
There are certain things that you possibly already know
about Ms Megan Washington: that she's originally from Brisbane, that her song
‘How to Tame Lions' won the Vanda & Young Songwriting Competition last year
and, if you've seen the ‘Rich Kids' clip, that she knows how to rock a glittery
bodysuit. But there's a lot more to the 24 year old than sly lyrics and catchy
melodies. For example:
She's a jazz nerd.
"I studied Jazz Voice and Jazz Composition at the
[Queensland] Conservatorium [of Music], and not to blow my own piccolo I did quite well in
the jazz scene. And I do still really have a healthy love of jazz - I'm quite
patriotic about it, and being a jazz muso and understanding jazz is a bit of a
club. You can go anywhere in the world: it's kind of like being a Mason."
She was in Old Man River.
"I'm sort of old friends with Kate Miller-Heidke and she was
having a show at Manchester Lane [in Melbourne], and I thought "oh, I don't
wanna go," but I did go after work and I met this guy at the bar. We shared a
pizza and he seemed like a pretty free-spirited, interesting cat, and his name
was Ohad [Rein]. I joined his band and I was on a plane to Europe a week and a
half after I met him."
She wrote some of the songs for the recent Sydney Comedy
Festival show Tripod vs the Dragon.
"I wrote one song outright and I collaborated on a few of
the other songs. They're fucking genius musicians, the Tripod guys. There's
no one like ‘em. But I'd like to write an opera, or a musical: something quite
narrative. Maybe a song cycle."
Her album I Believe You, Liar is almost entirely about one person.
"The guy in ‘Sunday's Best' is the same guy in ‘Clementine'
and the same guy in ‘Love a Solider' and the same guy in ‘I Believe You, Liar'.
The overarching muse on a lot of these songs is this relationship that I had,
that I am in now, but a lot of these songs were written during this turbulent,
awful, hurtful time where nobody knew what they were doing. I wrote ‘How to
Tame Lions' after this person had broken up with me for the third time. It was
a great little gift, that song. It's the codex that explains the rest of the
album."
She thinks of her album as her conjoined twin.
"Do you know what I did when it was finished? I cried. It wasn't like relief or fear, it was like somebody
had died. You know those twins in
the womb and one of them absorbs the other and after a while, even though it's
uncomfortable, they get used to it and then when the twin gets cut out, they
feel really dark and depressed about it? That's how it felt. I have a real
sense of this record being pulled from me, by some unholy hand."
‘Rich Kids' is her own ‘I'm Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman'.
"A lot of my friends went to GPS schools and they all
dressed very louche and boho, but they live with their parents and have an SUV.
I went to this warehouse party and that's when I realised that I had left that
place and that I was never going to be part of that anymore. Age 21 to 24, that's
when you kind of stop being a kid and start being an adult, and I feel when I
started writing this record I was a girl, and now I don't feel like that
anymore."
Actually, ‘Rich Kids' isn't her own ‘I'm Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman'!
"Oh god. If I ever wrote that song I'd expect you to fly to
Melbourne, tie me to my Hills Hoist and shoot me." Andrew P Street
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Darlinghurst 2010
Telephone 02 9332 3711
Price from $21.00 to $82.50
Date Sun 12 Sep 2010
Open 6pm (all ages show), 8.30pm (over 18s)
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