Archive for August, 2013

Project Runway S12.Ep7: RECAP

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Marie Claire Challenge: Create a look inspired by a pair of shoes

Kate reminds us and the other designers that she was previously eliminated during the seventh challenge in her prior season. The designers gather at Marie Claire office in the wardrobe closet surrounded by shoes. The designers then choose shoes after answering fashion history questions. I actually knew the answer to the question: What designer created the essential little black dress? Coco Chanel of course!

Suggested budget: $250

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Alexander and Miranda both choose plaid material. And they’re both making pants.

Alexandria—Gladiator shoes that had straps wrapped all the way up to mid-thigh. playful. “Making a statement piece without the bondage.”

Justin—multi-colored pump. Wants to make three piece outfit.

Miranda–Red patent leather flats. High-waisted pant and blouse, jacket. Tim: “fabric looks inexpensive.”

Alexander– off white platforms. was concerned about plaid pants due to Miranda but Tim said as long as he distinguishes his design.

Ken—black heel with open ties in front. Making a coat dress and it’s ballooning out in the bottom. Tim: “it’s looking dated. Don’t over design it.”

Bradon– sparkly flat and designed a champagne silky dress with a special French ruffling technique but Tim’s not all that impressed because he wonders where she’s going. “Don’t you think she’s going in it?”

Kate– interesting red patent platform. “I want to play up the surrealism of the shoe.” She’s making pants.

Jeremy– boots. Designing a chiffon sweater.

Dom– skater girl quilter dress with multi-colored creeper shoes.

Karen– beige and yellow pump. She’s designed a yellow and black dress. Tim: “Are you concerned about the matchy-matchy?”

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Helen: Shoe with a studded toe. loads of applique. “Heavy and deluding into nothing.” Tim says that he sees Kate Middleton but with everything added he sees her mother.

Before the runway, Ken says: “I don’t care for Miranda’s look at all. It looked like Amy Winehouse after she OD’ed.” Alexander had to sew his pants onto the model. Bradon’s really rushing with the look. Kate thinks Bradon designed way too mature a look.

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SAFE:

Kate

design by kate

design by kate

Alexander

design by Alexander

design by Alexander

Karen

design by Karen

design by Karen

Dom

design by Dom

design by Dom

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HIGH:

Alexandria

design by Alexandria

design by Alexandria

Gladiator ‘bondage’ shoe
“I think you did the perfect think for those shoes. I like that it’s whimsical and feminine.” –Heidi Klum
“These needed something very soft and relaxed.” –Zac Posen
“it’s so bold and shows such confidence in yourself. I like the lace at the top. It’s so feminine and sweet.” –Kaley Cuoco

Helen

design by Helen

design by Helen

Ankle boot with studded toe
“There’s something minimal and classic about your look. She looks refined, she looks sophisticated.” – Nina Garcia
I want now. This is so fantastic. It’s so well fit, sexy, chic. –Kaley Cuoco
It’s chic. It’s sophisticated. It’s fits immaculately. –Zac Posen
“I love this look. It’s sleek and chic.” –Heidi Klum

Ken

design by Ken

design by Ken

Open front tied heel
“She looks very sophisticated, hard. You took it to another level. I like the fabric. It has a beaut texture.” –Heidi Klum
“Maneater I love. She’s showing a lot of leg but she’s very covered up. She struck a great balance.” – Nina Garcia
“I love this. I think it’s so cool. It’s actually cute and cool at the same time.” –Kaley Cuoco

guest judge Kaley Cuoco

guest judge Kaley Cuoco

LOW SCORES:

Jeremy

design by Jeremy

design by Jeremy

Black high boot
“I don’t think it looks current or modern to me.” –Heidi Klum
“I think it’s a little much. There’s a lot going on.” –Kaley Cuoco
“You have this edgy boots. This should’ve been something cool. Something rocker. Simple.” – Nina Garcia
“I’m starting to question who you are as a designer. Your techniques and your skills and I really need to skills.” –Zac Posen

