Brandy Clark - "Girl Next Door"
Feb 9, 2016 13:44:35 GMT -5
Post by sabre14 on Feb 9, 2016 13:44:35 GMT -5
Article in Billboard about "Girl Next Door":
When Brandy Clark was a finalist a year ago for best new artist and best country album at the Grammy Awards, it likely shocked a lot of country fans β she had gotten minimal airplay for her album 12 Stories, and itβs a sure bet that most of the genreβs listeners had no idea who she was.
The industry loved her, and particularly appreciated the traditional style that the album represented. Underscoring that support, a year later, one of the albumβs ballads, βHold My Hand,β is up for the best country song Grammy on Feb. 15, even though it never made it into the mainstream.
Against that backdrop comes βGirl Next Door,β the first single from Clarkβs forthcoming sophomore album, Big Day in a Small Town. The song represents both a lyrical connection to her recorded past and a sonic departure from it.
The attitude of βGirl Next Doorβ mirrors that of her debut single, βStripes.β In both cases, the singer is standing up to an inappropriate lover. Cementing the similarities, both songs find her so angry that she has to restrain herself from committing a criminal act that would land her in jail.
But the sound of βGirl Next Doorβ defies stylistic expectations. Instead of framing her as a throwback singer-songwriter, it casts her as a current, edgy artist with a clever wit. Big Day in a Small Town was produced by Jay Joyce (Eric Church, Cage the Elephant), and the mash-up of folky storyteller and boundary-pushing studio guru puts a more aggressive spin on her music. It also gives her a better shot at a commercial breakthrough.
βI didnβt want to try to make the same record,β says Clark. βIβm so proud of 12 Stories, and I knew that if I tried to do something exactly like it, it just wouldnβt be good. It would be stagnant. And I would rather make something that is different. I always want to grow as an artist, and I would rather do that and fall on my face than try to do the same thing and just stay where I am.ββGirl Next Doorβ owes its existence to the ex-boyfriend of co-writer Jessie Jo Dillon (βThe Breath You Takeβ). Following an argument, Dillon carped to Clark about the tiff on the phone: βIf he wants the girl next door, go next door!β
As soon as she blurted it out, both writers saw the phrase as a potential hook. Clark and songwriter Shane McAnally (βBreak Up in a Small Town,β βStay a Little Longerβ) were up to their ears in work on Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical, a production that played last fall at the Dallas Theater Center. But βGirl Next Doorβ was such a great idea that they took a day away from Hee Haw to write it with Dillon.
The industry loved her, and particularly appreciated the traditional style that the album represented. Underscoring that support, a year later, one of the albumβs ballads, βHold My Hand,β is up for the best country song Grammy on Feb. 15, even though it never made it into the mainstream.
Against that backdrop comes βGirl Next Door,β the first single from Clarkβs forthcoming sophomore album, Big Day in a Small Town. The song represents both a lyrical connection to her recorded past and a sonic departure from it.
The attitude of βGirl Next Doorβ mirrors that of her debut single, βStripes.β In both cases, the singer is standing up to an inappropriate lover. Cementing the similarities, both songs find her so angry that she has to restrain herself from committing a criminal act that would land her in jail.
But the sound of βGirl Next Doorβ defies stylistic expectations. Instead of framing her as a throwback singer-songwriter, it casts her as a current, edgy artist with a clever wit. Big Day in a Small Town was produced by Jay Joyce (Eric Church, Cage the Elephant), and the mash-up of folky storyteller and boundary-pushing studio guru puts a more aggressive spin on her music. It also gives her a better shot at a commercial breakthrough.
βI didnβt want to try to make the same record,β says Clark. βIβm so proud of 12 Stories, and I knew that if I tried to do something exactly like it, it just wouldnβt be good. It would be stagnant. And I would rather make something that is different. I always want to grow as an artist, and I would rather do that and fall on my face than try to do the same thing and just stay where I am.ββGirl Next Doorβ owes its existence to the ex-boyfriend of co-writer Jessie Jo Dillon (βThe Breath You Takeβ). Following an argument, Dillon carped to Clark about the tiff on the phone: βIf he wants the girl next door, go next door!β
As soon as she blurted it out, both writers saw the phrase as a potential hook. Clark and songwriter Shane McAnally (βBreak Up in a Small Town,β βStay a Little Longerβ) were up to their ears in work on Moonshine: That Hee Haw Musical, a production that played last fall at the Dallas Theater Center. But βGirl Next Doorβ was such a great idea that they took a day away from Hee Haw to write it with Dillon.
While Clark didnβt necessarily see herself as the artist who would record it, her personality was at least part of the inspiration for Dillon.
βI was thinking about myself, for sure, as a woman in the song, but I was thinking about Brandy a lot, too,β says Dillon. βShe in her own way is just, βThis is me, take it or leave it.β I love that, and weβre similar in that way.β
With βGirl Next Doorβ established as the finish line in the chorus, they started at the top of the song, keyed by an acoustic guitar riff that Clark introduced. They referenced a handful of perfect-woman stereotypes β Debbie debutante, a Barbie doll and Brady Bunch character Marcia Brady β as the singer battles Stepford Wives conformity with verbal, female aggression.βWeβre talking about a character whoβs on the verge [of exploding], as opposed to already having gone and keyed a car and carved her name [like] in βBefore He Cheats,β which is the ultimate of those songs,β says McAnally. βOnce youβve done that, youβve got to find a new way to do it.β
They sealed the deal in the chorus with a βVirgin Mary metaphorβ line that all of them debated. Clark thought βmetaphorβ might be too cerebral for a country song, while Dillon and McAnally feared the religious imagery might be too controversial. That didnβt sway Clark in the least.βWe wouldβve had to change that probably for anybody else,β notes McAnally. βAnd to me, thatβs the best line.β
When they arrived at the βgo next doorβ payoff, McAnally served up a surprise post-chorus chant β βGo next door, and go right now/Donβt look back, donβt turn aroundβ β that extended the theme past the expected finish line. The writing went fast, and they came back a couple of days later to shore up the first verse.
