Jill Tracy
Jill Tracy | |
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Jill Tracy in 2010 | |
Background information | |
Genres | glam noir, dark cabaret, post classical, gothic rock |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, composer, pianist, storyteller, host |
Instruments | piano, voice |
Years active | 1995––present |
Website | www.JILLTRACY.com |
Jill Tracy is a singer, pianist, writer, composer, performance artist and "musical evocateur" based in San Francisco.[1]
Known for her dark, evocative, cinematic style, Jill Tracy states that some of her biggest childhood influences were film score composers such as Bernard Herrmann, and classic suspense tales, including Alfred Hitchcock and Fritz Lang films, Ray Bradbury stories, and Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone. In an interview, she stated, "I learned from watching 'The Twilight Zone' that often it was what you didn’t see that really put the fear in you... How a story could evoke such emotion and response essentially revealing so little. I abide by that in my approach to music. It’s the breath, the spaces between the notes and the arrangements that make the work come alive. The Soul lives in the silence."[2]
She thinks of her music as a portal, a "way-in" and calls this seductive and magical place she inhabits the "elegant side of the netherworld." [3]
Jill Tracy is listed in San Francisco Magazine's Top 100 Creative Forces in the Bay Area, has been awarded "Best of the Bay" by the San Francisco Bay Guardian, and has been nominated for two California Music Awards and SF Weekly Music Awards. She was called "a femme fatale for the thinking man” by the San Francisco Chronicle, which is a moniker that is now frequently used to describe her.[4]
Career
Following her 1996 solo debut CD Quintessentially Unreal, Tracy released Diabolical Streak (1999), her first studio album featuring The Malcontent Orchestra. The song "Evil Night Together" was awarded the SIBL international Grand Prize for songwriting. The album was listed among the "Top 10 Neo-Cabaret albums of all time" in Shift magazine. "Evil Night Together" has been featured on the CBS show NCIS, and Showtime chose the tune to promote the final season of Dexter (2013) in a promo entitled "The Final Symphony."[5]
"The Fine Art of Poisoning," also from Diabolical Streak, became an animated short film in 2003, a collaboration with Bay Area animator Bill Domonkos. "The Fine Art of Poisoning" has garnered film festival awards internationally, including Best Experimental Film in the 2003 New Orleans Film Festival as well as Best Music Video in both the 2003 Chicago and Seattle International Film Festivals. Clive Barker became a fan of her work after seeing "The Fine Art of Poisoning" and called it "both seductive and terrifying." [6] FEARnet licensed "The Fine Art of Poisoning" in 2012 as part of their permanent short film collection.[7]
Jill Tracy and The Malcontent Orchestra's original score to F.W. Murnau’s 1922 silent vampire classic Nosferatu debuted live at San Francisco’s Foreign Cinema in 1999 and toured Northern California theatres during Halloween season for five consecutive years. This led to the 2002 CD release Into the Land of Phantoms, selections from the Nosferatu score.
Jill Tracy released her fourth album, The Bittersweet Constrain, in 2008 produced by Alex Nahas. This album has a heavier sonic edge with the addition of exotic instruments such as the sarod, harmonium, and Chapman Stick. The surreal sepia portraits of Jill Tracy on the album are by outsider photographer Michael Garlington.[8]
Since joining forces with the Atlanta-based violinist Paul Mercer in 2007, the two have become revered for their unique traveling show "The Musical Seance," featuring channeled duets on piano and violin. Music is manifested via tales and treasured artifacts brought by the audience, their energy, and emotions.[9]
Intrigued with what she refers to as “spontaneous musical combustion,” Jill Tracy immerses herself in peculiar locations laden with history and curious backstory. After in depth research, she composes music “on the spot” while in the surroundings. She says "This is a beautiful and sometimes frightening study of the power of the immediate: Music lurks everywhere. Every object has a story to tell." She has composed music at Victoria B.C.'s landmark Craigdarroch Castle, Los Angeles' historical Dibble Mansion, abandoned asylums, cemeteries and others.[10]
Jill Tracy is the first musician in history to receive a grant from the renowned Mütter Museum in Philadelphia (Francis C. Wood Institute), the nation’s foremost collection of medical oddities. As of 2013, she is currently creating a musical work and accompanying book inspired by the Mütter collection, and her experiences after-dark composing inside the museum.[11]
For over a decade, Jill Tracy has been “Belle of the Ball” at the wildly popular Edwardian Ball, an annual lavish costumed event in San Francisco and Los Angeles, drawing thousands of spectators worldwide in homage to artist Edward Gorey.[12]
Discography
Albums
- Quintessentially Unreal (1996)
- Diabolical Streak (1999)
- Into the Land of Phantoms (2002)
- The Bittersweet Constrain (2008)
- BENEATH: The Bittersweet Constrain (2011)
- Silver Smoke, Star of Night (2012)
Compilations
- "Meantime" on Market Street, Best of Café du Nord (live) (2000)
- "Evil Night Together" on SIBL (Songs Inspired by Literature) Artists for Literacy (2002)
- "Evil Night Together" on Projekt’s A Dark Cabaret (2005)
- "Torture" on The Sepiachord Companion (2009)
- "In Between Shades" on Projekt’s A Dark Cabaret 2 (2011)
- "Coventry Carol" on Projekt’s Ornamental (2012)
- "Totenmesse (The Colour of the Flame)" on Songs of Decadence: A Soundtrack to the Writings of Stanisław Przybyszewski (2013)
Collaborations
- "Blood Sucker Blues / Tidal Wave Of Blood" by David J. + Shok (2010)
- "Bela Lugosi's Dead (Undead is Forever)" with David J. (2013)
Films
- In the Wake (2001) Jill Tracy narrates the film, the song "Extraordinary" is featured in the score.
