The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2008-09-25
(NOTE: Archived content:
Current issue here)

[image]
Previous Issues

News
Funding for thousands of new students
Dion unveils platform to Calgarians
New transcripts recognize on-campus volunteering
Refugee camp comes closer to home
Class project leads to monthly campus farmers' market
U of C helps settle land disputes
Camping on campus
U of C studies effects of roadside memorials
News for the unnewsed
Canada's stellar microsatellite

Opinions
The sickness of health care
Sleeping bears aren't meant to be poked
Shaming Ramadan: attacks blight the Holy Month
Playing around with loneliness
Stelmach gives criminals the silent treatment
It's a Google world, we're just living in it
Averting an epidemic: market solutions for Canada's food safety
The ghost of Caesar
The cost of neglect: riots erupt in a Mexican prison
Far beyond a bleached blonde
Outrageous handbags
Transit crisis
You wanted to come back?
Threesomes: part deux
SU View: Got (affordable) housing?
Letter: a staggering lack of understanding
Letter: Fearful Tax

Sports
Footballers let sloppy game slip away
Men's soccer squad winless on weekend
Women soccersaurs still look for first win
Field hockey team loses two games, but not spirit
Sportspinions: San Jose Sharks look for Yao Ming of hockey
Sport shorts

Entertainment
1,000 Journals pieces together a picture of the world
Keytars are a band's best friend
What's the Spanish flu?
Fall flicks hit the silver screen
Spun: Priya Thomas
Spun: Roots Manuva
Spun: The Matt Blais Connection
Spun: Lonely Drifter Karen
Weighing in on the Calgary International Film Festival
The universal language of dance
SSR introduces non-indigenous species to the wild
Internet and political sensation expands her horizons
Vancouver genre benders know how to get noticed
Songstress Laura Barrett's kalimba is excellent
Celebrated playwright takes the reigns of U of C drama
Spun: Kaley Bird
Spun: Divine Brown
Spun: Morgan Geist

Features
A student-sized carbon footprint



  Songstress Laura Barrett's kalimba is excellent


music



[Print] Print this story

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

music
ENTERTAINMENTRicca’s on the Razor’s Sharp edge
ENTERTAINMENTGet a B.A. in beatmatching at Voxbox
ENTERTAINMENTTenderly caressing your inner ear
ENTERTAINMENTWelcome to Nu-Funkistan
ENTERTAINMENTFeel the Dream Horse's Spirit

The kalimba is a simple African instrument. In essence, it's a tiny finger piano with a music box sound. Songstress Laura Barrett pairs this with her own light, sing-songy voice, beckoning images of a child singing nursery rhymes, a sound she features on her first full-length record, Victory Garden.

Barrett got her first Kalimba the summer after she graduated from the University of Toronto after majoring in psychology and specializing in English and linguistics.

"It's kind of become a mythical story," she says, laughing. "I was searching for portable music controllers online and came across a bunch of them. I bought one on a whim and after playing it, I fell in love because it's a beautiful-sounding instrument. I've since developed my own style of playing it."

Her style is definitely distinct as the young musician is virtually impossible to compare to anything that you've ever heard. Previously self-described as, "neurotic sci-folk for neurotic sci-folks," she has since changed her description to, "acoustic-trance meets impressionist-pop," though Barrett never envisioned herself going through with a career in music, despite carving such specific niches.

"I've played piano since I was about six and I would write songs, but I never performed for anyone other than my mom," she recalls. "I was really nervous and I didn't think that people would be into them, so how could I have ever imagined, 'Okay, I'm going to take up a new instrument and then I'm going to play a Weird Al [Yankovic] cover.' "

After performing that first Weird Al cover, the rest is history. Barrett self-recorded her first EP, Ursula, in her friend's bedroom. She went on to sign with Paper Bag Records and released another EP [Earth Sciences], toured cross country in May and then went back into the studio to record Victory Garden.

"It's kind of bizarre," she says. "It wasn't the plan, but now it's the plan for at least the next little while. I want to write another album and I want to travel and tour and then definitely go back to school because I feel like my brain needs a good solid workout."

Despite her burgeoning career and success so far, Barrett sees school coming back into her life in the future.

"Academics mean a lot and it's important for people not to have to quit one thing or the other," she says. "You can do both and it'll enrich both experiences. It's created a weird, not disjointed, but segmented way of looking at my life. The timing has just been strange. I have this BA, but I'm not using it in a professional context. I feel as though it was a very worthwhile experience though and I can build upon it later."

Share this story: del.icio.us digg Fark NewsVine Reddit YahooMyWeb


Reader Comments:

 Add your comment or send a letter to the editor

No comments found. Be the first!

 Views expressed are those of the posters and do not necessarily reflect that of the Gauntlet.

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

RSS icon RSS Feeds:
[ Main - News - Opinions - Entertainment - Sports ]
Volunteer at the Gauntlet®
.