Bradon

design by Bradon

design by Bradon

Sparkly flat
“I thought of swing dancing and Happy Days. I would have preferred a sleek suit. It’s so old school. I didn’t love it.” –Heidi Klum
“Those flat shoes are fabulous. I wish I had seen it with a little A-line dress. You went so tortured.” – Nina Garcia
“The silhouette and the fabric just feel frumpy dumpy. You have to start thinking of the amazing techniques you do and how to bring them into something that feels fresh for today. –Zac Posen

Miranda

design by Miranda

design by Miranda

Red patent loafer
“I didn’t particularly like this look. She doesn’t look like a cool girl at all. I don’t even know what era she’s from.” –Heidi Klum
“I sort of like that it’s not a cool girl. It’s nerd alert. I just think maybe it’s not kooky enough.” ––Zac Posen
“The whole look feels very retro but not in a new way.” – Nina Garcia

HELEN is the WINNER.

MIRANDA is OUT.

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STEELE INTERVIEWS: author David Vann

“What I can remember is what I understood. I know my own grandfather said I should be killed and burned, but I can’t remember what I felt when he said that, I think I felt nothing, because I remember nothing. Anger might have been possible But I could not have felt any recognition, and for some reason I don’t understand now, I felt no fear.”

GoatMountain HC c

David Vann writes dark, introspective, mesmerizing novels. In his latest novel Goat Mountain the unimaginable happens for an 11-year-old boy on his first hunting expedition with his father and grandfather. The three generations must examine themselves and their relationships with each other as well as the consequences of their actions. It’s riveting, disturbing, violent and haunting. Vann is the winner of fourteen prizes, including France’s Prix Medici etranger, the Grace Paley Prize, the AWP Nonfiction Prize and France’s L’Express readers’ prize. He’s a professor at the University of Warwick in England.

I recently interviewed David via email.

Amy Steele: Hi David. It’s an honor to interview you. I admire your writing. There’s such emotional intensity and darkness in it. I don’t tend to be gushy with my interview subjects but when I’ve read almost everything someone’s written [haven’t read A Mile Down], I just have to admit it. Dirt is my favorite.

David Vann: Thank you, Amy! Very generous of you. And I appreciate your reviews and inclusion on your best books lists.

Amy Steele: How did you end up teaching in England and living in Turkey as well as New Zealand?

David Vann: My wife Nancy and I became residents of New Zealand ten years ago, in 2003, and we love it more each year. We’ve finally built a house and live there Dec-May, overlooking a beach and headlands and ocean and islands. We do a lot of watersports and also hike and mountain-bike right from the house into the mountains behind. It’s a very peaceful and easy place where I can relax and focus on my writing. We sail for a couple months each summer in Turkey, where we used to run charters (I was a captain on boats for about 8 years because I couldn’t get Legend of a Suicide published). We like the culture there, and the beautiful coves and bays and ancient ruins. And I love my teaching job in England at the University of Warwick. It’s just 10 weeks each autumn, teaching two grad workshops of 12 students each, fiction and nonfiction. Talented students, great faculty, and my wife and I love London and touring around England. It’s also nice to be closer to various European book launches and festivals. I used to teach in San Francisco, and it was a bummer to do three roundtrips to Europe during a semester.

Amy Steele: Alaska is in your first two novels (California in the next two). Do you get back there often? How long did you live there? What was it like growing up there?

photo by Mathieu Bourgois

photo by Mathieu Bourgois

David Vann: I was born on Adak Island in Alaska and spent my early childhood in Ketchikan, Alaska, until I was five or six. After that, my parents divorced and I lived in Alaska just one-third of each year, two-thirds in California, until my father died when I was thirteen. The rainforest in southeast Alaska is still vivid in my memories and mythic in my imagination. In all of my fiction, I write from landscape. You can think of it as a Rorschach test, a kind of blank page for the unconscious to fill with shape and pattern and meaning. My grandfather caught a 250-pound halibut once, and I always think of it as a metaphor for how writing works, looking over the side of the boat into the water and seeing something small grow and change shape and become impossible and enormous by the time it reached the surface. I was going back to Alaska every year, most recently on a book tour with the library system there, but I’ve missed a year or two now.

Amy Steele: How did your Native American background affect your upbringing and cultural identity?

