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French singer embraces Britney, Apple for success
Christine Kearney
NEW YORK—Folksy French-Israeli singer Yael Naim found commercial success
after her song “New Soul” played in Apple’s MacBook Air laptop ads,
pushing the song to No. 7 on U.S. music chart Billboard’s Hot 100.
She already had gained fame for what some saw as a comic choice to cover
pop singer Britney Spear’s “Toxic,” singing a soulful, poignant version
of the commercial hit while playing piano. But Naim, 29, whose
self-titled new album was just released in the United States two months
earlier than originally planned following the success of the Apple ad,
says she’s not worried about being seen as too commercial.
“It opened a great window for us, for a lot of people to have a chance
to hear about our music,” she told Reuters in New York. “We had a lot of
propositions ... but we thought Apple and Macintosh have some connection
because today we work with computers to do our music.”
The singer-songwriter, who was born in Paris but spent a large part of
her childhood in Israel, recorded her new album in her Paris apartment
with her music partner, percussionist David Donatien.
“We did not have a label,” she said. “We did not have a lot of money so
we did it just with a computer.”
NAME HALVED
She became disillusioned with the “big studio” experience after her
first album “In a Man’s Womb” was released in 2001 through EMI, which
insisted she keep her name to just Yael.
“It was like they took half of my energy,” she said.
Both “Toxic” and “New Soul” appear on her new, second album, which was
recorded in English, Hebrew and French and has received warm reviews.
Rolling Stone magazine noted: “The way Naim purrs any word with a hard
‘ch’ will make your loins tingle.” Naim, who spent two years in the
Israel Air Force Orchestra, said she was surprised audiences in France
had embraced the mixed-language album.
“I did not think anyone would want to listen to ballads in Hebrew,” she
said. “It is not considered a very sexy language.” She also didn’t
expect the success of her version of “Toxic,” which Rolling Stone
described as “a stripped-down, slow-motion, kinda-brilliant cover.” “I
don’t particularly like her (Spears) as a musician, the voice, but this
song is a good song,” she said. “I wanted to take something that is
completely opposite of the music we do.”
Audiences at live shows, such as one last week in Manhattan, react
excitedly to “Toxic,” as well as to her current hit. She confided to the
crowd of several hundred that she once believed she was an old soul.
“Then my real life began and I figured that maybe I’m not an old soul,”
she said before launching into “New Soul”. |