wrote that solo. I had it on
the piano, but I knew I wanted it on the saxophone. It naturally ended up we
put horns on the other tracks as well. I think if there hadn’t been a saxophone
solo on ‘You’re Gonna Break My Heart Tonight,’ I’m not sure we would’ve ended
up with them on the other tracks.
Q: There is applause on “Go Tell Her Now.” Was it recorded before an
audience?
TO: The studio we recorded a lot of the album in is also
a bar in East London. We were recording the song and we took the microphones
outside and were recording people drinking. I thought it would be interesting. You
can sort of hear the bar in the studio. It’s a little bit fake, but then it’s not,
because they were there the same night when we recorded that.
Q: “Don’t Belong in Hollywood” immediately drew me in. At your September
acoustic show in Los Angeles, you mentioned from the stage how it was about you
“taking the piss” out of yourself. Are you singing about the price of fame on
that one?
TO: In a light way, yeah. There’s a mix of humor and
sincerity in that song. I’ve always been into very humorful writers such as
Randy Newman, Harry Nilsson. Lots of English songwriters as well – Chris
Difford from Squeeze. I wouldn’t say there’s often a lot of humor in my lyrics.
I’m always trying to find that delicate balance. I feel I found it in that
song. There’s humor to it in the sense of mocking myself for some almost Spinal
Tap moments when you just fall into the stereotype of the singer/songwriter
having success. It’s more making myself laugh.
Again, it’s coming back to this point in a lot of the
songs, which is just be yourself…There’s a huge amount on this album that’s
saying accept who you are. I hope I’m finally coming to that place. I noticed with
a lot of people in their 20s, my friends as well, that’s one of the things
that’s a big challenge. Some people have it early.
Q: How did you navigate the success of the first album and all the acclaim?
TO: I think I dealt with it quite well. I certainly don’t
think I went off the rails. It did affect me. Undoubtedly, it would affect
anyone. I pretty much have the same friends as I had before. I have a
relatively balanced life when I’m away from the touring. I think that’s been
similar since Day One. There were a few months when I really enjoyed the [music
industry] parties. I learned very quickly that wasn’t why I got into this
[business]. I don’t enjoy large groups of people. It was never particularly
appealing to me. I value my friendships. I’m fortunate to have a good family as
well. There’s no one in my life that would blow smoke up my arse. I’m not ever
in a position where that would be apparent. I’m sure I have my moments…
Q: The title track on Jubilee Road
is very picturesque, particularly the way you describe some of the characters.
Have you always been inspired by songwriters like Chris Difford, Billy Joel, Bernie
Taupin and Elton John?
TO: Massively. That’s really the music that got me into
this mess in the first place [laughs]. Particularly ‘70s music. Observational
songwriting, I love. I love lyrics. That’s increasingly the thing I’m drawn to
in music, the words. I find that becoming the focus more and more within my
music. Chris Difford was actually one of my tutors when I was at [BIMM
Institute in] Brighton. He’s a good man.
Q: Could you envision the song “Wedding Day” being played at people’s future
nuptials?
TO: You know what? I do have a song that’s played at a
shitload of weddings in the UK – ‘Grow Old with Me.’ People always come up to
me and say they used it as their first dance or something. I weirdly don’t
think that ‘Wedding Day’ would be used.
Q: Why?
TO: It’s melancholic and more observational. It mentions
dead relatives and is more anticipating a wedding than celebrating one. To some
degree, I actually wonder how much the song is about a wedding and perhaps how
much more it’s about family. That song is really a devotion to my sister. I
wrote it with open arms to her and telling how proud I am of her, which is
probably something I haven’t ever said with words.
Q: How did Alice Merton, whose “No Roots” single topped the Billboard Alternative
Songs chart in 2016, end up joining you to duet on “Half as Good as You?”
TO: I was a fan and she supported me [in Germany] last
year. That’s how I got to know her music. Then when I was making the album, I
had that song and it wasn’t a duet. I kept hearing her song ‘No Roots’ on the
radio. I contacted her and said, ‘Do you want to do it? She said, ‘yeah.’’
She’s pretty amazing and fabulous. A real talent and dedicated to her music. It
was nice to have another voice halfway through the album to break it up.
Q: Did you do it together in the studio?
TO: Yeah, we were together. Again, I’m old fashioned, I
don’t like any of that recording by proxy.
Q: You’ve often had a gospel-type choir presence on your albums that gives
the songs a joyous vibe. Jubilee Road
has it too.
TO: Funnily enough, a lot on this album, it’s me and [drummer/backing
vocalist/co-songwriter] Andy Burrows. We used some gospel singers on ‘Son of an
Only Child.’ Maybe ‘China Dolls.’
Q: On your social media sites, you often share your current music playlist
and reading material. Do you actually scan all the replies?
TO: Yeah. I have to say I’ve read quite a few books that
have been recommended to me on social media. Totally. It’s a really wonderful
thing. That shows you the drive behind why I share them because I want
something in return. I really do. I’m a ferocious reader. I read, particularly
at this stage of the process, when I’m traveling and touring, I lean very
heavily on reading. Gets me through a lot of it. There’s a lot of waiting
around in airports. I spent as much time packing my suitcase of clothes as
selecting the few books I’m going to take on the road with me. I’m old
fashioned. I do not like the Kindles or tablets. I like the printed page, the
feel of the page, the physical thing I can hold. Sometimes, I write things in
them as well. That wouldn’t really work with a tablet!
Q: You also spotlight charities that you’ve been involved with on your
socials. Help Refugees [www.helprefugees.org] seems to be the most important to you. Is
that fair to say?
TO: Massively. We’ve done a lot of work with Help
Refugees. I do as much as I can for them and support them. I visited a refugee
camp in [Calais, France] a couple years ago. Since then, I’ve been doing what I
can to help. That is still a big issue in the UK and Europe. It’s not going
away.
2019 U.S. TOUR DATES
April 17 - Atlanta, GA - The Loft
April 18 - Carrboro, NC - Cat’s Cradle
April 19 - Philadelphia, PA - Theatre of Living Arts
April 20 - Washington, DC - 9:30 Club
April 23 - New York, NY - Irving Plaza
April 24 - Boston, MA - Brighton Music Hall
April 26 - Montreal, QB - Corona Theatre
April 27 - Toronto, ON - Phoenix Concert Theatre
April 29 - Cleveland, OH - House of Blues
April 30 - Chicago, IL - Thalia Hall
May 1 - Minneapolis, MN - Varsity Theatre
May 3 - Denver, CO - Bluebird Theatre
May 4 - Salt Lake City, UT - Grand Room
May 7 - Los Angeles, CA - El Rey Theatre
May 8 - San Francisco, CA - August Hall
May 10 - Portland, OR - Wonder Ballroom
May 11 - Vancouver, BC - Commodore
May 12 - Seattle, WA - Neptune
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