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"We called the album New Universe because it
represents us taking charge of our own music after years of playing backup for
everyone else," says Lori Wilshire, one half of the singer-songwriter duo
Wilshire (rhymes with "fire"). "We were trying to make our thing
happen on the side, but it wasn't accepted because it was pop music and we
happened to be in Nashville. So we packed up everything we owned and moved to
L.A. We had no idea how we were gonna pay the bills, but we had this dream
inside of us."
At first listen, the New Universe track "Nothing Left
To Lose" -- which features the lyric "Standing on the edge of my new
universe" -- sounds like a woman gamely trying to pick herself up after
being knocked down by love gone wrong. But beneath Lori's heart-wrenching vocal
is a pointed reproach to doubters.
"We knew what people were saying," Micah Wilshire remembers,
"that we'd never have the guts to leave town." Adds Lori: "When I
wrote the lyrics for that song, I was thinking about how our apartment looked
when it was empty. I took one last look around and thought, 'Wow, I wish those
people could see this place now. We are gone.'"
This sense of triumph was quickly tempered, however, when
the pair began to realize just how difficult it is to "make it" in Los
Angeles. Songs like "Special," the driving first single off New
Universe, speak to that struggle.
"When we got to L.A.," Lori explains, "we started working as
extras. 'Special' was a picture of our life. We'd be in traffic every morning on
the 405 freeway going to these soundstages. After a while, it was the same old
grind. We needed something to keep us going. The words 'looking for a
hallelujah' in that song are about finding your purpose, finding freedom, and
joy."
The pair sought their purpose at Los Angeles' many open
mic nights. Though Lori admits to being "terrified" at their first
such performance, she says, "We played 'I Know What You Did,' and it went
really well, which gave us confidence."
Lori and Micah also plied their trade on the West Coast college circuit, driving
five or eight or 10 hours for maybe $100 a show. Along with their L.A.
performances, these bare-bones gigs helped the pair determine which of their
songs were worthy. "If you can pull it off buck naked -- just the two of
you and your guitars," Micah declares, "then the song works."
For Micah, understanding when a song works may be genetic.
"My main musical influence is my dad, who's also a songwriter," he
says. "Most of my guitar licks are exact rip-offs of stuff he taught me.
The first band I ever played in was with him -- on drums, when I was 10."
After high school, Micah moved from Roanoke, Virginia, to Nashville, intent on
becoming a session ace. In fact, he was earning a living playing guitar and
singing when he happened to see Lori perform one night. He recalls: "She
started singing, and I was, like, 'Holy crap!' I was just floored by her
voice."
Born and raised in Houston, Lori studied vocal performance at Nashville's
Belmont College. She says of her earliest musical inclinations: "When I was
a kid, I'd record myself singing these songs in my bedroom and then play them
for my family at the dinner table; it was, like, 'Here's what I'm working on.'
Then I saw this gospel group perform. They were so soulful, and they kind of
rocked. I'd never seen anything like it, and I said to myself, 'I'm gonna be a
rock star!'"
Micah introduced himself to Lori the night he heard her sing, but the two didn't
start getting to know each other until they found themselves working on the same
studio project. When Micah subsequently attended one of Lori's shows, she
invited him onstage. "The moment we started singing together that night, we
both knew our solo careers were over," Micah says.
They began their professional lives together singing covers -- the two share a
fondness for classic soul, Top 40 pop and The Beatles -- but soon began
performing original material.
During that year and after they moved to Los Angeles in May of 2001, Lori and
Micah recorded demos of their songs. Somehow, the work sustained them during
months of sweating out the rent payments. "What kept us going," Micah
confides, "was people telling us how much a certain song meant to them, how
it encouraged them. It's funny, because we were writing those songs to encourage
ourselves. We'd walk away from a show going, 'Wow -- what we're doing matters to
people.'"
Then they wrote "Special." Micah relates: "I was messing around
with a song idea, playing these minor chords that felt like angst, and Lori just
started singing, 'I'm looking for a hallelujah …' We did a quick drumbeat and
started laying it down. We recorded the vocals, and when we finished, I hit
'stop,' and we just looked at each other. You know how people say you gotta have
that one song? Well, Lori was jumping up and down, saying, 'This is the one --
this is gonna do it!'"
The demo of "Special" Wilshire recorded that day -- in 30 minutes in
their tiny apartment -- is what actually made it onto New Universe (augmented by
live drums and remixed by Tom Lord-Alge). "We did try re-recording it in
the studio," Micah says, "but when we did that demo, we managed to
bottle lightning, and you can't recreate that." ("Nothing Left To
Lose" and "I Know What You Did" are also enhanced demos.)
"Special" did seem to do the trick, and in August 2002, Wilshire
signed with Columbia Records and began recording New Universe, co-producing with
David Tickle (U2, Prince). The album was mixed by Joe Zook (longtime engineer
for producers Jack Joseph Puig and the team of Mitchell Froom and Tchad Blake).
Basic tracks were recorded at Hollywood's Sunset Sound, with some overdubs added
at Paramour, set in a restored 1920s mansion atop a mountain in L.A.'s
Silverlake district. The record was completed on Kauai, Hawaii, at Tickle's home
studio.
Though recording in Hawaii may have felt like the defining "look how far
we've come" moment for Wilshire, that was actually reserved for their
string session with arranger/conductor Paul Buckmaster, renowned for his work
with Elton John and The Rolling Stones, among countless other artists. The love
song "In Your Arms" and "Tonight" -- inspired by letters
from soldiers to their wives during World War II -- bear Buckmaster's imprint.
"That session was overwhelming," says Micah. "I'll never forget
when the musicians set down the first chart, and Paul cued them and they started
playing the intro -- we just welled up with tears. We both went back in our
minds to all the open mic nights and the college shows and everything we'd done
trying to get our music going. To hear this 20-piece string session at Capitol
Studios playing our song … " Surely, this was a new universe.
"I think everybody's looking over the horizon for a better place,"
Lori ventures, "looking for their destiny. What's important is what you go
through along the way and how you do it. You always have to struggle to make
something great happen. But when you look back, you realize that's the most
exciting part."