There is a myth that great artists operate in seclusion. One need look no further than to the ten songs of Antony and the Johnsons’ new album, I Am A Bird Now, to realize this is an utter fallacy. To be sure, with her androgynous features, the singularly named Anohni is an original. Have you ever heard a voice like this, imbued with the transcendental emotion of the blues, yet deployed with an unadorned simplicity reminiscent of medieval music practice, and graced with a top note of childlike wonder? Or songs that blur distinctions of gender and identity, yet which still summon up such powerful feelings: longing, love, lust, loss? No. Because Anohni is one-of-a-kind. But she is certainly not alone.
I Am A Bird Now, the second full-length from this extraordinary New York artist and his cohorts, features contributions from both Anohni’s peers (Rufus Wainwright, Devendra Banhardt) and heroes (Lou Reed, Boy George). Their involvement reflects both their admiration for Anohni, and her unique place in the contemporary arts community. “Everyone’s presence on the record shows them at their most unique, making a special contribution that is specific to them,” says Anohni. She arranged each one with painstaking precision, like a director creating an extended tableau on stage.
“Bringing other people in makes me feel less lonely,” adds Anohni. “I was making the album intuitively, the way I felt it wanted to be made. A lot of these people helped inspire this record.”
As a youngster in California, Anohni was smitten by the beguiling image of Boy George on Culture Club’s 1982 debut album Kissing To Be Clever. “George was really the first reflection I saw of myself in the world,” he explains. “I saw him and thought, ‘Okay, that’s what we do when we’re like this: We become singers.'” Twenty two years later, Anohni found herself sitting at a piano, recording the haunting “You Are My Sister” with her icon. “When he was in the studio, I just felt this big, long circle connecting in my spirit.”
Another one of Anohni’s champions, Lou Reed, introduces the soulful “Fistful of Love,” an intoxication concoction that mixes Muscle Shoals soul with an almost heroic sense of masochism. In 2003, Reed asked Anohni to reinterpret “Perfect Day” for his album The Raven. Subsequently, the former Velvet Underground front man invited Anohni to perform as part of the small ensemble on his American and European tours; he even gave Anohni a solo turn on the VU classic “Candy Says,” an homage to another one of Anohni’s inspirations, Warhol superstar Candy Darling.
Fitting, then, that the image adorning the cover of I Am A Bird Now is Peter Hujar’s striking 1974 photograph “Candy Darling on Her Deathbed.” In Hujar’s black and white images of underground figures like Darling and Divine, Anohni found another early touchstone. “There’s no sense of voyeurism in his portraits,” explains the singer. “They show an inside perspective. And that’s something I’m interested in: being empathic, not voyeuristic.”
When Anohni moved to New York in 1990, she came in search of a community where she could feel like an insider. She instigated the avant garde cabaret ensemble Blacklips, renown for their regular performances at the Pyramid Club, in New York’s then vibrant East Village. Initially, she modeled himself on Isabella Rossellini in Blue Velvet, and the bald drag queen pictured on the sleeve of Soft Cell’s 1982 single “Torch.” “I got that record when I was 11 years old, and thought, ‘That’s going to be me one day.’ And I have pictures of me at the Pyramid, with a shaved head, in a slip, and holding a cigarette, singing love songs.”
Since that arrival, Anohni has gradually come into her own, winning accolades for her performances everywhere from Joe’s Pub and Germany’s Biennale Bonn, to a turn in Steve Buscemi’s independent film Animal Factory. Yet I Am A Bird Now is a great leap forward from Antony and the Johnsons eponymous 2000 debut album (reissued last year by Secretly Canadian) and the 2001 single “I Fell In Love With A Dead Boy.” “In a weird way, this album is much more personal,” she admits. As she shed many of her archetypal influences, Anohni dared to reveal even more of herself to the listener. “I Am A Bird Now feels more intimate. In making it, I tried to bring everything – how it was recorded, how it was performed – extremely close, so it felt seductive, like it was right in your ear.”
Some musicians hide behind personas, or the words of others, or fine-tuned video imagery. Anohni, as otherworldly as she may look and sound, is not afraid of letting audiences see her true self, however vulnerable. “Opening myself up to the work, and to the world, is my passion,” she concludes. “That is the great risk, and the great boon, of doing this: There is that rare experience the performer gets to enjoy, which, in a way, is like having your spirit witnessed by people. And, sometimes, appreciated. Perhaps people will see it and relate, or identify themselves in it.” And thus the community that has nurtured Anohni, up to and through the creation of I Am A Bird Now (and beyond), continues to flourish and grow.