A personal performance
Young Chang
Leslie Claussen can’t quite understand it herself.
This folk-rock singer is wary of giving out information online and
won’t reveal much about her personal life to the media. Yet Claussen, who
performs today in Costa Mesa, will dig up, write about and sing aloud her
innermost emotions and memories.
About being abused by her stepfather as a child, and how that
experience twisted her definition of love for a time.
About having an alcoholic mother who left home and then died while
away, without saying goodbye.
About having her disabled grandmother take Claussen, her five
siblings, two cats and an Irish setter into her home.
And she also sings about random nameless neighbors in her building.
It’s not a sad song, and it’s not a happy one. It’s just a long thought
about how strange it is that there can be so many people, so far apart.
Claussen, 36, insists she doesn’t exclusively write sad songs. And if
her lyrics are at times sad, they’re as much about transcending grief as
the grieving itself. Because who wants to listen to a depressing song?
Claussen knows she doesn’t want to write one. That would defeat her
purpose.
“By saying these things, you kind of resolve them,” she said. “Writing
it down helps me to get through it; and listening to it, I hope, will
help someone else get through it.”
As painfully shy as she used to be, the Playa del Rey
singer/songwriter will remember her goal when she’s in the spotlight
today at Borders Books, Music & Cafe at South Coast Plaza. She’ll recall
that regardless of how she looks and feels, it’s the musical message that
will either flop or win big with the local audience.
So far she’s had reason to be hopeful. Claussen has already faced her
most difficult critics: kids.
During an 18-month involvement with the Grammy in the Schools Program,
she visited Los Angeles high schools and performed for the students. They
didn’t quiet down at first, no matter how much the teacher told them to.
But once she started playing, the drone died out and students shushed
each other.
“If they think you’re kidding them, they get impatient,” Claussen said
about the teen audience.
When it comes to lyrics, though, Claussen doesn’t kid.
It’s all about that one specific but carefully chosen detail that
might be familiar. It’s about the emotion you thought no one else felt
but now you hear from someone else’s mouth.
And it’s about telling the truth and meaning it, rather than spouting
generalities you know nothing about.
Children and other listeners have been touched by Claussen’s lyrics
because they come straight from the journal she carries wherever she
goes. For instance, the song titled “Neighbors” -- describing a woman
next-door whom Claussen doesn’t know -- came to her one day when she was
journal writing.
Her first album, “Sketchbook,” features a self-portrait on the cover
and is a three-fold reference, partly to her journal. The name also
derives from the acoustic style of music -- tunes recorded live, with
flaws.
“They’re more of a sketch,” she explained.
Even her siblings, who could’ve reacted to Claussen’s honest music
with reprimands for airing family ghosts, are moved by their sister’s
words.
“Stars,” a track about losing loved ones and suggesting each star in
the sky must be for a person lost, means the most to sister Valerie
Claussen-Huth. It includes the following lines:
“There’s a star for my mother, she never could stay; a star for my
father, I wish I knew more than his name. ... There’s a mist on the
water, tears on the sand, I stand under starlight with one reaching
hand.”
Claussen-Huth said she sometimes pops in her sister’s compact disc and
just listens, because it heals her. She thinks the songs are heartfelt
and from no other place but her sister’s soul.
“There’s nothing you can’t like about that,” Claussen-Huth said.
Yes, the subjects are, at times, dark and mournful. The rhythms are,
at times, more pensive than upbeat.
But Claussen never writes anything hateful, never even anything angry,
Claussen-Huth said on the phone from Sacramento.
“It’s very difficult, the things she has gone through. But if you
really listen to the way she writes it, it’s more [feeling] remorse for
what other people have done to her,” Claussen-Huth said, “And maybe
regret for things that happened.”
FYI
* What: Folk-rock singing by Leslie Claussen
* When: 7 p.m. today
* Where: Borders Books, Music & Cafe South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa
* Information: (714) 556-1185
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