Zhanna Ona: I'm not a DJ
How do you think what inspires creativity: writing texts and poems in different languages, making music and creating performances?
In this edition of “Stories and Languages” Polyglot discussed creativity and language communications with Zhanna Ona, a clubbish artist who travels a lot and appears on the biggest European and US festival stages.
This tender girl stood at the origins of electronic music in Ukraine. Inspired by creativity of British trip-hop bands Portishead and Massive Attack, an 18-year-old Kiever Zhanna Dymchenkodecided to create her own music. However, it was not the best time for creative startup. In the early 1990s, in Ukraine it was impossible to record electronic music professionally, for beginners especially. Having enlisted support from the soul mate young producers, this girl could finally take that first step towards her dream. She began performing in Kiev clubs, worked in tandem with DJs from Moscow and St. Petersburg. In 2001 Zhanna’s creative activity brought her to Spain. She has been living and working here in Barcelona for 15 years already.
– For electronic music fans Zhanna Ona is more known as DJ Zhanna. However, you don’t consider yourself a DJ. Why?
– Any artist who stands on the electronic stage is a musician who makes both live performance and DJ set. That’s why I always try to make it clear that I am an artist, musician, vocalist who makes a DJ set. I don’t want to disparage DJing profession. I like it very much because it brings fresh note at my music career. However, at the same time I don’t claim some exorbinant level of playing. That’s why I keep saying that I’m not a DJ.
– How do you think, is it important to be a musician to practise DJing?
– I think there are two ways to enter this profession. It is quite logical that electronic dance music amateur turns DJ. Today it can be vividly illustrated by the examples of many famous DJs. A musician can also try his hand in DJing. But they often try it as an experiment to extend their creative range. Both of these ways deserve respect.
– Can you be qualified as a freelancer? I think that your activity is within this definition: you act independently and do self-promotion…
– You can qualify me as a pioneer in the field of autoproducing (editor’s note: self-producing). In this regard I am autossuficiente (self-sufficient) orpolifacetico (all-round) as they say in Spain. As an author and artist, I always understand and feel what my music should eventually be in meticulous nuances, how it should sound. That’s why I had to dive into so many professions to control every step of the process: from studio recording, instruments choosing, stenography, stylistics and numbers producing to my performance site choosing.
By the way, such an all-round experience was of use when I and my soul mate friends created a platform for producing young musicians here. The artists who occurred after the early 2000s couldn’t make out what direction they should follow. The part of the industry that dealt with talent search has disappeared. Maybe people had an idea of disk recording because technology was already available that time, but they had no idea what to do further, how to bring it to market. That time we started using social networks (Facebook, MySpace) to promote artists.
– You continuously refer to some companions, soul mate friends. Who are the people you cooperate with? Who are your friends?
– As soon as I moved to Spain, I was offered cooperation with Sound School that trains Record/Music Producers, Sound Mixers, Recording Engineers and Concert/Performance Tour Specialists. Thanks to this School I’ve met a lot of great people, particularly global producers and artists. Since then we are good friends with Ken Stringfellow (a musician and member of The Posies and R.Е.M. bands) andFelix Da Housecat.
– How are you accepted by the Spanish audience? Do they understand your music or not?
– What is most interesting is that I perform mostly out of Spain now. I had a big tour when I presented my first album here. It was then, but not now. Here I create and produce my music, however, I give my performances in the USA, Ukraine and other European countries. The thing is that some other musical genres are popular here, particularly flamenco, its modernized versions, jazz and different folk streams. Indipop is gaining popularity. British involvement is noticeable here. Spanish electronic artists travel other countries as I do. Experience shows that Spanish people perceive music differently and they are not my audience.
– What are your impressions of Spain? What inspires you to create?
– First of all, it is the atmosphere. It turned out that I imagined it differently. As a creative person I have built my own castles in the air. I thought I went to refined Europe, but I found myself in underground. However, the atmosphere is so favorable and empowering here! It helped me deal with the post-Soviet close-mindedness. Here I realized who I am and what I’m capable of. That’s why this place became mystic for me. It should also be noted that my first bright impression of Spain was welcoming and kind people. I was totally fascinated by the architecture. It is very interesting to live in the city where you can read and look through all the epochs including the ancient world. Everything has withstood the ravages of time.
– Well, and Antoni Gaudi, of course…
– Gaudi is an outstanding example of artist who was popularized during his lifetime, found the resources and way for realizing his outlandish ideas. Gaudi phenomenon inspires me even more than Gaudi artist. By the way, in Catalonia there is a specific Jewish influence. Both Catalans and Jews are very pragmatic. They weight all the pros and cons and think several moves ahead. That’s why there is a sufficient number of inventive people who find daring and original methods of promotion here.
