Live music photos
Regina Spektor is giddy and relieved: She’s finally finished her latest album. We called the Soviet-born songstress in New York, hours after she’d flown home at 5:30am from L.A., where the 29-year-old put the finishing touches on Far, her fifth album and follow-up to the breakthrough Begin to Hope. The wide-ranging record features the playful pianist’s thoughts on the cosmos, the tuba and one of the Strokes. Four superproducers lent their hands, including Jeff Lynne of ELO fame. Well, not that much fame. Spektor had never heard of him.
Time Out Chicago: Why four producers for one album?
Regina Spektor: It had been three years since Begin to Hope. I never expected that album to become so big and for it to take so long to get to a follow-up. I always thought I’d make an album every year. I figured if I was only going to get to do this once every few years, I wanted to get the most out of it and learn as much as possible.
TOC: So this was like a master class on how to make a pop record?
Regina Spektor: Yeah, pretty much!
TOC: From now on, you can just do it yourself.
Regina Spektor: I’ll steal their secrets and go after their jobs!
TOC: How did you connect with Jeff Lynne?
Regina Spektor: Funny enough, I had no idea who he was. My label asked me to start thinking about what producers I’d want to work with. I’m not the kind of person who pays attention to who produces what. But a friend was playing the new Tom Petty album and I thought, Hey, I like this. So I flipped it over and wrote down his name.
TOC: So you had never even heard ELO?
Regina Spektor: No! I just thought Tom Petty sounded nice. When I met with my label, they asked me who I wanted to produce the record. So I pulled out my note and said “Jeff Lynne.” They all just silently looked at each other, and I was like, “What?”
TOC: Is this just because Xanadu never made it across the Iron Curtain?
Regina Spektor: What’s that?
TOC: Wow, how to explain? It’s a movie about, um, roller-skating angels? ELO did the music.
Regina Spektor: That sounds pretty late ’70s! But, no, I know people who grew up in foreign countries and know all sorts of pop culture. It’s like how I’m a terrible speller.
TOC: But you can’t spell in Russian either, is what you’re saying?
Regina Spektor: No, not at all.
TOC: Is that why your album title is so short?
Regina Spektor: I was originally calling it Far, Far Away, and I kept chopping it down.
TOC: Sounds a little fantasy sci-fi. What’s the thought behind the name?
Regina Spektor: One day it hit me, that I was standing on a planet, rotating in space. I could feel the Earth spinning beneath my feet; I could feel that we are just shooting through space, and everything else is so far away. And if you travel far, you leave something far behind. It was one of those deep moments, like when you realize you’re going to die.
TOC: Yeah, that’s a big one.
Regina Spektor: But lately I’ve been calling the album Fart.
TOC: Hey, it’s not set in stone!
Regina Spektor: I’m going to call up my label and yell, “Stop the presses!” I’d love to see their faces then.
Sire Records releases Far on June 23. No extra T as of press time.