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Debravation
Press Kit - July 1993
SIRE
RECORDS
Photograph by Dah Len
deborah harry
With her new album Debravation (Sire/Reprise),
Deborah Harry has assembled an extraordinary cast of
producers, players and special guests. These fourteen
new songs were written with a very impressive list of
collaborators.
The result is an album that once again
find Deborah Harry pushing the boundaries of popular
music into intriguing new territory. Debravation, in
short, is business as usual in a career that has
consistently embodied the unique, the innovative and the
unusual.
Considering it's been nearly four years since the
release of her Sire/Reprise Records debut, Def, Dumb and
Blonde, Debravation is a fitting title for fans who have
been deprived of Debbie's savvy, consummately crafted
brand of pop music.
Working with her long-time collaborator Chris Stein,
the pair assembled a wide array of material for
Debravation while on the road in Europe and America.
They then enlisted an array of composers and producers
to embrace the dynamic diversity that has always been a
part of Debbie's sound.
Among the co-conspirators: the award-winning team of
Frannie Gold & Allee Willis, Arthur Baker, Toni C,
Guy Pratt, Art Of Noise's Anne Dudley, up-and-comer
Leigh Foxx, Jon Astley and even cyberpunk godfather
William Gibson, who worked with Stein on the
future-shock track "Dog Star Girl.""Initially we were after a very immediate, very
raw sound," explains Debbie. "As the recording
continued, however, different elements began to emerge,
some of them quite layered and polished. What we ended
up with, I think, is the best of both worlds: a sound
with a real edge that also takes full advantage of the
studio state-of-art."
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Debravation also highlights a core of songs, tied
together by a common thread. "Cuts like 'Rain,'
'Dancing Down The Moon' and 'I Can see Clearly' have
lots of references to nature, it's beauty and the way
that it almost mystically effects us," she
explains. "It's not a message record. I'm not
trying to beat anyone over the head about ecology, but I
did want to connect with my own personal, sensual
feeling about the world, the weather and the
planet."
In sharp contrast to these sentiments are such key
Debravation cuts as "Lip Service," with it's
propulsive dance rhythms and trademark Edgar Allen Poe
homage, the jazzy textures of "Mood Ring," the
punk-inflected "Standing In My Way" and the
above-mentioned "Dog Star Girl" with its
scintillating sci-fi subtext. The term "bonus
track," meanwhile takes on new significance with
Debbie's updated rendition of two classics, "Tear
Drops and "My Last Date (With You)" which
features production and instrumental performances by
R.E.M.
And while Debravation will again bring Debbie's sound
and presence back to the airwaves and record racks, fans
of her live show will have to wait until later this Fall
to see her. No stranger to touring, Debbie played
everything from clubs to concert halls to stadiums and
festivals around the globe following the release of Def,
Dumb And Blonde. She was the main attraction of the
heralded "Escape From New York" tour, which
reunited her with such New Wave pioneers as the Ramones,
Tom Tom Club and others.
Her gift for live perfomances has taken on other
forms as well: a string of special appearances in and
around her home base of New York in such intriguing
guises as vocalist, poet, stand-up comedienne,
performance artist and more. It's all part of the same
media-melding approach that has seen Debbie venture
outside music into acting, with notable results. Her
film credits include Videodrome, Union City, Hairspray,
the John Carpenter directed Showtime series Body Bags,
and an off-the-cuff excercise in cinema verite entitled
Silent Movies, directed by Paul Morrisey and featuring
Red Hot Chilli Pepper Anthony Kiedas and Sophia Coppola.
Regular work at New York Actors Studio rounds out
Debbie's resume.
Yet throughout this full schedule, music remains
Debbie's priority. She's contributed material to the
scores of Scarface, American Gigolo, Polyester, Prelude
To A Kiss and the acclaimed Australian film Summertime.
She surfaced briefly on a smattering of benefit
projects, including the AIDS awareness album, Red, Hot
and Blue, singing a duet with Iggy Pop.
Now, with Debravation she delivers again: an album
that deftly captures the essence of an artist who
delights in defying both convention and description and
remains consistantly original, challenging and
entertaining.
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