- The Fine Art of Poisoning (2003) short film collaboration/music video project with animator Bill Domonkos.
- Heavy Put Away (2003) appears as nightclub singer, performed piano score, "Evil Night Together" is the film's end title song. (FOX Searchlight)
- Ice Cream Ants (2006) stars as the sinister Mona, performed/composed title song "Pulling Your Insides Out." (director: Jeremy Carr)
- The Black Dahlia (2007) composed/performed the song "Pulling Your Insides Out."
- NERVOUS96 (2011) Jill Tracy and violinist Paul Mercer scored this surreal short from filmmaker Bill Domonkos
- Other Madnesses (2015) Jill Tracy composed/performed the end title song "Dreamland," a haunting, melancholy remake of the 1904 tune "All Aboard For Dreamland." (director: Jeremy Carr)
TV
- Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Ion Network) - features Jill Tracy's song "Evil Night Together".
- Jekyll (BBC) - features "Evil Night Together".
- NCIS (CBS-TV) Episode "Ravenous" - features "Evil Night Together".
- The History Detectives (PBS)- features Jill Tracy's song "The Fine Art of Poisoning."
- Showtime Networks chose "Evil Night Together" to promote the final season (8) of Dexter, "The Final Symphony".
Written Works
- The Keeper of the Shop- published in Morbid Curiosity Magazine #6
- The Next Best Thing to Stevie Nicks- published in Morbid Curiosity Magazine #8
- The Keeper of the Shop- published in anthology Morbid Curiosity Cures the Blues (Scribner 2009)
- At Louche Ends- Jill Tracy writes foreword for Maria Alexander poetry collection (Burning Effigy Press 2011))
References
- ↑ Jill Tracy Interview sfist.com 26 October 2005. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
- ↑ Jill Tracy Interview tor.com 12 November 2009. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ↑ Jill Tracy Interview laweekly.com 20 August 2009. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ↑ San Francisco Chronicle article sfgate.com 12 August 2004. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ↑ ‘Dexter’ Season 8 Trailer: The Final Symphony Begins tvequals.com 25 April 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ↑ tor.com 2009
- ↑ FEARnet Shorts
- ↑ Jill Tracy Interview sepiachord.com 16 September 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ↑ tor.com 2009
- ↑ Jill Tracy Interview FEARnet.com 18 October 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ↑ Jill Tracy Interview Chain D.L.K., 20 April 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ↑ Tales from the Edwardian Ball EdwardianBall.com
External links
- Jill Tracy official website
- Jill Tracy on Facebook
- Jill Tracy on Twitter
- Jill Tracy's channel on YouTube
- Jill Tracy on Bandcamp
Interviews
- Mysteria Woman: Jill Tracy interview in Metropolitan Magazine
- Woman of Mystery: Jill Tracy Interview in SFist
- A Musical Seance: Jill Tracy Interview in San Francisco Chronicle
- Haunted by the Thought of Jill Tracy: Coilhouse article
- I'll Hold Your Hand While They Drag the River: An Interview with Jill Tracy in TOR
- Jill Tracy chats with Morbid Curiosity Magazine editor Loren Rhoads
- The Elegant Side of the Netherworld: Jill Tracy Interview in LA WEEKLY
- Jill Tracy Interview in Sepiachord
- Jill Tracy Interview: It’s always Night at the bottom of the Sea in AbsentaMusical.com
- Finding the Phantom: Jill Tracy talks music and the allure of monsters with Vampirisme
- Beauty Found in Darkness: Jill Tracy interview on FEARnet
- On Mystery, Music and the Mütter Museum: Jill Tracy interview in NOCTURNE Magazine
- Jill Tracy discusses her work with the legendary Mütter Museum in Chain D.L.K Magazine
- S.F. Musician Sees Romance in Shadows: Jill Tracy interview in San Francisco Chronicle
- Elegant Alchemy: Jill Tracy interview in the Bay Guardian
- Death Salon interviews Jill Tracy