David Vann: I didn’t know I was part Cherokee until after 2005, when my sailing memoir A Mile Down was published. I was contacted by the Cherokee nation because I was burying Chief David Vann in Google searches. It turns out he’s a great uncle several generations farther back. There was also a related chief with my father’s name, Jim Vann. My grandfather didn’t tell anyone about being one-fourth or one-eighth Cherokee, but looking back now, the men in my family and my new novel Goat Mountain only make sense to me in the context of that heritage. I think it’s very strange one can be so affected by heritage without even knowing about it. I’ve written an essay about this, which hopefully will appear soon, so I should perhaps stop here for now.

Amy Steele: What made you decide to study writing in college and grad school?

David Vann: I always wrote, even when I was a kid, telling our hunting and fishing stories then and giving them to my family as Christmas presents each year. So I never wondered what I wanted to study or do. I just never could get published or make any money through writing, so I had to do other jobs for a long time.

Amy Steele: What do you like about writing?

David Vann: I like the transformations by the unconscious that happen on the page, through landscapes changing shape and characters colliding. I’m watching more than writing, and the experience is the closest I have to religion, something that transforms the world and makes it meaningful and offers me a place.

Amy Steele: When you write do you tend to work from an outline or allow your characters or the plot to lead you?

David Vann: I never have any outline or plan or even any idea what the book will be about. This is exciting to me. Goat Mountain was the strangest and best, and I began to understand it only in the final fifty pages. It was a thrill ride. And it’s never plot that leads, but only character and landscape. What shocks me is how much pattern there is to the unconscious. In Caribou Island, for instance, there are four couples all reflecting on love and marriage, but that wasn’t a plan, and I thought I’d be writing in only one point of view but ended up writing in seven. The other thing that excites me is that the books are published almost the same as the first draft. No scene has been added, cut, or moved. I work very hard on line edits for months, polishing sentences, but even that doesn’t lead to much change. So readers experience basically the same thing that I did in first writing.

Amy Steele: Your first book, Legend of a Suicide, was about a son dealing with his father’s suicide which is something you experienced. Your other novels are also fairly autobiographical. In the prologue to Goat Mountain you write: “This is the novel that burns away the last of what first made me write, the stories of my violent family.” Are you no longer going to write novels about your family or that are violent?

David Vann: Goat Mountain is the end of my books that have family stories in the background. They’ve all been fiction, with all that happens made up (with the exception of the first three stories in Legend of a Suicide, which do contain many autobiographical facts and events), but they’ve been powered emotionally and psychologically by the disturbing stories of my family’s history. Once I finished Goat Mountain, I was afraid I might never write again, or never find any weight to my next characters, but then I wrote the next novel, about Medea, titled Bright Air Black, and she has as much weight as anyone else. That book is tragedy also, of course. But I’m working on a novel now, Aquarium, which is actually a comedy, not as in ha ha but as in nobody dies in the end. I should mention, by the way, that my novels actually are not violent compared to most other books and movies and TV series.

Amy Steele: Why did you want to tell the story in Goat Mountain?

David Vann: I didn’t. I was starting a novel set in the Australian outback and then just started writing Goat Mountain and had no idea what I was doing. But it is the material of the first short story I ever wrote, more than 25 years ago, so it was a novel waiting to happen, a landscape I couldn’t avoid writing about, the northern Californian ranch where we hunted deer each fall.

Amy Steele: What was the purpose of the bible stories?

David Vann: I didn’t know as I was writing, and I was surprised to see the holy trinity show up in my novel, since I’m an atheist. The poacher the boy shoots in the first chapter becomes a kind of Jesus figure, the buck he shoots becomes a kind of holy ghost, and his grandfather becomes a terrible god. The book is about the legacy of Cain, our desire to kill, and what rules hold us together and what happens when those rules are broken.

Amy Steele: Do you see Goat Mountain as a tale of morality or a coming of age story?

David Vann: I would never write a tale intending a moral, and there’s no moral in Goat Mountain. There’s only a battle. And it’s not a coming of age story really, either. It’s a Greek tragedy, 4 characters on a mountainside for two and a half days, told in real time. The boy is affected and does change and does become a man and more terrifyingly human.

Amy Steele: When you’re writing about killing a man or someone committing suicide what kind of inner dialogue goes on for how far to go in describing that situation to make it compelling and realistic without it being too gory to turn-off readers?

