|
Angela Motter Bio 2005 Recent Stuff: Summer 2003 was spent playing Yitzhak in the Actor's Express staging of Hedwig and the Angry Inch. "One of the best summers of my life. I think I had like 45 cents in my checking account when it was all over, but I've never been happier. I got to play my electric guitar really loud, act and sing with Mark Salyer, an amazing Hedwig, and assist music director Pete Hauenstein. I also got to take a break from the pressures of doing my own music and work with a band again. Total fun. Hedwig and the Angry Inch has been called the only rock opera that really works, and I agree. The music is so well written and it never got old playing those tunes. Director Randee Trabbitz is so talented, and the way she put together the room and the show got the audience involved in the play in a way that it couldn't have in a larger venue like the Jane Street Theater. We had some pretty rowdy audiences. I have some interesting stories to tell." Summer 2004 was spent directing and playing in the band for the musicalBeehive. Theatrical Outfit staged the play at the Rialto, directed by Kate Warner. "Once again being in an ensemble (an all-female band and cast this time) and directing the band was the best because Beehive covers so much musical ground. It starts with the "girl groups" of the 60's and ends with Tina Turner and Janis Joplin. Playing Janis' Ball and Chain and really letting it rip on my electric guitar was one of the many the high points of the show for me. I had so much fun playing with the band: Jen Lowe on Drums, Francene Machetto on Bass, Amy Lee on Sax, and Sue Wilkinson on Keyboards. Working with such incredible singers every night was an amazing experience. Divas Katy Carkuff, Rita Dolphin, Kenya Hamilton, Betty Hart, Denitra Isler, Katie Kneeland, and Wendy Melkonian: wow. Me wearing the mini dress and go-go boots in the first act: ugh!" The Usual: Her Recordings: Outta Control: Worth noting, too, are pictures of the then long-haired Motter featured in Outta Control's liner notes that cover ten years of hairstyles. This retrospective shows the transition from her long, curly haired feminine/androgynous look to her present look, a black-leather and muscle stage persona. Now, Motter might be easily mistaken for a tough guy right out of 1955. "The hair and make-up thing started not feeling right to me in about 1992. It's really true, when I was in High School leaving for a gig my Mom used to say 'you're not leaving the house without any make-up on'. God bless her. I've always been a tomboy. I've always walked funny, not like "a girl", whatever that means." Pleasure and Pain: Pleasure and Pain combines influences as unique as the artist herself. Mixing the Delta blues ache of Robert Johnson with the swagger of James Dean and a heavy dash of Keller's sexy bass-slappin' and poppin' funk, Pleasure and Pain rocketed Motter to critical and popular acclaim - acclaim culminating in two 1999 Gay and Lesbian American Music Award (GLAMA) nominations. The "gender-bending soulster" (-GAYBC) and her band performed the song "isitaboyisitagirl" at the New York ceremony, offering the Big Apple crowd a taste of her studious guitar chops and her rich, smoky alto vocals. At the end of the night, Motter had picked up a win in the "Best Out Recording" category for the track "My Mama Told Me." "Although physically she fits the stereotypical androgynous mold and some of her songs, most obviously the humorous " isitaboyisitagirl" clearly state her sexual preference, it would be unfortunate if this terrific album is lumped into the strummy, alt-folksy gender-bending "women's music" genre. Angela Motter is simply too good and too eclectic to be relegated to the dusty "indie gay" release racks. Now What? "Angela Motter has this piece of wood called a Porch Board that plugs into a DI. [That's technical jargon for how she plugs her Porch Board into the sound system] She stomps her boot down on the thing and it sounds like a cross between a weathered Tupelo veranda and a big ol' bass drum. The young heterosexual rocker boys in the room were blown away by her slide guitar playing and the hot blondes blushed at her naked, gender bent and pride bruised lyrics." -Kahle Davis, host of SongSmiths Songwriter Series in the Atlanta Room at Smith's Olde Bar Her music just got picked up by Borders, and she also continues to play gigs, teach guitar, write, fund raise for her third recording, and lift weights. Motter says someday soon she'll enter a bodybuilding contest, just to say she did it. Look for her latest performances on her web site. And maybe she'll be at a gym in your town, soon...
####
|