Beth Orton biography
Date of birth : 1970-12-14
Date of death : -
Birthplace : East Dereham, Norfolk, England
Nationality : English
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2012-01-06
Credited as : Singer-songwriter, known for her 'folktronica' sound, worked with the Chemical Brothers
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Beth Orton emerged from the British trip-hop dance scene as a singer/songwriter who directed her talents toward making amplified folk music in a refreshingly different vein. Orton, who lent vocal tracks for the likes of William Orbit and the Chemical Brothers prior to her solo career, found her way to the forefront of a new wave that Village Voice writer Julie Taraska termed "pastoral electronica an amalgamation of sixties folk and processed beats." Orton's cheerless but haunting voice and songs about morbidity and tragic romances, and earned a slew of critical accolades for her two albums, 1997's Trailer Park and her 1999 release Central Reservation. As an article in Rolling Stone noted, "Orton weaves English folk, confessional songwriting, and high-tech arrangements into a modern rhythmic approach."
Orton was born in 1970 in Norfolk, a city in the east of England, but moved to the London area with her family as a young teen. Always fascinated by words and the English language, she wrote poetry and stories from a young age. As an adult she worked in a pub for a time, and began her own catering company for film sets that she called Fat Beth's Lunchbox. From her parents she inherited an appreciation for a wide range of music including Sixties-era folk ensembles. From her rebellious older brothers she gleaned an awareness of punk, but Orton turned her creative energies toward a career in the theater. "I had a huge love of music, but it was something I never thought I was worthy of," Orton told Billboard's Dylan Siegler.
She appeared in London productions after studying drama, and even toured Russia "as a spitting, corseted whore in a play about Arthur Rimbaud," wrote Murphy Williams in Harper's Bazaar. In a hip London bar one night in 1989 she met ambient electronica producer William Orbit. Sitting on the barstool next to Orton at Quiet Storm, Orbit was struck by Orton's speaking voice, and convinced her to join him in the studio. They recorded "Don't Wanna Know About Evil" together, a cover from 1970s folk singer John Martyn. Orton then went on to work with several other acts including the Chemical Brothers on their groundbreaking 1995 album Exit Planet Dustand the trip-hop act Red Snapper. "When I started singing, I just couldn't stop," Orton told Siegler. "Music satisfied this need in me it was the expression I was looking for."
The exposure to studios and songwriters inspired Orton to begin writing her own songs. As she did so, a friend introduced her to the work of legendary, though somewhat forgotten, Chicago jazz singer Terry Callier. Village Voice writer Natasha Stovall explained that Callier's music had achieved a cultish fandom among London music scenesters by that point. "Callier's `60s and `70s recordings cook soul, folk, jazz, love, politics, and religion," wrote Stovall, and "guided by his example, Orton mixed her emotive free-associations and creamy melodies down into laid-back turntable soundscapes" that became her debut album, Trailer Park.
Released in the United Kingdom in 1996 and on the Heavenly/DeConstruction label the following year in the United States, Trailer Park was somewhat of a departure from the production-heavy blips and beeps of William Orbit. The album instead featured Orton using a folk guitar but backing it with dance beats. The album was produced by highly regarded studio whiz Victor Van Vught, who had worked with Nick Cave, and Andrew Weatherall.
A single from Trailer Park, "She Cries Your Name," was released but Orton did not tour in support of it, though she did open some dates for the Beautiful South, John Cale and John Martyn. In a talk with Billboard writer Paul Sexton in late 1996, Orton agreed with the difficulty of neatly categorizing her style. "Folk, jazz, and hiphop all rolled into one," she theorized, adding, "at the end of the day, it's just good taste. People used to say you couldn't do a folk song with hip-hop. I know it's all the rage now, but I swear, four years ago you couldn't get anybody to do it."
Critical reception for Trailer Park was enthusiastic. "Teetering between a songwriter's linear development and electronica's conscious fragmentation, Trailer Park incorporates the sum total of Orton's experience: the lyrics and melodies she writes on acoustic guitar and the processing and effects of studio engineers," noted Taraska in the Village Voice. Rolling Stone's Rob Sheffield called Orton's debut "one of those rare albums you could play for absolutely anyone and know they'd like it." By 1999 Trailer Park had snowballed into an underground success in the United States, selling over 90,000 copies.
Orton eventually did begin making live forays into North America, and found a warm reception in cities like Chicago and San Francisco. She also spent time on the Lilith Fair touring festival in 1998, where she met one of her more famous fans, Emmylou Harris. Returning to the studio she rehired Van Vught along with David Roback of Mazzy Star for her 1999 release Central Reservation. This time, however, Orton wrote nearly everything herself. Some of the tracks reflected her own circumstances both of her parents had passed away and musically, she headed in a different direction that distanced her from the intense beats of the electronica movement. In place of heavy drum loops was a greater emphasis on the guitar, the piano and conga drums.
Central Reservation also included several notable guest collaborators or performers. Ben Harper helped out on its first single, "Stolen Car," while New Orleans bluesman Dr. John and Callier appeared on other tracks. Dr. John had been working in the same studio complex and liked her work so much that he offered his services. Ben Watt from Everything but the Girl also made an appearance on the record.
Orton won wide critical acclaim for Central Reservation. "From a universe of elements, Orton has cobbled together on Central Reservation a sound both trippy and straightforward," opined Stovall in the Village Voice. Regarding Orton's progression as a songwriter and musician, Stovall wrote that she displays "an almost mystical relationship with sounds and words ... Central Reservationbypasses the cortex and goes straight for raw nerves; perhaps that's why Orton doesn't print out her lyrics, because you have to hear them to understand."
Billboard's Siegler also found Central Reservation a solid example of a developing artist. "The orchestration is lusher, the vocals are more dynamic and confident, and the artist's game of genre hopscotch is intact," Siegler declared. Writing in Newsweek, Karen Schoemer termed the record "a glorious accomplishment her songs drift along on oceans of strings, with brushed and Stax-style organ adding cushions of soul." Rolling Stone writer was no less impressed writing, "Central Reservation generates a special buzz of its own."
Orton has left her longtime record label and will begin work on a follow up album to Comfort Of Strangers which will be released sometime in 2012 on ANTI-. Some new material has been written and performed already.
Albums:
-SuperPinkyMandy (Japan only - 1993)
-Trailer Park (1996)
-Central Reservation (1999)
-Daybreaker (2002)
-The Other Side of Daybreak (2003)
-Pass In Time: The Definitive Collection (2003)
-Comfort of Strangers (February 2006)
-TBA (2011)