Episode Transcript
Taking a Walk.
You know, there's something poetic about the fact that Billie Joel's daughter chose to make her mark not by running down a dream on the highway, but by sitting at a piano bench, finding her own keys to unlock stories her father never told.
I'm buzznight and welcome to another episode of Taking a Walk.
Today, I'm joined by Alexa Ray Joel, singer, songwriter and yes musical royalty.
Well most people know her last name.
Alexa Ray has been the better part of two decades proving that legacy is just your starting point, not your destination.
She's here to talk about finding her voice when the world already thinks it knows what you should sound like, the courage it takes to bare your soul at a piano, and why sometimes the most rebellious thing you can do is simply be authentically yourself.
Stick around through this commercial break and we'll talk to Alexa ray Joel next on Take a Walk, Taking a Walk.
It's a glorious day.
I have Alexa ray Jel on the Taking a Walk Podcast.
Speaker 2Hi, Alexa, Hey, buzz, how are you?
Speaker 1I'm doing fantastic?
Do does it happen on occasion if you're doing one of these podcasts where somebody says hey Alexa and then there Alexa goes off in the background.
Do you have to deal with that from time to time?
Speaker 2I was just talking about this on the last podcast that I did, So I go buy Alexa Ray now, because in part of that, I don't want to hear Hey Alexa, Oh, what can I do for you?
Would you like this to?
Speaker 3No?
No, no, no no.
Speaker 2So that's why I do Alexa Ray as much as I can these days.
Speaker 1Welcome Alexa Ray.
And since we call this podcast taken a Walk, and since I'm not able to be with you in person at the beautiful undisclosed location somewhere.
Speaker 2In the east family home in the East Coasts, so beautiful space here.
Speaker 1Oh my god.
So since we're not able to take a walk in person, I do want to ask you though, if you could take a walk with somebody, living or dead, who would you like to take a walk with?
Then where would you take that walk with him?
Speaker 2Whoo wow?
I wouldn't mind taking a walk with Billie Holiday.
Yeah, you know someone that's grown up completely differently obviously different in every way, different everything, skin color, different life experience, different perspective, different time.
Speaker 1A true icon for sure.
A trailblazer, right.
Speaker 2A trailblazer.
I remembered watching I watched a documentary of hers.
I was just sitting there crying the whole time, just in awe of just the gravity of how much she went through, how much she suffered, how much she put everything into her art.
It was very profound to me.
Speaker 1That's a good one.
I think you guys would have a nice conversation.
I think it would probably be a pretty long walk.
Speaker 2Don't you think it would be a very long walk.
Yeah, yeah, she and it would be mostly me listening.
I would just hear her talk.
Speaker 1Yeah, you know, well, congratulations on the new EP and on Riverside Way so much.
I want you to take us inside the creation of that.
But I do have to ask you, who is your Mount Rushmore of music if you could kind of define that, obviously knowing there's a certain family member who would have to be part of that.
Speaker 2But yeah, I mean, you know, it's hard to say off the top of my head because it's a mix of people, and I can't not put my father on that Mount Rushmore list, just in terms of how many different types of music you know, I measure an artist based on how much they play, how much they experiment, how much they push past different boundaries, and really just how much of a nonconformist they are just artistically go with whatever they want.
I think that's so brave, and so I don't know.
I mean, he's at the top.
I would put Joni Mitchell up there.
I would put George Gershwin up there.
I would put I would put Randy Newman up there.
I think he's such an unbelievable It's so funny because I've covered some of his songs at the Carlisle at Kathay Carlile where it's so funny.
He's so underrated, Like nobody they're like, oh, that sounds familiar, you know, but they don't know it's him.
And really any artist that's made it into that classic.
I'm an old school guess.
So the American Songbook is really the pinnacle of great music for me and Rogers and Hammerstein and all of that.
I'm a theater girl, you know, so I go way back into all of that, and I think it gives you a better understanding of music traditionally in terms of the structure, right, you have a little maybe, like my Dad often opens with a classical piano part.
But then you have the verse, you have the chorus, you have the second verse, you have the second chorus, you have the bridge.
Like I just have a true respect for people that are able to write like that.
Whether it's Gershwin or Dad or Bob Dylan, you know what I mean, or or Newman or any of the greats, or Elton John or even freaking Don Henley is such a great songwriter.
He knows how to write a structured work.
