Village folk

Suzanne Vega gets into the sounds of the city
By TED DROZDOWSKI  |  August 7, 2007

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NEW YORK IS A WOMAN? Well, on Beauty and Crime, New York is Suzanne Vega.

Suzanne Vega’s Beauty and Crime (Blue Note) is a sleek collection of New York City stories, all pop-song trim, but bubbling with an undercurrent of experimentation.

The album might just as easily be called Beauty and Sadness, if Hoboken’s Smithereens hadn’t taken that title years ago. The shadow of the World Trade Center attack hangs over the lovers and artists and socialites who populate Vega’s 11 songs, altering their visions of their lives much as the attack indelibly changed the character of New York.

You could say that Vega’s giant bite of the Big Apple is overdue. True, Boston played an important role in her national breakout. Local radio stations and concertgoers embraced her after her A&M debut, Suzanne Vega, was issued in 1985. And she was already a major star here when the follow-up, Solitude Standing, with “Luka,” a dark-hued hit about child abuse, put her on the pop charts. Nonetheless, she’s always been a New York songwriter: terse and direct, unfussy and lean with her arrangements, and devoid of the rural settings and viewpoint many folksingers favor. For Vega (who comes to the Somerville Theatre September 20), folk has always meant Greenwich Village — which, along with the Upper West Side, she’s called home.

“I spent a lot of time thinking about things in the last six years, being in New York with my daughter, walking around,” she says. “It seemed natural to write a bunch of songs that were about New York or little stories that had New York as a character.”

She considers Beauty and Crime something of a risk. Yet the elegance you hear in the rocking “Zephyr & I” (a zesty evocation of pre-9/11 bohemian life) and “New York Is a Woman” (where saxophone and clarinet join her soft, husky vocal melody to create a romantic evocation of the city’s mystique) blended with the hooks-and-beats foundations makes this album one of her catchiest sets. The 1993 99.9 F°, with its towering monoliths of hissing and puffing industry-inspired sounds, was edgier and weirder, as well as brilliant. But much of the credit for its architecture goes to her ex-husband, producer Mitchell Froom. Beauty and Crime is all Vega.

The album germinated in a quintessentially New York way. “I met Philip Glass as I was walking down the street,” she explains over the phone from, of course, Manhattan. “I run into him fairly often. And he said, ‘How’s it going?’ I said that I was without a record deal, and he looked really happy and said, ‘Congratulations. That means you can do what you really want and finally have freedom.’

“I wasn’t clear how I felt about it at the time. I wasn’t seeing it from that point of view. Two weeks after 9/11, I found out my deal with A&M was up and asked them for another year on the label, and they didn’t pick up the option, so I quietly went away.”

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Related: Review: Suzanne Vega at Sanders Theatre, Going on sale: June 8, 2007, Crossword - ''Center piece'', More more >
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