David Vann: I never think of readers. I follow what happens in the writing, transformations on the page, and question only whether I believe each sentence. I had a class with Grace Paley, and she said every sentence in fiction has to be true. I agree with that. And American readers generally have forgotten the last 2,500 years of literature anyway. We should never ask whether characters are likeable, for instance. That’s a new question. It’s been irrelevant for 2,500 years and is still irrelevant. But I should also address this question of gore. I don’t like or write horror or gore. I write tragedy, in which any violence is connected emotionally and psychologically, and there’s actually very little violence in my books comparatively. Horror is without this connection, just watching limbs sawn off in deadened entertainment, the same as our soldiers being taught to kill without feeling anything. Tragedy moves in the exact opposite direction, bringing us in close for conflict and empathy and catharsis.

[AS: If I could’ve followed up on this question I completely agree that it’s irrelevant whether characters are likeable or not, only that they’re compelling. I’ve enjoyed many well-written, engrossing novels with completely repellent characters. As for gore, I don’t enjoy reading gory books. I think that David Vann writes tragic prose with some horrific moments. There’s never any gratuitous violence. That wasn’t what I intended in the question. I like the answer regardless.]

Amy Steele: How are you able to revisit devastating, complex moments in your past and write clear-eyed, focused and rather calmly about them? Is it cathartic or therapeutic for you?

David Vann: It is great therapy. I feel much better now after writing four books of fiction about my family. But writing is more than therapy. It’s not only about truth. It’s also about the beautiful. It has an aesthetic aim that therapy does not. And the necessary distance in writing comes through an indirect focus, through writing about the landscape and letting the interior life of characters appear there instead of trying to write directly about feelings.

Amy Steele: Why do you write mostly fiction vs. nonfiction? Is it so you can (mostly) re-imagine events in the way you wanted them to transpire?

David Vann: I write mostly fiction because in nonfiction I can’t make up characters or events, so the stories are held in a kind of straightjacket, without full freedom to transform and surprise and take on unconscious pattern. I’m guessing that some nonfiction writers do find this freedom (my favorite memoir is Tobias Wolff’s This Boy’s Life, and it feels entirely free and fluid). I still like writing nonfiction, and of course there’s no such thing as a true story, so it’s an odd field in which I should feel more freedom, but it’s more limited for me.

Amy Steele: What kind of music do you listen to when writing?

David Vann: I never listen to anything while writing. I sit in a room alone and wear earplugs. I don’t understand how anyone can write with music or especially in a café.

Amy Steele: Where do you do your best writing?

David Vann: In bed, in the morning, for two hours every day. It can be anywhere in the world, any hotel room or home or boat. And that’s my only writing. I don’t try to write later in the day, so there’s no best or worst writing, only the writing each day.

Amy Steele: What interested you in writing Last Day on Earth? It’s so creepy and sadly fascinating.

David Vann: My editor at Esquire assigned it to me, because I had a frightening history with inheriting all my father’s guns after his suicide, when I was thirteen. I shot out streetlamps in our neighborhood and aimed at the neighbors. I was able to get the full 1,500 pages of the police files about the shooter, unedited, the most complete information anyone has ever had about a school shooting. But no one wanted to read or even review my book, because we don’t really want to know how our shooters implicate us. They’re incredibly easy to profile, and could also be very easy to stop if we only wanted to. But of course we never will.

Amy Steele: Thank you so so much in taking the time to answer my questions. Hope to meet you in person one day.

David Vann: Thank you! It’d be great to meet. And thank you for such thoughtful questions.

