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"After hearing the initial songs", continues Jen, "Andy asked if he could arrange and mix them, as they were a
little too raw and unfinished-sounding." Aside from "Boulevard" (which opens the album), all the songs were written and recorded
in real time, from spring until winter of 2008. Jen wrote and recorded them at home, sent them to Andy and, while he was enhancing
them, she’d write and record some more until they had enough for an album - a process she describes as "from shack to shed".
Jen and Andy discovered a perfect musical synchronicity purely by chance (though they didn't actually meet until
last December, by which time the album was finished). When she sent each new song to Andy, Jen sketched out the album's intriguing
percussion parts using rocks, wine bottles, her kid's blocks - anything she had to hand. Andy reimagined her basic percussive
techniques and then added other effects (such as a choir at the end of "Set It On Fire"), as well as some spooky keyboards here
and there. "He filled in the blank spaces. It was all recorded in a very organic and natural way. Who would have thought I'd need
to hook up with someone 7,000 miles across the world to make something that made sense? It's ludicrous that I haven't been able to
do this with anyone local but Andy has his penchants and I have mine. We found we had compatible levels of weirdness."
Asked about influences, Jen says the music that mattered to her early on was by the Beach Boys, Stevie Wonder and
particularly Karen Carpenter, in terms of her singing, the tone of her voice and the importance of melody. Later in life,
she discovered David Bowie and Kate Bush. "She's the only person I own everything by, almost one of those OCD things - I had to
have it all." If a little Kate Bush rubbed off, it’s in Jen Olive's sense of originality, intricately melodic songs with twisted
rhythms and time changes. And, like all the best songwriters, she's soaked up a little of everything she's heard and experienced
through her musical family's jazz background, along with a little of that New Mexican flair and colour.
Jen Olive is a songwriter first - a singer-songwriter in the loose tradition of those classic, only recently
rediscovered seventies artists such as Ruth Friedman and Judee Sill, except she's very much in the here and now. Like Kristin
Hersh or Bjork, Jen Olive's vision is modern and unique. There's just no right way to describe Warm Robot - it's
essentially acoustic-based, then subtly embellished. All you have to do is listen; the songs are delightful, distinguished and
highly personal and, with a little help from Andy Partridge, she has just followed the music where it has taken her.
http://www.myspace.com/jenolivemusic
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