Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

MELISSA ETHERIDGE BRINGING ‘THE MEDICINE SHOW’ TO TOWN TUESDAY

- BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO CORRESPOND­ENT

The last time Melissa Etheridge was in a recording studio was for 2016’s “Memphis Rock and Soul,” a collection of covers that paid homage to a number of different soul artists.

The 2016 presidenti­al election and its aftermath proved to be the shock to the system that immediatel­y sent Etheridge into the studio. The result is “The Medicine Show,” her 15th studio album released this month by the Kansas native.

“I started thinking about this new album in 2016 when I was sure that we were going to have this great new female president. Where we went at the end of 2016 really had an effect on me. I realized that now it was about inspiring because this was depressing. And it’s times like this where I know music and art can do so much,” she explained in a recent phone interview.

“I decided to use some of these instances [for creative fuel]. All of 2017, I got some notebooks and started writing things down, picking up pictures and thoughts and putting a notebook of inspiratio­n together. I knew that this next album was going to be about this time because 20 years from now, you’ll be able to look at this album and see that it’s a

If you go

› What: Melissa Etheridge

› Where: Walker Theatre inside Memorial Auditorium, 399 McCallie Ave.

› When: 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 30

› Admission: $58.50-$118.50

› For more informatio­n: 423-757-5580 microcosm of 2018. I have no desire to preach to anybody. But I do want to reach into the hearts and minds of people and really give hope and find a way to inspire through this.”

The 11 songs Etheridge recorded found her pulling from current events to paint a picture of what this country was going through. “The Human Chain” offers hope for healing, while “Shaking” finds the rocker addressing the inner turmoil of anxiety.

Health and wellness are at the core of the album, be it the psychologi­cal or physiologi­cal. It gets addressed via “Here Comes the Pain,” which focuses on opioid addiction, and album-closer “The Last Hello,” which was informed by the Parkland School shootings.

“I was actually in the studio [when Parkland happened]. It all really depressed me, but the next day when I saw … Emma Gonzalez and David Hogg get up and speak …. for me, there was the shining light we should follow,” Etheridge recalled.

“So I put my mind and heart in that place of a survivor and started doing a little research. There are a lot of people that have died in school shootings, but there are 150,000 people who have survived school shootings. When I start thinking of all those people that have seen this horrific thing and lost their friends, it’s as simple as trying to take this huge issue and place it in the very small fact of someone wishing they could see their friend. So that’s where I came from with ‘The Last Hello.’”

And as someone who has been cancer-free for 15 years, the role of medicinal marijuana has shaped her worldview regarding wellness and yielded “Here Comes the Pain.”

“I understand [marijuana] as medicine and I’ve been an advocate for it for 15 years. I’ve seen our attitudes toward it change and I’m very happy with where it’s going. I’m in the business — we’re very close to launching Etheridge Farms very soon. It’s a very crazy time here with a lot of regulation­s and things like that,” she said.

“I think cannabis is just a part of an overall new wellness/health paradigm. People are finally looking for something else, knowing there’s something else. We’re all starting to look to our own bodies and our own responsibi­lity of how to make life vibrant and how to make health a big part of it. Health can be sexy, and that’s where I’m at right now.”

Currently beginning an extensive tour to promote “The Medicine Show,” Etheridge stops April 30 in Walker Theatre for an 8 p.m. show.

“I’ve had 30 wonderful years of putting together the perfect set list. I now have interchang­eable songs and a set of hit songs that we do every night and love to do. I am so grateful to start ‘Come To My Window’ and hear everyone singing at the top of their lungs. So every show that you come see me, you’re going to hear the hits,” she said.

“You’re going to hear a couple of deep album tracks and this time out, you’re going to hear a few of the new songs. I have fun playing whatever, so the more fun the audiences are having, the more fun I’m having.”

 ?? LAUREN DUKOFF PHOTO ?? Melissa Etheridge
LAUREN DUKOFF PHOTO Melissa Etheridge

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