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Mount Kimbie Fall Tour Dates

mount kimbie

video for “Home Recording:”

TOUR DATES

9.22–Symbiosis Gathering Fest – Oakdale, CA

9.23–Echoplex – Los Angeles, CA

9.24–Porters Pub – San Diego, CA

9.25–DNA Lounge – San Francisco, CA

9.27–Decibel Festival (Showbox Sodo) – Seattle, WA

9.28–Venue – Vancouver, BC

9.29–Doug Fir Lounge – Portland, OR

9.30– Neurolux – Boise, ID

10.02–Urban Lounge – Salt Lake City, UT

10.03–Larimer Lounge – Denver, CO

10.05–Mutek MX – Mexico City, MX

10.07–The Sinclair – Boston, MA

10.08–Music Hall of Williamsburg – Brooklyn, NY

10.09–Black Cat – Washington, DC

10.11–The Loft – Atlanta, GA

10.12–Jack Rabbits – Jacksonville, FL

10.13–Club Downunder – Tallahassee, FL

10.14–The Social – Orlando, FL

10.15–Bardot – Miami, FL

10.17–Republic – New Orleans, LA

10.18–Walters – Houston, TX

10.19–Red 7 – Austin, TX

10.20–Club Dada – Dallas, TX

10.22–Lincoln Hall – Chicago, IL

10.23–The Basement – Columbus, OH

10.26–Carnegie Mellon – Pittsburgh, PA

10.27–Mountain Oasis Festival – Asheville, NC

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Fall Books on My Radar

September Releases:

wrong girl

sister mother husband dog

goat-mountain-cover

help for the haunted

MaddAddam

lowland

October Releases:

valley of amazement

longbourn

we are water

dirty love

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Luray: music review

thewilder-medium

This Washington, D.C.-based bluegrassy, ethereal [banjo-driven folk]/ Americana band revolves around singer/songwriter Shannon Carey’s gentle, sun-kissed vocals and diverse banjo playing. On the magical, glorious title track Carey sings in subdued style then hits an exquisite high note at the chorus. This song sounds the mellowest and most electric at the same time, keyboards and guitar being central instruments. “Kalorama” [a section of D.C.’s Adams Morgan] sounds distinctly alt-country while “Already There” shimmers with a sweet banjo twang and kicky beat. “Tidalground” features a more atmospheric sound and swirly vocals. From the first note of “Crying,” you’ll feel like you’ve hit the road in cowboy boots. When something seems inherently simple it can’t possibly be. Carey possesses the songwriting abilities and vocal range for Luray to straddle several genres while maintaining its own sound. Even though her brother Sean (S. Carey of Bon Iver—a more brooding indie band) produced the album, Shannon clearly prefers singing and writing songs with happier vibes. Think fresh air, blue skies, paddles dipping into cool water, trail mixes, reading on a hammock and long winding hikes.

–by Amy Steele

The Wilder
Release date: August 27, 2013

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FALL TOUR: Irish folk singer/songwriter Damien Dempsey

damien dempsey2

37-year-old Irish protest folk singer/songwriter Damien Dempsey will be touring in support of his sixth album, Almighty Love, available now on iTunes. He sings emotionally charged songs with social and political themes in the same vein as Frank Turner. Quite popular in Ireland, Dempsey’s toured with U2, Sinead O’Connor, Morrissey (both in the US, UK and Ireland), David Gray, Bob Dylan and Hot House Flowers.

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TOUR DATES:

8/31-9/1 Kansas City, MO– Kansas City Irish Festival
9/4 Chicago –Lincoln Hall
9/6 Boston — Brighton Music Hall
9/7 New York–Bowery Ballroom
9/9 New London, CT –Hanafins Pub
9/10 Philadelphia — World Cafe Live
9/11 Washington DC –The Hamilton
9/13-14 Muskegon, MI — Michigan Irish Festival

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There Was an Old Woman: book review

there was an old woman

There Was An Old Woman by Hallie Ephron. Publisher: William Morrow (2013). Suspense/Thriller. Hardcover. 304 pages. ISBN 9780062117601.

I’ve been aching for a real thriller in recent months– a page-turner that I don’t want to put down and can’t wait to pick back up again, one which avoids slasher gore and serial killing. There Was an Old Woman by Hallie Ephron draws you in with equal parts creepiness, cleverness and colorful characters. Ephron manages to include fear of aging, alcoholism, family dynamics, aggressive developers and historical preservation in her twisty-turny suspenseful novel about a young woman who returns to her Bronx neighborhood when her alcoholic mother ends up hospitalized. Evie knew her mom wasn’t doing very well but didn’t realize how far she’d declined in recent months. The more she investigates and befriends sassy 91-year-old neighbor Mina, who shares her own conspiracy theories about the neighborhood’s demise, the stranger everything seems. Is it all in her elderly neighbor’s mind or is someone trying to make fools of them all?