McAnally produced a demo that the musicians nailed on the first take, and the song got shopped around on Music Row, with Little Big Town nibbling but never quite claiming it. Ultimately, Clark started thinking of βGirl Next Doorβ as her song, and she took it into Joyceβs St. Charles Studio in East Nashville, where it gained an even more aggressive texture during five days of rehearsal for the album. They recorded for a couple of days, then Joyce burrowed into the songs alone for another nine days before Clark heard the results.
βHeβs such an artist himself and needs time to just create on his own,β says Clark.
When they turned in the album to Warner Bros.β Los Angeles division, Warner president Dan McCarroll accepted the entire project except βGirl Next Door,β which he thought needed more work. Joyce gave it a new, almost-disco bassline and changed a couple of other things around it. Then Clark went in to re-sing it, matching its new energy level while envisioning it as a feisty message about determining her own direction as an artist.
βThe song is about a woman telling a guy, βI canβt change who I am. Thatβs what you thought was cool about me,ββ she says. βBut for me to really inhabit the song, it has more meaning [with] the music business.β
McAnally and Morgane Stapleton added background vocals, and the new version was such an improvement that βGirl Next Doorβ became the first single. Warner Music Nashville shipped it to radio through Play MPE on Jan.22 with a Feb. 16 add date.
More than a year since they wrote it, Dillon has moved on from the boyfriend that inspired βGirl Next Doorβ β βshocking,β she says sarcastically. βHe would probably get off on that, knowing it was about him,β she adds. βI havenβt told him, but maybe I should β at the No. 1 party.β
Clark isnβt making such bold chart predictions, but sheβs cautiously optimistic that her real-woman dismissal of Marcia Brady- and Virgin Mary-level perfection might push her a little further into the mainstream than she got with 12 Stories and βStripes.β
βI wanted [this album] to be great,β says Clark. βI didnβt want to just be nominated for best new artist at the Grammys and then nobody ever hear from me again.β
βI was thinking about myself, for sure, as a woman in the song, but I was thinking about Brandy a lot, too,β says Dillon. βShe in her own way is just, βThis is me, take it or leave it.β I love that, and weβre similar in that way.β
With βGirl Next Doorβ established as the finish line in the chorus, they started at the top of the song, keyed by an acoustic guitar riff that Clark introduced. They referenced a handful of perfect-woman stereotypes β Debbie debutante, a Barbie doll and Brady Bunch character Marcia Brady β as the singer battles Stepford Wives conformity with verbal, female aggression.βWeβre talking about a character whoβs on the verge [of exploding], as opposed to already having gone and keyed a car and carved her name [like] in βBefore He Cheats,β which is the ultimate of those songs,β says McAnally. βOnce youβve done that, youβve got to find a new way to do it.β
They sealed the deal in the chorus with a βVirgin Mary metaphorβ line that all of them debated. Clark thought βmetaphorβ might be too cerebral for a country song, while Dillon and McAnally feared the religious imagery might be too controversial. That didnβt sway Clark in the least.βWe wouldβve had to change that probably for anybody else,β notes McAnally. βAnd to me, thatβs the best line.β
When they arrived at the βgo next doorβ payoff, McAnally served up a surprise post-chorus chant β βGo next door, and go right now/Donβt look back, donβt turn aroundβ β that extended the theme past the expected finish line. The writing went fast, and they came back a couple of days later to shore up the first verse.
McAnally produced a demo that the musicians nailed on the first take, and the song got shopped around on Music Row, with Little Big Town nibbling but never quite claiming it. Ultimately, Clark started thinking of βGirl Next Doorβ as her song, and she took it into Joyceβs St. Charles Studio in East Nashville, where it gained an even more aggressive texture during five days of rehearsal for the album. They recorded for a couple of days, then Joyce burrowed into the songs alone for another nine days before Clark heard the results.
βHeβs such an artist himself and needs time to just create on his own,β says Clark.
When they turned in the album to Warner Bros.β Los Angeles division, Warner president Dan McCarroll accepted the entire project except βGirl Next Door,β which he thought needed more work. Joyce gave it a new, almost-disco bassline and changed a couple of other things around it. Then Clark went in to re-sing it, matching its new energy level while envisioning it as a feisty message about determining her own direction as an artist.
βThe song is about a woman telling a guy, βI canβt change who I am. Thatβs what you thought was cool about me,ββ she says. βBut for me to really inhabit the song, it has more meaning [with] the music business.β
McAnally and Morgane Stapleton added background vocals, and the new version was such an improvement that βGirl Next Doorβ became the first single. Warner Music Nashville shipped it to radio through Play MPE on Jan.22 with a Feb. 16 add date.
More than a year since they wrote it, Dillon has moved on from the boyfriend that inspired βGirl Next Doorβ β βshocking,β she says sarcastically. βHe would probably get off on that, knowing it was about him,β she adds. βI havenβt told him, but maybe I should β at the No. 1 party.β
Clark isnβt making such bold chart predictions, but sheβs cautiously optimistic that her real-woman dismissal of Marcia Brady- and Virgin Mary-level perfection might push her a little further into the mainstream than she got with 12 Stories and βStripes.β
βI wanted [this album] to be great,β says Clark. βI didnβt want to just be nominated for best new artist at the Grammys and then nobody ever hear from me again.β