

Country Girl, City Girl
She's a born and bred Brooklynite, but lately Rebecca
Pronsky has a little extra twang in her step.
By Catherine Plato
Published: August 1, 2007
Singer-songwriter Rebecca Pronsky recently returned from a tour of country
music's homeland, where her music received mixed reactions. Her experience
in Nashville — a city the country-lovin' Brooklynite had long
romanticized — was most disappointing for her.
"I was really surprised at how little I felt I fit in there,"
she says. "It actually taught me a lot about my music. I think
of myself as an artist with a country influence, but my influence is
more musical than lyrical. ... So much of what seemed to be received
positively there was very topic-based: 'I grew up in a small town; my
daddy works at the factory; when you left, I cried.' That sort of thing.
It wasn't my bag."
Pronsky, one of the rising stars of Brooklyn's indie music scene, makes
her East Bay debut this month with a show at Mama Buzz Cafe. With slicker,
ballsier vocals and jazzier progressions than your average folksinger,
she bridges the gaps between folk, Americana, jazz, and indie pop. She's
been compared countless times to Joni Mitchell, and while just about
every female musician with an acoustic guitar and intelligent lyrics
gets that at some point in her career, the 26-year-old earns the distinction
more than most. She cites the legendary songwriter as a major influence.
"I own every album of hers, songbooks, LPs, etc.," she says.
"She did so much in the span of one career, it's just amazing.
Her use of altered guitar tunings and forays into jazz really got me
interested in writing songs."
Pronsky's new record, Departures and Arrivals, is her third release
and her first on Nine Mile Records, a small indie label from Northampton,
Massachusetts. She says the album, which comes out in October, is "much
more compositional" than her earlier work: "My other albums
were similar to live shows, more like 'recordings,' but this record
has much higher-quality production and instrumentation."
It's also her most polished effort yet, with a distinct country-pop
flavor compared to the folkier, more acoustic albums she released in
the past — partially thanks to coproduction by her boyfriend and
guitarist, Rich Bennett. "There were a whole lot more people involved
and a whole lot more time spent to make everything sound the way we
wanted it," she recalls. "Rich brought in so many good ideas
about instrumentation and style. I really needed someone with perspective
— I often get stuck inside my songs and I needed him to look at
them in a fresh way."
Now Pronsky finds herself thinking about the birthplace of country music
in a similarly fresh way. And while she admits the cities in the South
are diverse, all the time she spent touring in Jesus country began to
make her feel "like a big crazy Jew" wandering among the never-ending
highway evangelism. "There's so much Jesus-freak-slash-creationism
propaganda on the highway," she laughs. "My favorite was a
billboard with a picture of a man de-evolving into a chimpanzee with
the words 'Don't make an ape out of me.'"
And so it's onward and upward to the Jew-friendlier Bay Area. Although
Pronsky played a few shows in San Francisco last summer, this is her
first full West Coast tour, with dates in Seattle, Eugene, and Portland,
and all down the California coast, ending with a show in San Diego.
She says she's especially excited to bring her music to the East Bay.
"Oakland seems like Brooklyn to me, which is a good thing, a very
good thing, since that's where I live," she says. "[It's]
like San Francisco's underrated neighbor, more real and more funky."
Beyond the show, she's looking forward to Bay Area burritos and sushi,
and shopping at Amoeba. "These are three things that we lack in
New York City. Of course we have sushi and burritos, but it's no comparison,
and Amoeba is just so awesome."
Rebecca Pronsky plays Mama Buzz on Wednesday, August 14 with Campo Bravo
and the Rocking Chairs. Time and ticket price TBA. MamaBuzzCafe.com