RATING: ****/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from William Morrow.

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Project Runway: S12.Ep6: RECAP

glamping

Resource Water Challenge: Create a high end fashion look inspired by nature

The designers go glamping. Beds set up in the tents. Big hammocks. Bonding by talking and relaxing. It’s really a lovely way to get a bit of rest and relaxation away from the workroom. They zip glide and go rafting. Justin teaches some sign language. Dinner catered by candlelight.

Katelyn gets ready to zip line.

Katelyn gets ready to zip line.

The next day they head off to Mood with a recommended budget of $300 and back to the workroom.

Karen
Inspired by tent and way it was draped. “vintage safari camp.” Her dress looks like an off-white toga with leather trim. Tim says it needs something more. “Compared to your peers you didn’t take it far enough,” he says. She says she will ombre dye it.

Justin2

Justin
Creating lace with a glue gun. Tim thinks it’s “smashing.” Justin thinks he’s been playing it safe.

Alexander
He’s doing a silhouette of trees against a dark sky and has a dark blue sheath dress to which he’ll attach black and dark blue leather. Tim thinks it’ll be too bottom heavy.

Bradon
Using a threading technique to recreate moss. Tim thinks it looks like a children’s drawing.

alexandria2

Alexandria
Glamping is the modern camping so she’s making a modern denim jacket and creating a drop-crotch pant. Tim doesn’t like the pant.

Ken
Inspired by water and waves for the structure of the dress. Red and green color dress.

Jeremy
Wrote a “semi-philosophical love letter” to be put on a bias-cut sheath dress. He’s going to overlay shapes in primary colors: red; yellow and blue. Tim says “whenever my students chose primary colors I would say it was a cheap shot. The challenge will be in the execution.”

Helen gets a bit of sketching in.

Helen gets a bit of sketching in.

Helen
Challenged by a moth dying in a bathroom sink. Tim: “this is going to be a work of art.”

Miranda
“I’m making a bunch of little origami petals that remind me of a tree trunk with leaves coming off the bottom.”

Alexander: “Karen, Helen and Dom, when they’re together it’s like the Witches of Eastwick. They cackle and they’re loud and it’s kinda annoying.”

guest judge Allison Williams with Nina Garcia, Zac Posen and Heidi Klum

guest judge Allison Williams with Nina Garcia, Zac Posen and Heidi Klum

SAFE:

design 5 by kate

design 6 by kate

design 6 by bradon

design 6 by bradon

design 6 by miranda

design 6 by miranda

design 6 by helen

design 6 by helen

design 6 by dom

design 6 by dom

HIGH SCORES:

Jeremy:

design 6 by jeremy

design 6 by jeremy

Sonnet chic. I’m a sucker for bias. You did it very well in the time frame. It’s beautiful. –Zac Posen
It feels very personal. It feels very authentic. When you see this dress it gives this emotion. I’m crazy with this little row of buttons on the side. –Nina Garcia
It is fluid and stunning. –Heidi Klum

Alexander:

design 6 by alexander

design 6 by alexander

The fit on this dress is ridiculous in a good way. I could go either way with the leather piece on it. –Heidi Klum
I’m crazy about this dress. I like the little pieces on it. –Allison Williams
I’m not that wowed by the hand painting. –Zac Posen
There’s something dramatic about this dress. –Nina Garcia

Alexandria:

design 6 by alexandria

design 6 by alexandria

The back looks fantastic. Modern, cool, draped. You made it into a very luxurious jacket. –Nina Garcia
I couldn’t tell it was denim and that’s a testament to your work with this material. –Allison Williams
This felt sophisticated. It felt cool. I was totally impressed. –Zac Posen

LOW SCORES:

Karen:

design 6 by karen

design 6 by karen

“She looks trashy to me. It looks like a duvet.” –Heidi Klum
“It looks like a beach dress but she has a leather harness and cowboy boots. You have two conflicting stories.” –Nina Garcia
A little of her femininity was lost in the piece –Allison Williams

Ken:

design 6 by ken

design 6 by ken

I am not thrilled with this look. So heavy it is overpowering. Her hair and makeup is very 80s. –Nina Garcia
I had written on my card frog queen. –Zac Posen
It’s a lot of fabric to have right on her chest. –Heidi Klum

Justin:

design 6 by justin

design 6 by justin

I’m not a huge fan of this dress. It’s borderline Halloween costume from an inexpensive place. –Heidi Klum
It almost looks like she has a foaming vagina. The location. –Allison Williams
I do like the color of the chiffon on the bottom. It’s a nice modern color. –Zac Posen

Alexandria is the WINNER. “you took a risk and it totally paid off.” –Heidi

Jeremy and Alexander are IN.

