The Arizona Republic

Regina Spektor on solo tour launching in Arizona

- ED MASLEY

By Regina Spektor’s count, she hasn’t toured without a backing band in “many, many years,” which makes the looming prospect of the solo tour she’s set to launch in Tucson on Oct. 20 “kind of daunting,” she says with a laugh on the eve of her opening night. “And exciting.”

Billed as “A Very Special Solo Performanc­e,” the concerts will feature the singer performing alone on piano — “and probably my little blue guitar too:-),” as she noted on her website.

“I’ve been touring with such amazing musicians,” Spektor says. “And I have really loved playing a lot of the songs with many of the colors I would like to do. There’s something magic that happens when you’re in a group of musicians and you’re all listening to each other.

“And there’s something magic that happens when you’re just by yourself and completely free. ... And I wanted to experience that again.

“Within my show, I’ve always had a few songs where the band leaves and I would just play by myself. And it was an interestin­g feeling. I really liked it. So I wanted to remember what it was like to play an entire show like that.”

We caught up with Spektor to talk about the tour and the brilliant album she released last year, “Remember Us to Life,” her first release since giving birth to her first child. Here’s what she had to say in the course of a 16-minute conversati­on that was every bit as whimsical and charming but also reflective as one would expect from Spektor’s records. Question: You used the word free. Do you find that there’s more room for spontaneit­y when you’re performing by yourself?

Answer: Maybe. It’s funny. I feel very free anyway. And I compose all the songs. It’s not like I’m jamming or changing them from night to night. It might just be little things, like taking a little bit more time with a certain moment where yeah, if there’s a bunch of musicians, you’re not gonna stretch it out or else you’re just gonna trick them and they’ll come in early, you know? (laughs).

But when you’re by yourself, you can stretch time in a different way. Of course, you can talk to me after these shows because maybe what I’m rememberin­g is not even real. Our minds are tricky like that.

But it’s sort of like if you decide to invite a lot of people to a dinner party, it’s one kind of a night and then when you decide to invite just one person, it’s a different kind of night. And the fun thing is that you don’t have to choose. You can sometimes do one and sometimes do the other.

I’m kind of excited to take that trip and see what that dinner party for one is gonna be like (laughs). Q: I read an interview you did with

where you said, “The fun thing about making records is that they sort of find water; they sort of find their own level.” Once they’ve found that level, are there songs that just don’t feel right when you try to scale them back for a solo acoustic performanc­e?

A: Oh yeah, definitely. There are a lot of songs I wouldn’t do in a tour where I have the band, just because if it’s a solo piano song, I’ll feel like, “Oh no, I have all these incredible musicians here. I want to do the songs that I can’t do without them.” ...

I’m not going to be doing some of those songs on this tour. But at the same time, there’s these other songs that for the most part don’t get to see the light of day because they’re battling for real estate in a set — these more piano-y moments that I know just from being in touch with the listeners and fans over the years that they really want to hear ...

For me, it’s fun to rediscover these things that wouldn’t be part of a set on a band tour.

Q: So there are older songs you haven’t done in a while on the set list?

A: Oh yeah. I’ve been practicing really old songs that I hadn’t played in so many years. Some of them, I start to play and I’m like, “I don’t want to play this at all.” ... And something else, I’m like, “Wow, I haven’t played this in 12 years and it feels so nice to play it.”

Q: You mentioned being in touch with listeners and fans through the years. What channel of communicat­ion do you have with your listeners?

A: It’s interestin­g. I’m not a person who is always in touch in the classic sense of the word. Some people are really, really in touch. They read everything and they respond to everything . ...

I’m terrible at correspond­ence. I plan to write back and then I never do (laughs). It’s been like that since I was a kid, actually. I had a really hard time writing letters from camp and all that stuff. But I love getting letters (laughs).

So I read a lot of the letters that people leave me at venues or that they pass to my crew or correspond­ence that ends up on the bus. And then, of course, when I do tune in, some gets to me through Twitter and Instagram. But I do try to stay on top of that as much as I can.

Q: On your website, you say you’ll play some new and never-beforehear­d songs. Have you been writing with a new release in mind or are you always writing?

A: I’m always writing. It’s funny, though. The more that I’ve been practicing the old songs, the more I’m starting to feel like I don’t know if I’m ready to play those new songs.

A lot of the time, when I write songs, I hear production for them, and I feel a lot better playing them knowing that they’re on the record, so that my vision of them is out there first and all the re-imagining can happen afterwards.

Q: Last year, you released “Remember Us to Life,” which is such an evocative title. What appealed to you about calling it that?

A: Well, it’s actually a line from one of the Yom Kippur prayers. I had the title long before I had the record. Titles kind of sneak in and I start to roll them around inside my brain before I have a record, but in the end it sort of ended up fitting the music to me, so I kept it. I thought it was a really beautiful line.

Q: When you have the title first, does that then shape the writing of the record?

A: I don’t know. That’s a really good question. I feel like I don’t really think of it as writing records anyway. I think of it as writing individual songs that I string together.

Q: One of my favorite songs on the album is “The Trapper and the Furrier.” Does it feel as though the strange, strange world we live in may have gotten even stranger since you wrote that song?

A: Ooh, yeah. It made me feel like it was creepily prophetic and I didn’t want it to be. I feel actually like I would love for that song to become irrelevant. I have another song called “Ballad of a Politician” that I’ve been playing. But honestly, I wish they would all become irrelevant and I would never play them again.

It makes me really sad how real it is (laughs).

 ?? SHERVIN LAINEZ ?? Regina Spektor
SHERVIN LAINEZ Regina Spektor

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