|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
and Poetry
"The poor are treated like enemies"
An interview with Iris DeMent
By Richard Phillips
18 April 1998
Richard Phillips: Who are your main musical influences?
Iris DeMent: I was mainly influenced by the Carter Family,
Jimmie Rodgers, Loretta Lynn, Merle Haggard, and others like Bob
Dylan, Johnny Cash. It is difficult to explain what it is about
their music that attracts me--it's how I hear and feel it. There
is something about the emotional content of the voices of these
singers that attracts me.
RP: In your introduction to the song "Higher Ground,"
on Infamous Angel, you say that your mother showed you
that music is a pathway to a higher ground. Can you explain this?
Is this a religious conception?
ID: This is not religious, but what I meant was that
my mother used music to relieve her from the problems and difficulties
she faced. Music provided an escape for her from all the difficult
times our family faced. If there was a family fight or she was
upset about some problem, she would sing. It was the way in which
she would get herself out of a sad and miserable place.
RP: You were brought up in a religious family. How and
why did you leave the church?
ID: I left the church when I was about 16 years old.
This was a very difficult thing for me because it had been my
whole world. But I had to break away in order to live with myself.
There were so many things that I just didn't agree with. It was
hard, but I suppose it would have been harder if I hadn't, because
I would have been living my life dishonestly.
I don't describe myself as a Christian or religious, but I
like to think that how I live my life is honest to myself and
other people. It's hard to explain, but I want my music to somehow
show the basic threads of life that bind us all together in some
way or another.
RP: You've said that you think of music as either being
sincere, or insincere. In one interview you said that you "don't
hear much music these days that's coming from a real place."
Could you elaborate?
ID: What do I mean by that? Well, most of the music
you hear on the radio today is developed for making money. It
doesn't feel true or honest and you can feel it in the music.
The problem is many people haven't had the opportunity to hear
much honest music.
RP: What pressures are placed on musicians and recording
artists to deliver this type of music, and how do you deal with
this?
ID: I've been lucky with my recording company. I haven't
had this sort of pressure. I talked a lot with them before I signed
up and I make the music I want. There hasn't been any interference;
they've left me alone artistically.
I think this arrangement is the exception, because I know a
lot of other musicians and there is an awful lot of pressure placed
on them. There is a lot of grooming and shaping of images that
goes on and the results musically are never good.
RP: How do you approach song writing?
ID: When I'm asked about writing I always start thinking
about pencils and pieces of paper, but I don't approach it that
way. A lot of living experience has to happen before I can write
a song. I tend to go through a process of struggling with my own
life and then, after a while, the songs come to me pretty quickly.
My first impulse is to deal with some problem that I might
have, so my first aim is to get through to myself. Secondly, I
hope that what I have created will make somebody else think more
deeply and then get them out of a jam.
As you know, creating is not always easy. There's lots of agony
that goes into it. Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining, because
this is how it has been since time began. If you want to make
something really worthwhile and true, then you have to suffer
for it.
RP: You write about the difficulties that confront ordinary
working people. Can you explain why you take up these themes and
what you aim to do?
ID: When I began I didn't sit down and think that I
was going to write about these subjects. My songs are an outgrowth
of my life, of where I come from, and how my parents and my family
lived and my own experiences. I heard many stories about hard
times and these were part of my life.
But now I'm starting to realize that I am going to have to
do more of this. The more I hear and learn about the world and
all the injustice that goes on--the poverty, the terrible things
that happen-it makes me realize that maybe I should begin writing
more and more about these subjects. This has got to be done so
that more people understand what we are really facing.
The poor are treated like enemies and it's getting now that
you are almost considered a nut case if you speak out for ordinary
people. This is something that I worry about a lot.
RP: Could you explain the hard times your family encountered?
ID: My parents had a small farm, they grew corn and
other things, and the family used to do hours of cotton picking
to supplement our income. In the early 60s when the farm fell
on hard times and we had to sell it, my father went to work in
a factory in town. It was called Emerson Electric.
They had him working eight-hour shifts and then they would
demand that he work another eight hours. He was forced to work
the swing shift, the graveyard shift, all sort of times. These
hours were killing him and becoming impossible for him and the
family. This went on for a while and so he and some other guys
decided to try and do something about it. It wasn't that they
wanted increased money. All they were after was better conditions,
and so they tried to get a union there. They set up a picket line.
This lasted a year but they weren't successful. It was after this
that we went out to California.
RP: Do you sense that more songwriters and artists are
starting to speak out. Do you see a change?
ID: Yes, I think that maybe there is a change taking
place. There are more musicians and other people emerging, like
there used to be, who are deciding that they can't keep silent
about these questions. Steve Earle is dealing with some of these
questions, and Bruce Springsteen, on his last album, takes up
these issues. This is encouraging because the newspapers aren't
doing anything to help people.
RP: In 1996 some music critics in the US disparaged
your song Wasteland of the Free for its comments on the
government, the church and other political questions.
ID: Yes, there was that kind of thing, but the positive
responses I've received outweigh the negative ones. I must admit
I didn't expect that. I thought that maybe people would be put
off, but everyone finds something in the song that they have to
agree with.
This song was written from the guts and because it's such an
in-your-face type of song, I sometimes find it difficult to perform.
But I can't keep quiet about these things. I have to live with
myself and want to be completely honest with everybody.
I don't have all the answers, but if my songs make people think
more deeply and figure out solutions that I'm not able to, then
this is what it's for. If people get upset and it forces them
to stop and think, then the song has done the job.
RP: What advice would you give young people today?
ID: The first thing I'd say is turn off the TV and start
digging around for information that's not from a corporation trying
to make money. It has dawned on me over the last few years that
these news networks and corporations are not interested in the
truth. They're just in it for the money.
I don't want to go on, I could do that for a long time and
then it would sound like preaching, but young people should look
at things a lot more critically and try and get some solid, unbiased
information. If you can get the truth, then you can make some
informed decisions.
See also:
Iris DeMent: Songwriter steeped in the
heritage of American country and traditional music
[18 April 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |