Nikka Costa—the wild-haired, funk/soul-singing white girl (and daughter of the late
producer/Frank Sinatra arranger Don Costa) who can work a mike stand like a
baton-twirler—won my heart with the amazing, unpredictable Everybody Got Their Something in 2001. I spoke with Costa a couple days ago, but never got
around to asking her about something I’m fairly certain she’s fed the hell up with by
now: being compared to Janis Joplin.
Google Costa and Joplin’s names together and you’ll find page after page of the go-to
comparison. Certainly her ferocious vocals—not to mention her flair for revisiting the
innate soulfulness of blacker R&B artists of yesteryear—has made many a music
writer feel the need to call her the next Janis and be done with it.
I wanted to ask if she’s ready for even more comparisons to Joplin now that her latest
album is called Pebble to a Pearl, which was released this week. Is the
title a snarky nod to Joplin’s posthumous 1971 album Pearl? Is this her
way of saying she’s nowhere in the same musical vicinity as Joplin, and people should
just accept her as her own performer?
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Shit. I should’ve opened with that. I’m slipping.
While Costa didn’t bring up Joplin as an inspiration for her music, she did classify
herself as a Stevie Wonder freak. In fact, if you listen to some of the songs on
Pebble, you’ll sense that she’s mimicking the psychedelic-funk
sound he laid throughout his early-’70s classic period. And Costa isn’t afraid to cop to
that.
“I’m a huge Stevie Wonder head,” says the thirtysomething Costa on the phone from her
L.A. home base. “I knew I wanted to tap into the records where he was still on Motown,
but he had just taken control of his own production and stuff like that.”
Control seems to be a priority for Costa these days, along with freedom. These were
two things she didn’t have at Virgin, the label that released Something
and her 2005 follow-up can’tneverdidnothin’. Indeed, Costa isn’t
hesitant to bring up the disgust she felt as an artist there.
“I just really wanted to get away from Virgin,” she says. “I didn’t think they were a
healthy company, and I had four presidents while I was there. And I don’t know if you
know anything about the changing of hands in a record label. It’s laborious. And every
time I would finish a record, I’d get a new president, and they’d tell me to make a new
record. So it was very frustrating creatively, in a lot of different ways.”
Nikka Costa Tues., Oct. 21, 7:30pm.
$25-$40.
With Pictures and Sounds.
World Cafe Live,
3025 Walnut St.
215.222.1400. www.worldcafelive.com
After asking to be released from Virgin, Costa went back to square one, coming up with
more songs and even starting her own record label Go Funk Yourself with her husband
producer Justin Stanley. And what was the first item on the agenda for their new
venture? Making an album, of course.
“We basically made Pebble to a Pearl on our own dime, and it was
great,” she says. “It was a totally liberating and amazing experience. I could make
whatever I wanted, could do whatever I wanted and it was, like, so freeing. And fast. We
did 15 songs in five days.”
Recording at Henson Studios (formerly A&M Studios) in L.A., Costa rounded up
some true players for Pebble, including James Poyser on keyboards (who
performed on Something) and the peerless James Gadson on drums. Little
did Costa know another label, a more legendary one when it comes to soul, had its eye on
her.
She recalls, “At the end, we were mixing and Stax had gotten word that I was making a
record and they wanted to hear it. And then once they heard it, they were just like, you
know, aggressively kinda wanting me to be on the label. So it was nice to be associated
with a label that has such a historic stamp—for soul music, especially. And also, to be
with a label that really wanted what I was already doing, not wanting to change me.
Because, in the past, it was kinda always like, ‘You’re really great. But God, if you
would sing more like Kelly Clarkson, we could really do something with you.’”
Considering Kelly Clarkson doesn’t sound like Kelly Clarkson anymore, it appears Costa
made the right move in flying the Virgin coop. She wouldn’t have landed in the caring
palms of an immortal soul empire if she didn’t. Bottom line: Costa is just glad to be
doing what she wants to do, especially for a label that appreciates her. And that’s all
that’s worth talking about.
But I’m still cursing myself out for not bringing up Janis.