The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Loeb leveraged ’90s hit ‘Stay’ into sustainabl­e career

Singer/songwriter to perform with original band at Brookhaven Cherry Blossom Festival.

- By Rodney Ho rodney.ho@ajc.com Lisa Loeb continued on C2

The story about how Lisa Loeb’s “Stay (I Missed You)” became a most unlikely hit three decades ago is well-chronicled but still fun to tell.

Loeb was a neighbor and friend of actor Ethan Hawke, who starred in a most Gen X of movies in 1994 called “Reality Bites.” Hawke heard her song “Stay” and passed it on to producer and co-star Ben Stiller, who placed it in the end credits.

Hawke then did Loeb, a struggling singer/ songwriter, another solid by directing her music video, a single camera shot of a fetching Loeb in a largely empty Man- hattan apartment also featuring Hawke’s cat. That video helped fuel the song all the way to the top of the Billboard Hot 100, the first time an unsigned artist had ever reached that height in the rock era.

Loeb, always donning her signature cat’s- eye glasses, was able to leverage that song into a sustainabl­e career. The 56-year-old Los Angeles resident is performing at the free Brookhaven Cherry Blossom Festival on Sunday, appearing at 3:15 p.m. before the day’s headliner, Barenaked Ladies. She also will be touring with her friend Lyle Lovett later this year.

Tom Breihan, in his Stereogum essay about “Stay” as part of his journey through all of Billboard Hot 100′s No. 1 songs from 1958 to today, described Loeb’s tune as “a messy, personal romantic-argument song with no chorus and no clear structure.” Yet he lauded the way she sang in a “wounded, vulnerable, intimate quaver,” noting how the “chord changes fit together in weird, jazzy, oblique way, but they’re always reassuring, never jarring.”

In summary, he writes, “It’s a pretty song that never seems like it’s trying too hard to be a pretty song.” And “Stay” now remains a fixture on any pop radio station with a focus on the 1990s.

Over the years, Loeb has continued to tour, garnering other hits such as “Do You Sleep?” and “I Do.” She co-hosted a food show with her former

boyfriend, Dweezil Zappa. She took part in a 2006 E! dating show called “#1 Single.” She has done plenty of voiceover work. Now married with two children, she has recorded a raft of quality children’s music, winning a Grammy Award in 2018.

Recently, Loeb was invited to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland with Garbage’s Shirley Manson, Go-Go’s guitarist Jane Wiedlin and R&B guitarist Malina Moye to introduce the new exhibit “Revolution­ary Women in Music: Left of Center.” It features items from groundbrea­king female artists across all genres of music. Some of her memorabili­a is on display, which humbled her.

“That was fun,” Loeb told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “I was always a huge fan of music and culture going back to the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s. I read books about different bands and sheet music books that had liner notes. That affected me growing up. It was a magical world away from my own real world. To be around all that was really exciting.”

As a young female singer/ songwriter in the 1990s, Loeb was part of a group that resonated with that decade’s vibe along with the likes of Suzanne Vega, Tracy Chapman and Sarah McLachlan. She participat­ed in Lilith Fair as well.

“I don’t like separating myself out as a woman musician,” Loeb said, “but there is something about that camaraderi­e around strong, interestin­g, powerful, creative women that is really empowering. It’s a supportive feeling that makes you feel connected to others.”

Since 2022, Loeb has been a regular D J on Sirius XM’s ’90s channel, resurrecti­ng a gig she had in high school. She created a weekly segment interviewi­ng famous folks from the decade such as LeAnn Rimes, Taylor Dayne and Atlanta-based actress Kim Fields.

“It’s a fun passion project,” Loeb said. “As someone from the ’90s, it’s fun to engage with people to find out what they’re doing now.”

Loeb also was a recent guest on the 17-year-old web show “Live from Daryl’s House” hosted by Daryl Hall of Hall & Oates fame. Back in the early 1990s, she had written “Stay” with Hall in mind when she heard he was seeking tunes for a solo album.

In the end, she kept the song for herself. “I had Daryl Hall in mind with some of the melodies while writing it,” she said. “I was able to tell him that story years ago. He had no idea.”

She was then able to not only perform “Stay” with Hall but also his Hall & Oates classic “Rich Girl.”

“That song kills me every time!” she said. “He had done it with other musicians, but I came up with a different approach. It was a thrill to work with one of my heroes. He treated me like a peer.”

Hall and his band also inspired Loeb to reunite with her original Nine Stories band from the 1990s for dates this year. In Brookhaven, she will be joined by guitarist Tim Bright, drummer Jonathan Feinberg and bassist Joe Quigley, all of whom performed with her on the original “Stay.”

In Atlanta, “we’ll play our songs from the ’90s and a couple of new tunes,” she said. “People will have fun!”

 ?? JUAN PATINO PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Lisa Loeb
JUAN PATINO PHOTOGRAPH­Y Lisa Loeb

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