Portsmouth News

Jane brings us the next chapter of a music career in constant spectacle

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Over the course of an idiosyncra­tic career Jane Weaver has ploughed her own sonic furrow.

She’s taken in everything from alternativ­e-rock to electronic­a via folk and psych.

And with her new album Love in Constant Spectacle she continues to probe her own way through the musical cosmos – but never losing sight of the melody at the heart of the songs.

Usually self-producing, for Love... – she turned to John Parish, who is probably best known for his work with PJ Harvey.

“I decided that I didn't want to repeat the last album, or albums,” explains the Manchester-based performer, “and I didn't want to do anything conceptual or in the same studios, so I just wanted to record the way everyone else does - go into a studio and record for a couple of weeks, rather than me chipping away at it for two-three years!

“I spoke to John, mid/late ’22, then it was me writing, and we recorded at the end of March/april 2023.

Everything happened quite quickly with someone who's very organised – which John is!

“It was a really good experience.”

However, the album was put together against the backdrop of Jane’s father falling ill and dying. How did that play into its creation?

“Perhaps subconscio­usly, and perhaps that's why I wanted to work with someone else – there was so much going on in my personal life and family life, that still trying to be a musician and tour and do the things you have to do, but there was this monumental personal thing parallel to that.

“It did have an influence, but I didn't particular­ly want to write directly about it. I didn't want to write all about myself, so I chose to do it as me thinking about it as different characters and in different scenarios as a way of distancing myself.”

When writing she would also randomise and translate her lyrics – akin to the cut-up methods used by Bowie and Burroughs.

“It's not something I've done much of before – it was another way of distancing myself from my own words. I would cut and paste them and mix them all up and try to get some sense out of them.”

One technique Jane used was to run lyrics through Google translate into another language, and then bakc into English.

“When you watch a subtitled film you think, ‘they're not saying that.’

It's that slightly different interpreta­tion or it’s a bit reductive. If you flip something back and forward from east to west or whatever, it does change the nuance of what you're trying to say and I found that really interestin­g. I think a lot of writers do it, but I'd never it before.”

Mortality and fragility feature as themes throughout the album too. As she says of its title track: “Love in Constant Spectacle is about looking for the small things in nature and the small things that make you happy.

“Those big bold gestures or whatever... when something quite monumental is happening like a loved one is seriously ill, you feel in a state of anxiety all the time, you have to think to yourself, things are still fine – you can look out the window and see the birds in the trees, and it's ok really.”

Jane Weaver is at The Wedgewood Rooms, Southsea on April 30. Go to wedgewood-rooms.co.uk.

 ?? ?? Jane Weaver plays at The Wedgewood Rooms on Tuesday
Picture by Nic Chapman
Jane Weaver plays at The Wedgewood Rooms on Tuesday Picture by Nic Chapman
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