Jonneine Zapata’s ‘Demons’ cast out, for all to hear
Kevin Bronson on
5
Jonneine Zapata casts herself as something of a mystery woman, and it’s not just the icy, inhabited-by-the-music glare she projects onstage. The L.A.-singer will have you believe that with little more music training than the exposure to Mom’s record collection (heavy on the Motown) and childhood sing-alongs she has arrived where she is today, fronting a quintet and holding listeners rapt with her sultry, dusky stylings.
“As a kid I’d sing along to anything on TV; I’d sing while sitting in the back seat of my grandma’s Cadillac. I never took it as a vocation,” Zapata says. “But through meeting people I’m here today.”
Her arrival was announced by her debut, “Cast the Demons Out,” one of the most compelling releases to come down L.A.’s musical freeways in recent months. It simmers in places and boils in others, roiling in the same dark undercurrents explored by the likes of Johnette Napolitano and PJ Harvey. The album was quietly made and quietly self-released, and now with a crackerjack band behind her she seems ready for bigger stages.
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“Demons” was co-written with Sabrosa Purr guitarist Jeff Mendel, who acknowledges he had his hands full during the songwriting process. “The big challenge was capturing Jonneine’s mojo,” he says, explaining that most of the music originated with the singer. “She’d come to me with a melody and an arrangement, just sung. I would figure out the chords and the parts.”
Mendel’s Sabrosa Purr bandmate Will Love plays drums in Zapata’s lineup, with Dragan Milovanovic on guitar and the Vacation’s Steve Tegel on bass. They’ve already started working on new music, this time written as a group.
Not that “Demons” should be passed over very quickly. Asked about the source material for her music, Zapata, who has lived in Orange County, Hawaii, Texas and Kansas, explains: “Probably the first demons I was talking about were the ones in the White House. … Then there are the ones inside. You have to grow up. You have to learn your parents were right about some things, and you have to apologize. You have to confront the hard stuff.”
However, she warns against interpreting the album too narrowly. “Even though [my family] traveled a lot, I saw a lot of things prematurely. So a lot is ‘little Jimmy sees the world.’ I think I learned a lot a little too soon. … But when I listen to a record I don’t want it to be just about that person’s emotions. It can’t be just me-me-me. When you sing, sometimes you’re speaking for a group of people, and maybe there are people calling out for me to speak for them.”
||| Live: Watch for a live show in mid-April at the Viper Room.
I love this record and saw her recently perform at the Kibbitz Room (Which is a challenging setting in my opinion). However, she was amazing. I”ve missed the last 2 shows but will definitely go to the Viper. She’s very talented and amazing to watch and listen to. Really refreshing.
I’ve been a fan of Jonneine’s since 2000. She has grown as an artist in such an amazing way, and considering the fact that she (and her talent) blew me away 9 years ago, it’s hard to believe that she could even get better. But better she is, and this album and her stage performance shows a true, mature, complex, honest, capricious woman who we simply need to see and hear more from. America, make her a star!
Jonneine Zapata is one of the most talented performers in Los Angeles. She really knows how to capture an audience and then take them for a wild ride. Her voice alone could make angels cry. Her show at the Viper Room is going to be amazing. A must-see spectacular!!
I saw JZ a couple years ago opening for the Raconteurs at the Wiltern. She was just starting out, not even on the bill, and backed only by a single guitarist. She was the first to go on and her incredible voice cut through the pre-show chatter, completely quieted the crowd, and kept everyone’s attention until she left the stage to huge applause…and I was left having to find out who she was.
Since then, I’ve seen her more and more around LA; and, she’s gone from just merely incredible to really sincerely amazing. There is no way that I’m going to miss her at the Viper!
[…] Her arrival was announced by her debut, “Cast the Demons Out,” one of the most compelling releases to come down L.A.’s musical freeways in recent months. It simmers in places and boils in others, roiling in the same dark undercurrents explored by the likes of Johnette Napolitano and PJ Harvey. The album was quietly made and quietly self-released, and now with a crackerjack band behind her she seems ready for bigger stages. – Buzzbands LA […]