Ken is IN.

Karen is IN.

Justin is OUT.

Everyone’s crying in the back and Tim Gunn comes back to say that he disagrees with the judges and thinks that Justin’s very talented. He uses his “Tim Gunn SAVE.”

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STEELE INTERVIEWS: AISHA BURNS

Aisha Burns possesses a stunning, emotive voice with amazing range and impressive character. She’s been playing violin and contributing vocals to the Austin, Texas group Balmorhea for years and finally decided to release a solo album. Exquisite violin melodies create amazingly complex and emotional songs that combine her classical training with tender layers of Americana and folk. On her debut album, Life in the Midwater [out September 17 on Western Vinyl], sweetly sad songs echo the depths of the bell jar, walls closing in, the salty splashing tear drops. How enviable be so talented, grounded and sensible in one’s mid-twenties. Burns reminds me of solo artists Neko Case, Cat Power and Beth Orton.

I recently interviewed Aisha.

Amy Steele: When did you start playing violin?

Aisha_Burns_2

Aisha Burns: I started playing when I was 10 through an after school strings program at my elementary school. My best friend was playing. And one day after school I picked it up, tried to teach myself a song from her beginner’s book and got really into it. If it hadn’t been for her and that class, I wonder if I would’ve ever found my way to it. It all definitely makes me feel really strongly about music programs in school. Sometimes, it takes being exposed to something before you realize that you might really love it.

Amy Steele: What do you like about the violin?

Aisha Burns:I think I love its ability to be so forcefully emotive. Something about it has always sort of affected some deep part of me. I love the strings more than any other musical family. There’s nothing like the sound of a string section.

Amy Steele: What does your classical background bring to your songwriting?

Aisha Burns:That’s difficult for me to pin down exactly, but it definitely comes into play while writing the string arrangements. I understand the violin through its classical context, so I’m sure that’s in the back of my mind while I’m putting the parts together. I’ve had people say that my vocal melodies are similar to the way a solo violin might behave in a song. Maybe that’s a part of it too.

Amy Steele: You sing in Balmorhea and you’re also a member of Idyl, led by Alex Dupree. Why’d you want to go solo now?

Aisha Burns: That’s just sort of the way it worked out. I’d been writing songs for a while, but had publicly been spending my energy contributing to projects led by other people. I think I wanted something that I was in complete control of–partly because I had something different to express and partly because I think I wanted to prove to myself that I could do it. As I got more comfortable singing and playing, it just felt right to capture the songs and make a record.

Aisha_Burns_1

Amy Steele: What’s been the best aspect of being a solo artist and the greatest surprise?

Aisha Burns:The best aspect has been having control over all aspects of the music. I love playing in bands, but its been nice while I’m writing to have the freedom to play exactly what I’m hearing in my head at all times. There’s no one else to compromise with, no one else’s arrangements to write around.

The greatest surprise might be that I experience the dynamic between audience and performer differently in my solo set. I think I tend to take everything more personally. Or maybe I just feel more vulnerable. it’s not a feeling of, “oh I hope this crowd is into the band,” rather its “oh I hope this audience likes me.”

Amy Steele: Austin’s well-known for SXSW, is it a cool music scene other than that. How did it help you to grow as a musician living in Austin?

Aisha Burns: Definitely. There is such a friendly community of musicians here that I think I often take for granted. I forget that this type of scene is rare. And that so many genres can exist well in the same town. There are so many places to perform, and after being here for a good while, it seems like nearly every working musician I know is connected to someone else I know. The first band I ever played in was here. I didn’t know them at all beforehand, they just sort of welcomed me in. That inclusive, positive spirit has made it easy to learn from others. It’s been amazing to be surrounded by talented people. Good songwriting rubs off, I think.