He understands the craft of song, and I can't help but feel that that's getting somewhat lost because everyone's prioritizing a hook.
And that's great, But can you write something that sounds timeless and structurally like like the Rock of Gibraltar, you know, like solid, like a solid, timeless work.
That's hard to do.
I respect that.
I try to emulate that.
Speaker 1So a couple things to unpack there.
First of all, you mentioned the Cafe Carlisle, and certainly that whole experience there, Bembleman's experience, and just when you walk into that place, it's such a joyous celebration.
We're actually creating an episode celebrating bem Woman's and that whole experience there institution.
Yeah, yeah, so I had to mention that.
But I also in thinking of Randy Newman, I think he's vastly underappreciated.
Speaker 2Don't you think I'm so glad you circle back to him, because even this new generation, like I'm trying to show, I'll play, feels like holm on the piano.
My brother and my little brother and sister, like who's that?
They thought it was something I wrote.
I said, don't give me the credit.
That was written by the great Randy Newman.
Even da da da da dun dun dun dun dun da dun dun dun dun dun.
It's so comforting, it's so familiar.
Not everybody even associates it with him, right toy story, It's what he's been able to write.
I recently watched Was with my fiance.
We love the movie.
We bought a zoo and they had the scene where the rain was coming down and it was really sort of, you know, beautiful and like that tranquil moment in the film, and it had I think it's going to rain today, And I just started crying those cores words and I remembered why.
I went to see a show at guild Hall many years ago, and I think my father was going through a sort of emotional time and we saw the show together, Randy Newman show, and he played I think It's going to rain today, Dunda, and my father looked at me and he just started crying, and I just started crying, just the beauty of it.
And to this day, it's funny how those childhood memories come back and then you hear this song and you just you get misdy eyed again.
So a new Randy Newman is like Dad for me, and that he's kind of a home base guy that is a part of that American songbook.
He understands how to write timeless work that's so well crafted and well thought out.
And like I put him up there with Dad, and my father does too.
Speaker 1You know, it's awesome.
Speaker 2I thought it was always tinkling on the ivories his stuff.
Speaker 1So I have chills thinking about Well, one song just popped into my head as we're having the conversation, and that is and you can I mean, you know, there's so many.
But as somebody who spent time near the water obviously who doesn't sail, away, Take your breath away.
Speaker 2I'm so glad you brought that up.
I actually covered that with my amazing pianist Carmine Julio at the Carlisle and I did more of an even more gospel version because it's so gospel to me, you know, say, and you can do a lot vocally, like you can build it.
You can start very bare bones and then get into those gospel and those I don't know, just really dig in on the on the keys and even do more that gospel sound.
I love it.
And it's funny because if you listen to that, and then you even listen to like River of Dreams from they come from a similar school.
It's that old school gospel and it's just the root of soul right there, you know.
Take me to the river, take the church, and it's the best.
Speaker 1Oh yeah, thank you for sharing that.
Speaker 2I wanted to add too.
I love how there's no pretense with him.
He's one of the only artists.
Speaker 1You know.
Speaker 2They say every artist has a little bit of an affectation in terms of their look or how they wish to come across to differentiate themselves.
And I'll bring up another movie because I'm a big movie buff but begin again.
I don't know if you've seen that movie.
If not, it's all about music.
You should really watch it.
It's Mark Ruffalo here Knightley, and they kind of find each other and do a record together in New York City.
The girl says, oh no, sorry, Mark Ruffalo says, his character says, okay, give me.
Every artist is affected, every artist, even dealing with the shades and the hat.
Only one artist that doesn't have some form of aesthetic or appearance pretense.
And Kiera Knightley's character goes Randy Newman, but that and he goes, you got me.
I love Randy Newman.
There is no concern for appearance or any like external.
It's all about the writing.
It's all about the music.
And I just love that.
So you should watch that movie.
It's really a real music lovers film.
Speaker 1Oh I will for sure.
Well take us into the making of the EP, the whole process that you take in terms of bringing people together, the writing process, the collaboration process.
Give us a little inside glimpse into it.
Speaker 2It's very raw for me.
It has to just flow.
And I was just in a place.
This was a couple of years ago.
Now with the EP Tales from a Winding Tower and we're doing Waterfowl releases, so people right now are only hearing going to hear one song at a time.
But it was really natural for me.
I don't know, it just I just felt like, Okay, this is a time when I feel like writing.
It was all just coming out.
