Edmonton Journal

DUCHOVNY STRIKES A CHORD

X-Files actor wants his fans to believe in new musical project

- ROGER CATLIN The Washington Post

Add David Duchovny to the long list of actors who have used their fame to become gigging musicians. The New York native released his first album, Hell or Highwater, last year. A literature major with degrees from Princeton and Yale, Duchovny, 56, found it easy to match poetry he had been writing to the music he was just learning on guitar. He also writes prose, having published two successful novels and readying a third.

We spoke to the actor-musician:

Q What brought you to music this late in your career?

A I’ve always loved music, and it was just something where I had a lot of down time. I always told myself I was always going to learn guitar at some point, and I finally did. I’m in my trailer so long. As an actor, you sit on your hands for three hours and then you act for 10 minutes. That’s just the nature of it. So while I wait, why don’t I learn guitar? Because that will make me happy to be able to play music and listen to it. It kind of organicall­y grew from just knowing a guitar well enough to throw some chords together, and then putting some melodies over those chords. I guess the lyrics came most easily because I’ve always written words. So before I knew it, I was putting songs together.

Q Are people skeptical of this new direction?

A Sure. We only have so much room in our brains for other people. So people think of me a certain way. If they don’t think of me as X-Files, they think of me as Californic­ation, or they maybe think of me from some other movie. But that’s probably as much as they care to think about me. So if I come and tell them I’m a singer as well, yeah, maybe they don’t want to think about that.

But certainly, there are some other examples of actors who make music. I don’t judge it categorica­lly. I think music, of all the arts, is really the most unprejudic­ed. Your ears are not looking at anything; you’re just listening. And you either like the music or you don’t.

Q What music got you inspired enough to pick up a guitar?

A I’m pretty much a child of the late ’60s. I had an older brother who kind of defined my music taste, because he had enough money to buy albums, and he had a record player. So he was the DJ of the house. So I would say my tastes were really formed by ’60s music. You know, the British Invasion, Beatles, Stones, Kinks, Who, Zeppelin ... And then when I got $4 in my pocket to buy an album, I went a little softer than my brother. I was kind of into Elton John, then I went to Steely Dan. I was into Yes, like, progrock for a while. I also liked funk. After that, Bowie, Lou Reed, so I was kind of all over the place ... I do like the singer-songwriter­s as well.

Q Do you think music is something you will continue to do?

A I don’t think it’s a phase. It’s definitely like a new door that I opened later in my creative life. It just seems fertile for me ...

Q Who do you see in your audiences? Fans of your acting?

A I imagine they are. I’m not vain enough to think they’re coming out because they know the music. It’s hard to make an impression in the music business. Especially because I don’t think my stuff is exactly what’s radio-friendly right now. It’s like, “Come for the actor, stay for the music.” So if I get you in there, you’re going to hear the music, and you’re going to like it or not. And maybe you’ll come back. In Europe, honestly, one of the most amazing things was people singing along to my songs in a language that wasn’t their first. That was special.

Q You returned to The X-Files last year. How was that experience, and is there talk of doing more of those?

A We’re talking about doing more of those soon. The experience was strange at first to go back to something that I’d started, at the time, over 20 years ago, and I hadn’t done for seven or eight years. But since I had done that character for so long, it was really simple to find it again. But it was also an interestin­g challenge, because it was playing a guy who’s older, and maybe character doesn’t change, but we change a little bit — our energy changes as we age. Our maturity changes. So it was interestin­g to try to bring that to the guy.

 ?? JIM FISCUS/NBC/FILES ?? David Duchovny, actor and author, has now added singer-songwriter to his inventory of talents.
JIM FISCUS/NBC/FILES David Duchovny, actor and author, has now added singer-songwriter to his inventory of talents.

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