I don't know just when I decided to make a record. I've always kept a
journal and I've always liked to fool around on the guitar and at some
point songs started coming out. This didn't seem unusual; everyone
around me was writing songs.
When I was in school, I used to perform as often as possible. I like the
energy of being in front of an audience, and again it just seemed natural,
having grown up on the road a lot.
So I found myself in Boulder, Colorado. I 'followed my heart' out there.
There's a lot of music in Boulder and I got the idea that I should get my
songs down on tape. I wasn't thinking so much about making a record, I
just had to unload. I certainly didn't have any plan to launch a career or
follow in anyone's footsteps (I still don't). This was a very modest and
personal effort.
A year or so ago in Telluride, CO., in a borrowed house, I found a book
called "Tomboy Bride". The image of a young 19th century frontier
woman striding wide open into a new life resonated deeply with me, and
helped me identify my self in a new world. The song "Tomboy Bride" just
came tumbling out.
The world of the high-powered music-biz doesn't seem like much fun to
me. I don't like the image of my songs on the assembly line, slugging it
out with other acts. And since I've made the record on my own, with the
dogs and the crickets in Wendy Woo's living room, I figured I'd release it
on my own, too (I've got a thousand of them in a cardboard box at the
foot of my bed).
I mean - we invent ourselves ... right?