I wasn't forcing it.
I wasn't sitting there going come on, come to me ideas.
The music was just coming went after the next and I'm very eclectic.
I was particularly eclectic with the CP So Riversideway is more of a fiery banger.
The next song we're putting out that I'm putting out is more of a sixties Torch style Heavy Eyes.
Then the next one is a very melancholic ballad.
The next one's more bohemian rhapsody if you will.
There's some notes to like Fiona Apple and the Lilith Days, almost a little bit more of the nineties singer songwriter approach.
So it just all of those influences just kind of came out.
I know it sounds funny, but it just happened.
It just happened.
It was such an organic process.
I called up my dad's guitarist, who's an amazing producer, Tommy Burns, and I said, I got to do this record.
I've got all these ideas just flowing.
And he was just he was on board.
And we brought our friend Tony Bruno, who's an incredible musician, plays every instrument, producer, and they were my guys, they were my producers.
It was a super You know, it helps when you're friends and you have a sort of repertoire in chemistry with the people you work with, because you're sharing your as my father says, you're spilling your guts out on the table.
You got to be able to be vulnerable and as a homebody, which I am.
You see my family home here.
We actually I was lucky enough to record in my piano room in the music room right behind here, and it's a big, wide open space.
I was barefoot, you know, didn't even have to put shoes on, really spoiled with the recording process, and I just sat there and did the piano and the vocals bare bones.
They recorded.
We did the studio musicians up in Applehead, which is in Woodstock, apple Head Studios, great place to record, very seventies Hendrix, I don't know everybody in the seventies was there.
So I wanted that energy, that real artist energy, very earthy woodsy up there.
So it was a super organic process and I feel so lucky that I just got to record right in my living room and the rest is history.
And I just hope people connect.
There's something in there for everybody, you know, for someone that might not connect to Riversideway, I've got a more old school nostalgic ballad coming your way that you might enjoy.
Like, I just wanted something for everybody, because for me, I get bored, you know, I stick to one genre, one niche I need to move on to the next.
My father's the same way.
It's you got to play, you gotta you know, I don't like sticking with one style at all.
Speaker 1So did you feel most in the zone in terms of process and ultimate creation with this project?
Speaker 2Yes?
I was completely in the zone, completely in the zone.
I mean River Sideway.
I think I wrote in like two nights, late late night and hus in the bathtub and I was like done, da da dom boom boombo man A bad boy on the rid of a sad way and I just heard it and it was just there, and you know, I know my father writes the same way.
He just kind of just there, and he usually does start at the beginning with the first verse, because I don't know listen, I don't know how people write out of order.
Speaker 3I hear some people don't we hear the chorus where I'm like, how do you hear the chorus first?
How do you hear the bridge first?
Don't you need to write in order?
I'm kind of an orderly girl too in my life.
Speaker 2I think chronologically I need things to go, So I got to start with the first verse, then the pre chorus, then the chorus.
I feel really, really lucky that it just flowed at that time, because I don't always have and I know other artists.
I've talked to other artists about this.
My father is the same one.
Sometimes it's a dry well.
It's not every single day the songs are just coming to you, the ideas are just flowing.
You have to be it's got to be there.
You got to be in that zone, you know.
Speaker 1And if there's a dry moment, though, do you just sort of leave it there and come back to it in an hour or the next day.
I mean, how do you sort of address that?
Speaker 2If I'm being honest, I should probably be more disciplined about it.
I don't like to force it.
Music is something I love so much.
It's so fluid for me.
I only go to it when it's there.
And I know there's other songwriters that are much more regimented, and they will sit there and they will go, Okay, I need to finish this today.
I've never been able to do that.
I'm a little bit of in fantasy girl.
I like to live in a fantasy world and live in my dreams as much as I can.
This world we're living in is a bit disconcerting, the reality of our just everything that's going on, and music is my escape.
And with Riversideway, which is out now, it was a lot about going into fantasy, even going into an alter ego, even stepping out of your self and your own head and your own kind of neuro season and comfort zone.
And oh I'm a good girl and I need to be this way.
And I just said, screw that, and let me just take a huge departure, go off them, off the grid, off the map, and have some fun and so, you know, just write a fun, fiery bang or the hooks came, I heard wooo, I was playing on the piano, couldn't stop playing it.
I said, well, this is insane.
Speaker 3I know.
Speaker 2My father's the same way.
