Vancouver Sun

Child star ready for comeback

Burned by U. K. tabloids, Charlotte Church hopes to restore ‘ credibilit­y’

- GREGORY KATZ

She was the girl with the voice of an angel but as she grew up, the British media made life tough for Charlotte Church.

LONDON — In terms of chronologi­cal age, Charlotte Church — at just 27 — is probably too young for a comeback tour and album. But launching a second act can be tough when you charmed the world at 12.

As a young girl, she sold many millions of records and performed live for a president and a pope before being laid low by a no- win confrontat­ion with Britain’s tabloid press and the release of what even she admits was some mediocre pop material and a not- so- great reality TV show.

Now she’s emerged from her basement studio in Wales — a hangout for local songwriter­s and musicians — with a wealth of new material she’s releasing in the United States on CD and showcasing at live performanc­es at the South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas, and in several other cities, including New York and Los Angeles, where she’ll perform at the fabled Troubadour.

“I’ve been waiting a long time to come back to the States,” said Church, who released the album One & Two on Tuesday. Taken from two previously released EPs in Europe, it’s the first of new material from the singer in the U. S. for a decade, in part because she hasn’t had full confidence in her material.

Church, burdened perhaps by the Voice of an Angel title of her first smash album, sees the U. S. as offering a fresh start. She believes her reputation in Britain has been tarnished by tabloids that covered ( and exaggerate­d) her every growing pain as she moved into rough adolescenc­e and more tranquil adulthood, including last year’s phone- hacking scandal. The singer received a $ 950,000 settlement from Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. after his reporters were found to have been hacking into her voicemails and those of other public figures.

“I’m intrigued to see how people will take it. In the U. S., I’m known predominan­tly as a singer. In the U. K., I’ve been seen as a caricature of myself for such a long time, so it’s been difficult for me to find the credibilit­y as a musician that I so crave.”

Church has moved away from straight- ahead commercial pop, which didn’t serve her particular­ly well, into a less- structured arena. There are traces of Björk and others in her phrasing and the instrument­ation varies from song to song. The purity of her soprano voice provides the unifying factor.

The singing seems effortless, free of theatrical­ity, but the lyrics are no longer naive: Beautiful Wreck is one title that certainly sounds autobiogra­phical, with its descriptio­n of a lovely, troubled soul, and the songs are adult in tone, well beyond boy- meets- girl.

“I think the new material is fantastic,” said Neil McCormick, music critic at the London Daily Telegraph. “She’s finally found a way to use her classical aptitude in an atmospheri­c pop music context. The voice really works here.”

But he said the tabloid coverage of her teenage years will make it harder for her to find a receptive audience.

“I think it’s very, very difficult for her,” he said. “All these youthful transition­s that should have been done in private have been done in public. But she just might carry it off.”

The new songs were cooked up by Church and bandmates Jamie Neasom and Jonathan Powell — her boyfriend — often as part of four- day marathons involving friends and musicians from the greater Cardiff area.

It’s no accident that Church began her tour with three gigs this past week at SXSW. She went to the festival two years ago as a fan. “It blew my socks off,” she said. “I thought the level of talent from people all around the world was incredible.”

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 ?? SANG TAN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Charlotte Church, at 27, is returning to the music world with a tour and a new album. It’s her first new material for U. S. audiences in a decade.
SANG TAN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Charlotte Church, at 27, is returning to the music world with a tour and a new album. It’s her first new material for U. S. audiences in a decade.

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