Meet Janice Grace
What are the seemingly unrelated elements that alchemically converge and
create a fresh new musical presence? Sometimes, artists seem to spring from
nowhere, perfectly reflecting the zeitgeist, and we become consumed with
their lives, even as they become part of ours. So, before the mad rush to
deconstruct the ethereally inspired Janice Grace begins and the tabloids
distort it, heres the real story:
Early Brilliance
Born in Long Island, legend has it that it took 12 years for Janice Grace
to be conceived. What took so long was that she had to find
the most musically nurturing parental units to bring her back to Earth.
Plus the longitude & latitude had to be perfect. Being the control freak
that she is, she was VERY fastidious about who they were going to
be.
By the time she was in the fourth grade, Janice was the schools musical
prodigy, playing concerts for classmates and accompanying the chorus. By
high school, the preternaturally talented musician had become an accomplished
oboist and the mainstay of local orchestral and band performances, winning
gold medals for excellence and her schools award as Best Musician,
while simultaneously pursuing an intensive extracurricular education in
liturgical music.
Throughout high school, Janice also studied piano and classical organ with
a teacher who recognized her emerging abilities. With his support, she became
assistant organist at Trinity Lutheran Church in Hicksville, Long Island,
and, by the time she was 13, undertook a schedule of rehearsals and performances
that ultimately consumed more than five hours a day. They said I showed
flashes of early brilliance, she says, but I was a strange loner
and all I knew was that when I played music, I felt power. I may have been
possessed. Or mad.
Rebel, Rebel
By 17, although profoundly drawn to the music of the church and the symbols
and icons of religious life, Janice Grace was also deeply immersed in the
music and fashion of her time. Although she was enrolled at the Westminster
Choir College in Princeton, NJ, when the dormitory lights were out, it was
funk that provided inspiration. At first, she recalls, It
was disco, and Rick James, and P-Funk that got me off. I still loved church
music, but the chapels were cold and the dance floors were hot. Of course
there was Led Zeppelin
and Stevie Wonder, and ultimately, David Bowie. She was also beginning
to experiment with clothing design, making her own clothes with a sensibility
that, she says, I borrowed from Cher, Grace Kelly, and Myrna Loy.
After one semester, she moved to a studio apartment in Manhattan, and with
a windfall $2,000 bought an electronic keyboard.
Strategically Positioned
Freed from the constraints of choir school and armed with synthesizers,
Janice Grace was ready to be discovered. I may have been a bit naive,
she laughs, but Madonna was huge then, and it just seemed like it
would be my turn next. Man, so wrong. Still, she did what young musicians
in New York do she got crummy jobs. I was working to afford
my gear jones, she says. I dont even want to remember
the jobs, but if I got good enough in them to be asked to stay, Id
quit. I didnt want to make it easy for myself to leave the music business.
Somehow, she pieced together an eight -track recording studio in her apartment
and taught herself to engineer. I learned out of sheer necessity,
but I learned, she says.
Soon, she was working nights and writing and recording during the day, gradually
meeting other up-and-coming musicians. We were all helping each other,
writing together, playing on each others demos, she says. Sometimes,
it was discouraging. One night, at a time when I felt that everything I
was doing was strategically positioning me to fail, I was working late and
blew off a meeting with a songwriter looking for a collaborator. And so,
I dissed Desmond Child [writer of Ricky Martin, Cher, BonJovi,].
Atlas Almost Shrugged
Through friends, she got a job waitressing at the Hard Rock Café
and loved it, and through a chance meeting on a jury duty bench, she hooked
up with a band called Atlas, playing keyboards and singing backup vocals.
What was great about the Hard Rock was that when you had a gig the
whole staff would show up. And the band was this close, she recalls,
almost ready for a deal. For more than a year, Atlas made strong
inroads in New Yorks competitive downtown band scene, playing showcases
at CBGBs, the Bitter End, Kenny's, and the Cat Club.
For Janice Grace, the bands ultimate inability to land a record deal
proved to be something of a blessing. She had been continuing to write and
record her own material, and finally left Atlas to form her own band. I
realized that what mattered, what still matters, is the satisfaction, the
artistic fulfillment of making my own music, she says. I think
its the confessional quality of being a solo act that appeals to me.
With enough material for a showcase set and intent on producing a major
event, she rented the Limelight, but her band wasnt ready and the
show went on with Janice (and two backup vocalists) performing to prerecorded
tracks. The show had energy, and the labels gods came, she says,
but nothing materialized. Afterwards, I thought I came across too
much like Bjork, whos great but must scare A&R guys.
Time Out
After the Limelight gig, Janice Grace pulled back for while. Heres
how I remember it, she says. Time passed. The pages on the calendar
tore away in the wind. No, wait, thats not my story, thats a
1940s movie. Me, I got married, went to design school, listened to music,
and bought more recording equipment.
The marriage came first, to a legendary audio designer who had designed audio
systems for Jimi Hendrixs Electric Lady Studios, Woodstocks famed
Bearsville, and Pink Floyd alumni Roger Waters, among others. He had been
commissioned to create sound design for high-profile restaurants as well,
and was assembling in-house audio programing for a string of Hard Rock Cafes
when the two met. Soon after we got together, I took over the programming,
Janice says, and it turned out to be a revelation. Immersing herself
in music, she found herself reconnecting to the funk and dance music that
had attracted her initially and finding newer artists -- Depeche Mode, Cocteau
Twins, Jane Child -- who were pushing the musical envelope in ways she could
relate to. Taking time out to listen to music was enormously valuable,
she says. It gave me a chance to assimilate everything Id learned
and experienced.
An additional
detour, in the form of clothing and fabric design studies, presented itself
in the mid-1990s. At the Fashion Institute of Technology, she perfected
pattern-making skills that she had long toyed with, but never taken seriously.
Fashion definitely has a place in the World According to Miss Grace,
she says. I see my clothing designs as a direct parallel to my music.
Right now that means theyre a mixture of elegant,opulent, funky classic
with a punch and MOD, in new fabrics that are polished and tailored.
There are no plans for a commercial line yet, but she will wear dresses
of her own design in videos and at engagements supporting her music.