It's like, once it's inside of you, if you can't get that earworm out of your head, you better see.
Speaker 3It through I.
Speaker 2For those who are listening, you should really watch my father's documentary.
And so it goes.
He talks about with river dreams, I'll go walking in Hapaa and he's saying, I'm in the shower and I'm going akadavada.
It was me too with Oh Donna, boom boom, boom boom, and I was like, Alexa, shut up.
But I couldn't get it out, so I knew that I had to finish it.
And then Tommy and Tony were like, damn it, Lex, we got this earworm.
Speaker 3We can't get this song out of woo.
Speaker 2And they're moving equipment and they're going, I'm like, okay, great, that's a good sign.
Speaker 3We got to make this record fast because if we're singing it NonStop.
Speaker 2Maybe it'll be contagious.
You know, So you got to you got to enjoy that hook and trust it that.
Speaker 1The documentary is spectacular.
I mean it is.
It is just Yeah, stunning on every every level and brilliant and engaging and honest and just so wonderful.
And it does, yeah, take us inside you know, his process and his the way it works, and his brilliance.
So it's fantastic.
Speaker 2Oh deep, I just provided such a deeper context into his material that some of which I I didn't even know, you know, with part one back in the seventies.
Like Dad, there's so much there, you know, even with his first wife and how she managed him and how many uphill battles they fought to make.
It's it's really amazing because people think, oh, you know, maybe just land a hit or it just happens.
Speaker 3He was not.
Speaker 2That did not happen.
It was not overnight.
He had to claw and blood and sweat and toil and go through you know, being ripped off and fight for the rights to his palog And it's just amazing.
You know how much artists do go through behind the scenes that you know, unless people share those stories, people have no idea.
Speaker 1Resilience the key to resilience merging with creativity.
How is your dad?
Speaker 2Resilience is everything.
He's great, he's great, he's tough, he can he can get through anything.
I always say, especially after watching the doc I called him up, I said, Dad, are you like you're like a cat?
You have nine lives maybe more, you know, because each sort of era and they sort of in my view, went decade by decade with his career and it's sort of unfolded with his personal life as well, which then affects his material and how he's writing.
And he went through his I even said, I said, at one point, you were sounding more like Woody Allen in the seventies, and then you went You're so in love with mom, and you were more like you felt like a teenager again.
So you're doing Tin pan Alley and Frankie Valley in the fourth seasons and you know, the doop and and then you you know, and then you wanted to go darker and more experimental and do your Sergeant Pepper era with nylon curtain and expand sonically, and with each he even sounded different how he was speaking, like he really is a chameleon.
People don't realize this, and I've learned a lot just from watching him through the years.
He's not just a chameleon musically, right, He'll style himself a little different he'll start talking a little bit different because he goes into the character of where he's at musically and what he's working on.
It's very interesting, you.
Speaker 1Know, Alexi Ray.
Please give your dad our love and thank you for sharing everything here about your new music, Riverside Way and the full EP, which is going to be I like how you said that it's going to be waterfall.
Speaker 2Is that the term you used, Yes, Waterfall releases.
I'm glad you brought that up because a lot of people on my Instagram and friends are asking me what's waterfall releases.
It's one song sort of flows into the next.
So I have Riversideway at the top of the EP, and then I'll be putting out Heavy Eyes, and then we have I don't want to confuse everybody, but then we have three more coming down the line.
But it's going to be one at a time because in this sort of add society where it's tough to catch people's attention and it can be confusing with it, it's like a lot to take in a whole record.
I wanted to do it one song at a time.
Each song is its own story, each song is its own niche, its own world, its own kind of.
I take on a different character for each song, so I really wanted a moment for each special song to shine.
And it's going to be five songs total.
It's called Tales from a Winding Tower because I wrote it in my family home, which is actually called Tower Hill, and we have a beautiful winding tower up to the top of the house where you can see this gorgeous view.
And there's something storybook about a winding tower, and there's a few influences with some psychedelic story book stuff that you'll hear later on with the ep So that's why I call the Tales from Winding Tower.
I thought it sounded like a seventies type of record.
Speaker 1You know, Oh, sounds fantastic.
Alexi Ray, thanks for enchanting us and taking us inside the process and for the beauty of everything that you give us.
Speaker 2Thank you so much, Thank you so much.
Speaker 1Buzz Thanks for listening to this episode of the Taking a Walk podcast.
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