Top College News Subscribe to the Newsletter

Cue the Music

  • HI!!

    LEARNING CAN HAPPEN OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM

    It’s amazing how much a person can change in the span of a school year—especially a person like me who is hard headed and stoned half the time.
    Being Noise editor this semester has certainly changed my approach toward this profession and opened my earlids to more local music.

  • PeePee

    GWHAT IS IT YOU ASK?

    Despite all the joints, beers, shots, and shrooms, it only takes the tiniest shred of paper to remind me of all the good times I’ve had at shows.

A conversation with ZZ Ward

“Put The Gun Down” singer picks up microphone

Senior Staff Writer

Published: Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Updated: Sunday, March 17, 2013 04:03


ZZ Ward is an up-and-coming singer/songwriter with a sound that turns heads—and she’s clearly a threat to border security. Her planned interview with the Advocate was disrupted when her tour bus was stopped crossing the Canadian border.

Luckily, it’ll take more than a couple of measly Canucks to stop this woman’s rise. Born Zsuzsanna Ward, she spent most of her childhood in woodsy Ashland, Oregon, learning music from her blues-playing father and singing at hip hop clubs in Eugene.

Ward’s big break came not long after moving to Los Angeles, where her unique brand of neo-soul and piercing voice quickly got her noticed in a jaded city.

With strong roots in the blues, but without the constriction of the five-bar form, and guest spots by Los Angeles rappers like Kendrick Lamar and Freddie Gibbs, Ward’s debut album, Til The Casket Drops, signaled a delightful new talent. The album is polished enough to get play on Clear Channel, yet conceals a surprise with each song.

And her list of producers would be the envy of any upstart rapper—A Tribe Called Quest’s Ali Shaheed Muhammad helped Ward flip an Etta James classic on “Charlie Ain’t Home,” and Ward has laid down tracks in the studio with the likes of DJ Premier and Pete Rock.

On the occasion of her visit to Denver, as part of the always-swamped Keggs and Eggs event at LoDo’s Bar And Grill on the 15th of March, Ward talked about her attraction to hip hop, Denver’s enthusiastic crowds, and how a farm girl adjusts to Los Angeles.

Advocate: Thanks for talking with us today. I hope they didn’t give you too much trouble at the border.

ZZ Ward: Yeah, that was a little weird. But it’s all good. It’s good to know they’re protecting our country. [Laughs.]

A: Let’s talk a little about your career and how you came to record this album.

ZW: I moved to L.A. about three and a half years ago from Oregon to pursue music. I grew up in Oregon, and I loved the blues and I loved hip hop, and I really wanted to be a recording artist but I had exhausted all options where I was.

I wasn’t in an area where there was a lot of music going on, or any opportunity for music, so I moved to L.A. I didn’t know where I was going to start; I started booking my own shows. And Evan Bogart, who is now my manager, found me on Myspace about three months into living in L.A., and from there I started working with him and started co-writing with people.

Then I put out a record in October, and I’ve been touring ever since the last South by Southwest. So I’ve been on the road and introduced to life on tour since then.

A: What do you think about L.A. so far, compared to Oregon?

ZW: I love L.A. It’s obviously not as pretty as Oregon. [Laughs.] I grew up with a lot of natural beauty around me, and I’m very thankful for that … But [in L.A.], I was like, “gosh, I need to go on a hike or something.”

I have all these plants on my patio because I needed some nature around me. But for the most part, I really appreciate the opportunity in L.A.; I feel like there’s so much variety. I grew up on a 20-acre farm lot, so for me, when there are these things going on around me, and the weather is nice all the time, I appreciate it a lot.

A: Who’s in your band on this tour?

ZW: Eric Walls, my musical director and guitarist is in my band, and he’s been with me the longest. I met him through a nephew who produced half my record. We have different guys come out with us sometimes, but for the most part, Eric Walls is always with me.

A: How much of what you do on record is in-studio instrumentation, compared to computer and keyboard instrumentation?

ZW: It’s hard for me to think about it that way. A lot of songs are written really organically, just in my apartment. You know, I like live drums and stuff, but I also like programmed drums a lot ... So it’s kind of a mix of the two.

A: So on your mixtape, you had Freddie Gibbs and Tyler The Creator beats. You actually have Gibbs and Kendrick Lamar rapping on this record. And you’ve worked with producers like DJ Premier. Could you explain your attraction to hip hop a little bit?

ZW: I grew up listening to blues, because my parents got me into it. It was always what was playing around our house. My older brother listened to hip hop, so I used to steal his Nas and Jay-Z CDs. And I really like the stories in hip hop, about getting out of the place that you are and becoming something more than you were destined to be.

A: What connection do you see between hip hop and the blues?

ZW: They’re both very authentic, the hip hop and the blues that I listen to. There’s a lot of emotion from both types of music ... I think that’s what people also feel from me, and that’s what attracted me to the music in general.

A: When it comes to hip hop, do you find yourself gravitating to new stuff like Kendrick Lamar, the Black Hippy crew, or the old-school, like Pete Rock?

ZW: Both. I am not one to choose one type of hip hop or one genre of hip hop. I love the new stuff, I love seeing what they do, and I love old hip hop too.

A: What direction are you thinking about for your next record—if you are thinking about it?

ZW: I’m not really thinking about it so much right now. [Laughs.] I just put this record out, so I’m really excited about promoting it, and getting the world to know me through this one.

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

Be the first to comment on this article!





log out

Show Report

  • RedRocks

    BIGGEST PAIN IN THE ASS VENUE

    There is no denying that Red Rocks is one of the awesome places in Denver and holds an iconic status in the music world. But despite how epic it might be under the right circumstances, the outdoor concert venue is incredibly inconvenient and, at times, just a complete pain in the ass.
     

    1 comment

  • Oriental

    MOST COMFORTABLE VENUE SEAT

    Even though the couch at the Oriental Theater has soaked up gallons of spilt beer and sweat, it’s a couch for Christ’s sake, one that you can sit on at a venue that plays music. Good luck finding another one.
     

  • WORST COMEBACK BY A MUSICIAN

    Of all the indignities we as Americans have suffered so far in 2013, the most grating of all may be the upcoming record by folk rocker turned queen of synthetic pop Cher, her first since 2001’s Living Proof.

  • BEST COMEBACK BY A MUSICIAN

    Rather than buying a private island and constructing a new civilization out of unsold copies of Tin Machine II, David Bowie came back with a brand-new album, The Next Day, and the music world promptly pumped its fist in the air with collective joy.

  • BEST BAND INSTRUMENT

    When Muse stepped on the stage for Saturday Night Live’s musical performance, all eyes were on Chris Wolstenholme. The question needed to be answered—what in the world was attached to his bass?

  • HickHop

    The identical swagger of hip hop and country

    Despite being associated with two very different cultures—urban and rural—hip hop and country nonetheless share many similarities.In addition to having the same specific center of origin, they have become so homogeneous in their cultural aspects that they are arguably one in the same.

  • BK Lounge

    The digital age transforms the music machine

    With new advances in music distribution—like Spotify, iTunes, and YouTube—come new forms of music altogether. And that means a bigger international influence in the entire music scene.