Grammy Award-winner and former Eighth Blackbird violinist Yvonne Lam’s debut solo album features works for solo violin with electronics by six remarkable women. Released July 28, 2023 on Blue Griffin Recording, Watch Over Us has been praised for its “dazzling virtuosity and kaleidoscopic colors.” In our latest Insider Interview, we spoke with Lam about the recently released album and more.
You are best known for your work in the ensemble 8th Blackbird. How does that chamber ensemble experience compare with performing solo with electronic tape? How did it prepare you for this project?
It’s like apples and oranges. There was a lot of blood, sweat and tears invested into the music and business of running Eighth Blackbird. Working with five other musicians so closely for eight years was like being in a very intense family. Indeed, we saw more of each than we did our own families, and we got to know each other so well on many levels. We could adjust on the fly and almost knew what others were going to do musically before they did.
Performing solo with electronic tape is a little bit like trying to play with someone who can’t hear you. There’s zero “give” with fixed media, so you have to learn to adjust to it, to know where you have space and where you don’t. I was introduced to playing with tape during my time with Eighth Blackbird. That prepared me by helping me realize how much I didn’t know about the tech! Performing solo with tape live is always stressful because things can go wrong with the tech, but that’s not an issue when recording.
You specifically chose music by women for this collection. Were there other works by women that you had to leave out, for stylistic considerations, practical reasons, or time constraints?
I didn’t intentionally set out to choose only women composers. If you had asked me ten years ago to picture a composer who writes electronic music, it wouldn’t have been a woman. But in the process of discovering works, I kept running across fabulous composers who happened to be women. And then I had enough for an album.
Were there one or more compositions by men that you considered including?
Oh, sure. There are so many great pieces out there! Maybe for the next album…
Tell us about your collaborations outside of classical music. For instance, your work with the jazz bassist and composer Matt Ulery, and with the experimental performance group Every House Has A Door.
Matt Ulery is a unique musician and a joy to collaborate with. I am not a jazz musician, not in the slightest, and working with Matt gave me such insight to just how different his skill set is. I keep telling myself that one day I will actually take lessons, but I do know that jazz is learned by doing, so I’ll have to commit myself to some serious doing.
Working with artists who aren’t musicians is illuminating. I love seeing performance through their eyes, which is often more holistic than the way musicians think. We don’t scrutinize our extra-musical movement, for example, or think about the intention our facial expression or eye focus projects. We also don’t place much importance on what happens in-between pieces, either, even though that’s still an integral part of the experience we shape for our audiences.
This fascinates me: When you first started playing violin as a young child, you thought it was a guitar. Why? And why was your interest in guitar so keen? Did you ever get to learn to play that instrument?
I wish I remembered what I was thinking at that age! My mother used to schlep me to my older sister’s piano lessons at a music store. While we waited for her, I would stare at the display cases, and my guess is I saw the violin but didn’t know the word “violin”. Or maybe I genuinely thought it was a guitar, since I had likely seen one on TV. No one near me played either instrument. In any case, I bugged her for a year (or so she says) before she finally gave in and found a teacher for me.
My husband, who is also a violinist, taught himself electric guitar before he started violin. So we have a couple of guitars in the house. I never learned to play, but not for lack of trying. I can play a few chords, but anything beyond that and my brain ties itself into knots.