Martha Wainwright finds her voice anew at All Saints Church in Pocklington tomorrow

Martha Wainwright: 20th anniversary tour show at All Saints Church, Pocklington

MARTHA Wainwright plays All Saints Church, Pocklington, tomorrow on her 18-date 20th Anniversary Tour.

The Montreal-born singer-songwriter will be marking 20 years since she released her self-titled debut album, when she stepped out of the shadow of her illustrious North American musical family (father Loudon Wainwright III; mother Kate McGarrigle; brother Rufus Wainwright and aunt Anna McGarrigle).

“Twenty years ago my life as an artist took shape when my first record was released,” recalls Martha, now 49. “In many ways that record defined me, as well as launched me into a now over-20-year-long career that has made me who I am.

“It was after ten years of playing in bars, making cassettes and EPs to sell at my shows, singing back-up for my brother Rufus, falling in love and out of love, practising, writing, singing until I could barely sing anymore, partying, playing with musicians and listening to great artists, working with my ex-husband [producer and bassist Brad Albetta] in the studio for two years, all that created this first record.”

Martha continues: “Labels wouldn’t sign me when I started and I had to craft, with the help of many people, an album that would finally be licensed and released in 2005. My first record tells my story and when it was finally released I was able to work and tour and have a career in music – something that I always wanted but wasn’t sure would happen. 

“Twenty years later, with six other albums under my belt, two kids and a career that is chugging along, I can safely say my first record paved my way forward.”

In May, [PIAS] (CORRECT) released Martha’s debut on vinyl for the first time, alongside CD and digital versions with extra tracks and a bonus disc of 14 rarities and alternate versions: unheard songs, outtakes and early material from ten years of discovery that led to her first record. Gems include Bring Back My Heart, featuring Rufus Wainwright, Our Love with Kate & Anna McGarrigle and Far Away, featuring the late Garth Hudson, of The Band.

“In the years before my first album was released, I was doing my own version of ‘artist development’ – playing a lot of gigs and going into the studio to make demos,” says Martha. “I got to New York City in 1998. It was a magical blur of fun and discovery, meeting musicians, playing and seeing shows and going into the studio. Hopping from bar to bar in the Lower East Side and Williamsburg.

“These are some of the recordings that came out of that time. Some were released as EPs that I would sell at shows but others have never been released. These are the ones that best reflect that time and the wild eclecticism I’ve always had, for better or worse, as an artist.”

Why did she call her first album “Martha Wainwright”? “That’s a very classic singer-songwriter thing to do. It’s your introduction, and the world’s introduction to you, and it also means there is not necessarily one song that defines the record. It’s not saying ‘this is the single’; it’s not creating an image. That’s how eponymous works for me,” says Martha.

“Also, I think, for my first record, as is the case for some artists, this one was a long time in the making as I couldn’t get a record contract, thought I released my first cassette in 1997, then moved to New York, made some EPS and tried to discover myself musically.

“Coming from a musical family, I needed to discover myself when there’s a lot of shadow to come out of, and these were songs that I wrote over many years as a young person defining myself.”

Was she ever tempted not to use her family name? “Well, it’s interesting, because I come out of a tradition of songwriters who use their own name as they had an interesting name and didn’t need to change it or didn’t want to,” says Martha.

“Artistically, it could be silly to change my name, though not necessarily so, because people will inevitably draw comparisons, but we’re all bogged down  by our families, whether we want to be or not.

“My family chose songwriting to be the big subject in life, and I guess I was leaning to that, but it was also about love and unrequited love.

“It was this acceptance of where I came from, but also maybe that I would have to push and shove , and you can hear that edge, that youthful resentment, to make you different to Kate and Anna, Rufus and Loudon.

“Every artist is trying to find their spot, trying to find that centre, and maybe we are trying to do that not only as artists but as people: to find our voices.”

Now comes her 20th anniversary tour with “a few great musicians”, when Martha will be playing her debut record in its entirety, complemented by a few new songs. “There’s no 49-year-old me without the 28-year-old me,” she says.

Martha Wainwright, supported by Michele Stodart (of The Magic Numbers), All Saints Church, Pocklington, August 27, 7.30pm. Also The Foundry, Sheffield, August 28, 7.30pm. Tour tickets are on sale at marthawainwright.com.