Amy Steele: You have such an emotive voice and distinct vocal style, where did you do all your secret singing to know that you were talented enough to share it with others?

Aisha Burns:I had a group of friends that moved to Austin from North Carolina who effectively changed that season of my life. They were all really creative and encouraging and truly believed in community and bringing people together. So they started hosting these house shows once a month. We’d all have a potluck dinner together and then whoever wanted to play would draw a number out of a hat and play three songs. I played the first song I was really proud for a couple of those friends before the show. They went on to put my name on the list without me knowing and kind of forced me to play! I was terrified. But when I finished the last song, I realized that I’d survived, and that I actually kinda liked it. I got a lot of great, unexpected, encouraging feedback. I went on to play nearly every one of those shows for about two years.

It was the perfect place to build confidence in singing publicly. Everyone, even the new people that would show up were so interested in sharing and receiving whatever others had to offer. It was a very warm, safe, packed house. I met so many amazing musicians there. Those shows don’t happen anymore, but man, they were a powerful force for me while they lasted.

Amy Steele: On your Facebook page you list some great books like Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and Middlesex. Who are some of your favorite authors? Are you reading anything at the moment?

Aisha Burns:I’m horrendous at choosing favorites for anything, but Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides is one of my favorite books, as is Henderson the Rain King by Saul Bellow. I’m reading a couple of things now: Gilead by Marilynne Robinson and a non-fiction book about food politics called Stuffed by Hank Cardello.

life in the midwater

Amy Steele: What does the album title Life in the Midwater mean?

Aisha Burns:It’s from a book about the ocean that describes the Midwater, a specific layer of the ocean, as this dark place where fish who have a capability to shine and produce light sort of timidly sit in waiting. They’re too afraid to move because if they bump into another light producing fish, it’ll expose them to their lurking predators.

To me, it’s about being in a state of such confusion where everything feels so tense and fragile that you’re almost afraid to move. There’s great potential, but there’s also a feeling of impending danger. It means a lot of things to me and its specific meaning changes. Almost depends on what day you ask me! But that’s the gist of it, I think.

Amy Steele: In college you majored in journalism so you clearly like to write. What kind of songwriter are you?

Aisha Burns:I do love to write–it’s true! That’s a tricky question to answer. I just write what feels true. My songs are portraits of a feeling or specific situations. I think I’m most concerned with communicating a feeling in an interesting way.

Amy Steele: What inspires you?

Aisha Burns:Ah, I don’t want to come off too weepy, but in truth, sad songs. And difficult emotions. The poet Rilke talks about art being made out of necessity. Some of my songs that I’m most proud of are those that were written almost spontaneously and in direct response to something that happened that day. It feels really cheesy to say that life and complex emotion are my biggest inspiration because, well, that’s probably true for anyone that’s not some sort of machine. I don’t think that’s unique, but that’s what begs me to sing.

Amy Steele: What makes a good song?

Aisha Burns:It’s all so subjective! You mentioned my journalism degree earlier–writing music reviews was difficult for me because there were things that I didn’t like even though they were “good.” But to me, I’m drawn to a really honest, creative expression. A lot of heart, a strong melody, something to latch onto. I definitely don’t have all the answers, but I think those pieces are important.

aisha burns website

Balmorhea website

purchase at Amazon: Life in the Midwater

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Julia Holter: music review

loud city song cover

dramatic. experimental. speak-singing[“Horns Surrounding Me”] on some songs, whispery [“World”] on others. Reminds me of Charlotte Gainsbourg or Feist. “In the Green Wild” jumps and weaves with big strings and a triumphant spiritedness. The aching, stunning “Hello Stranger” shifts to a contemplative mood with its windiness. “Maxims II” invokes a musical number or a café setting or both. Horns and Holter’s precious vocals blend on “This is a True Heart.” L.A. singer/songwriter Holter said that the classic 1958 musical Gigi inspired this album. A daring idea and creative endeavor that works with Holter’s fascinating, varied vocal delivery combined with her uncommon song constructions.

Loud City Song
Domino Records

purchase: Loud City Song

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