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Biography
"There's a love affair going on," Michelle Branch says, "between
me and music."
There's no one telling the eighteen-year-old how to move, what to wear,
or what to sing about. Nobody writes her songs for her. At a time when
young people are force-fed so much pap-pop, Branch's music is a deep breath
of fresh honesty.
As far back as she can remember, songs have always danced around in her
head. When she picked up the guitar at 14, words and music tumbled out
of her like she couldn't help it. Where does it come from? "I don't
really know," Branch says. "Music has always been in me. When
I sing, I have a sense of peace, I feel like my brain turns off, and I
become the core person of who I am--the essence of me. I feel connected
to whatever is out there. It's almost like I leave my body and get to
watch."
Some of Branch's shimmering songs come from dreams. "Sometimes I
wake up and get confused about where I am, I'm not sure if I'm asleep
or awake. I have dreams when I write an entire song, chords and everything.
I wake up and hope I can remember the dream-song, and find that I've already
written it all down, and I just pick up the guitar and play it."
Is it sleepwalking? Sleepwriting, perhaps? "I don't know," she
smiles. "It's a mystery."
Branch feels the connection to John Shanks, the producer of her record,
(Melissa Etheridge, BB Mak, SR-71, Chris Isaak ) is a magical one. "Once
you write a song, it's really personal. The song is your baby, you watch
it grow, and then you let it go. When we were in the studio, I immersed
myself in it--idea after idea just flowed," she recalls. "John
was so inspiring."
Branch hopes to inspire people the way the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix and Led
Zeppelin inspired her. "If God had a voice, it would belong to Robert
Plant," she declares, "and Jimi Hendrix is so honest when he
sings. The cool thing about the Beatles is that they created music that
makes you feel the lyrics. When you listen to 'Here Comes the Sun,' you
can just feel the sun's rays. In 'She's Leaving Home,' I feel the parents'
hearts breaking. I want to give back to people what I get from the music
I love."
Branch already gets letters from young aspiring singer/songwriters. "I
hope I can inspire people my age to play music," she says. "There
are so many 'put together' musical acts today, younger girls write and
tell me--'they all dance and sing and look so perfect, and it's so hard
to watch them, then I heard your music and now I'm writing songs.' I hope
that continues. I want to be able to speak truth and make a difference.
Even though you can't see it or grasp it, most people know love is out
there. My album is about love---songs about what people believe in."
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