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All of those stories about my interview-fear date from the beginning of the band. At the time of our first interviews everything was new and unclear, so I usually was staring at a reporter with this big question mark above my head. I just didn't know it then. It was too new, and I was nervous and paranoid.
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Bono has a big voice, yes, but let him sing over a Portishead trac, and there's nothing left of it.
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I am a very sensitive person, very impulsive and emotional.
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I mostly listen to Nina Simone, Otis Redding, Janis Ian, Jimmy Cliff. Although lately I often listen to The Joshua Tree by U2. I love Bono's voice. It's very inspiring.
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I still don't like doing interviews. I hardly do any... I hope this will be the last one for a long while.
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I think that after a year of Portishead I've become a little more sober.
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I thought I had a clear picture of death, but now I know it's a mystery and it will always be a mystery, although it is something we all have in common: everybody knows that life ends with death.
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I try to imagine how we would live if we didn't know we were going to die. Would we live our lives differently? Less careful, maybe? Less scared? These are beautiful things to think about and build a song around.
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I wanted to do live things, needed an audience. Geoff was more of a studio-guy. A real programmer. So pretty soon it was: nice to meet you, bye.
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I was a big fan of the Cocteau Twins and especially of singer Liz Fraser, who used non-existing words in her lyrics. Just like Lisa Gerrard from Dead Can Dance still does. I thought that was fantastic: searching for the ultimate emotion, not bothered by something as limiting as vocabulary!
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I've had a wordless phase, and that's still not entirely over: what I sing is not always literally meant that way, and you can hear that in the way it is sung.
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I've just put my heart and soul in a song and need at least a week to recover.
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Let's get one thing straight: there's no such thing as the Bristol sound.
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Most of the lyrics are over a year old, and it doesn't feel like it's about me. Time created a distance.
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My voice adapts itself to the music. I can do a lot more than you hear in Portishead.
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Portishead-brain Geoff Barrow was the poor guy who made the tea and sandwiches and was allowed to press a few unimportant buttons in the studio while Massive Attack were making their debut Blue Lines in 1990.
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The music comes first. When Geoff has made something the inspiration comes automatically. His music is very expressive. But still is is a very difficult process: I have to add something to his music, not push it away. It has to be equal, and I find that very difficult.
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There's no romantic Seattle or Manchester-like offensive of musical solidarity feeling in Bristol.
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There's not only emotion in the way you sing but also in what you sing. That way I can compensate it.
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We're not Bon Jovi, you know.
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We're thinking about printing the lyrics with the next record so that people can find their own meaning in them. But then they would start having a life of their own, and I think the Portishead music should stay a whole in which the lyrics come second, actually.
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You feel the music needs something but you don't know what. So you start searching, fitting, measuring, trying. Every time you try another angle. And sometimes that's frustrating, especially if you don't come up with something for three days.

Biography

Beth Gibbons is the vocalist for the trip-hop band Portishead.

She met bandmate Geoff Barrow in a Government business start-up scheme. Barrow and Gibbons joined jazz guitarist Adrian Utley, and the sessioners John Baggott, Jim Barr and Clive Deamer to record three successful and critically-praised Portishead albums. Admired by artists as diverse as Dr. Dre and Robert Plant, the latter used Gibbons's musical associates in his own projects.

Gibbons has also collaborated on a separate project with Paul Webb, aka Rustin' Man. In October 2002, the album, Out Of Season, was released in the UK, and in October 2003 it was released in the US.

She was reported in the spring of 2005 to be working on the soundtrack of a French language film, her Piafesque singing making her especially popular in that country. She also produced lyrics for Joss Stone.

"Suffering for your art is most definitely overrated but I do get a certain, I don't know, satisfaction from being able to deal with my paranoia and insecurity."
—Beth Gibbons

External links

*Her homepage

...(more on Wikipedia)

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Beth Gibbons".
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