– Knowledge of language is one of the most important tools of self-promotion in different culture. How did you learn Spanish?
– I came here with a basic knowledge of English without any specific practice. Although, that time I tried to write my songs in English. As soon as I moved here, I took my one-year Spanish language courses. The beauty of it was that I had to speak Spanish straight away in spite of my language level. I could use dictionary any time, but we spoke in Spanish only. It was easy for me to learn because of my deliberate awareness of communication. In three weeks I could speak Spanish much better. Some people choose another way, save their funds, learn foreign languages by themselves step by step. But expression was of great importance for me. I needed to bring my position and my views into people’s minds whether in store or in work. I needed to make new friendly and professional relations. My knowledge of Spanish allowed me to integrate into this culture. I got acquainted with different people: writers, artists, musicians. And it was so interesting how everything is interrelated in the world. You suddenly find out that some local poet met Vysotsky somewhere in Paris and they wrote something together. Or, for instance, we had a joint project with local Rock Stars of the 1990s. Some artists gathered together and created the album based on Leopoldo Panerо creativity. This poet writes about Tsvetaeva in one of his poems. Such a synthesis of cultures was a real discovery for me. I always participated in different literary and poetry events. Some time ago I lived next door to man who was friends with great-grandson of Trotsky’s killer. So here I have the “Klondike” of interesting stories.
Cultural adaptation had a great impact on my creativity. At first I kept writing songs in Russian and in English, then gradually I started writing poems in Spanish. And when Spanish ingrained in my head, I had to improve my English to keep writing songs in English.
– Did you feel any discomfort?
– No, I didn’t. For me it was a fascinating journey through subcultures and linguistic spaces.
– Well, sure… if you do something to make your wish come true, it will be a pleasure for you! I suppose you like travelling…
– Yes. By the way, we spent the whole last year travelling. We have visited Bali, Hawaii, Turkey, Crimea and Kiev. We inspired, I recorded… different sounds of nature: the noise of the sea, sound of pouring rain. I even have the records of Easter Carols.
– I hope that in near future your love for travel will bring you to Ukraine again. Thank you for a nice conversation. What would you like to say to our readers?
– I like 2Polyglot.com project very much. It unites people, because the more languages we speak, the more we get closer to each other. I wish you success and good sailing!
How do you think what inspires creativity: writing texts and poems in different languages, making music and creating performances?
In this edition of “Stories and Languages” Polyglot discussed creativity and language communications with Zhanna Ona, a clubbish artist who travels a lot and appears on the biggest European and US festival stages.
This tender girl stood at the origins of electronic music in Ukraine. Inspired by creativity of British trip-hop bands Portishead and Massive Attack, an 18-year-old Kiever Zhanna Dymchenkodecided to create her own music. However, it was not the best time for creative startup. In the early 1990s, in Ukraine it was impossible to record electronic music professionally, for beginners especially. Having enlisted support from the soul mate young producers, this girl could finally take that first step towards her dream. She began performing in Kiev clubs, worked in tandem with DJs from Moscow and St. Petersburg. In 2001 Zhanna’s creative activity brought her to Spain. She has been living and working here in Barcelona for 15 years already.
– For electronic music fans Zhanna Ona is more known as DJ Zhanna. However, you don’t consider yourself a DJ. Why?
– Any artist who stands on the electronic stage is a musician who makes both live performance and DJ set. That’s why I always try to make it clear that I am an artist, musician, vocalist who makes a DJ set. I don’t want to disparage DJing profession. I like it very much because it brings fresh note at my music career. However, at the same time I don’t claim some exorbinant level of playing. That’s why I keep saying that I’m not a DJ.
– How do you think, is it important to be a musician to practise DJing?
– I think there are two ways to enter this profession. It is quite logical that electronic dance music amateur turns DJ. Today it can be vividly illustrated by the examples of many famous DJs. A musician can also try his hand in DJing. But they often try it as an experiment to extend their creative range. Both of these ways deserve respect.
– Can you be qualified as a freelancer? I think that your activity is within this definition: you act independently and do self-promotion…
– You can qualify me as a pioneer in the field of autoproducing (editor’s note: self-producing). In this regard I am autossuficiente (self-sufficient) orpolifacetico (all-round) as they say in Spain. As an author and artist, I always understand and feel what my music should eventually be in meticulous nuances, how it should sound. That’s why I had to dive into so many professions to control every step of the process: from studio recording, instruments choosing, stenography, stylistics and numbers producing to my performance site choosing.
By the way, such an all-round experience was of use when I and my soul mate friends created a platform for producing young musicians here. The artists who occurred after the early 2000s couldn’t make out what direction they should follow. The part of the industry that dealt with talent search has disappeared. Maybe people had an idea of disk recording because technology was already available that time, but they had no idea what to do further, how to bring it to market. That time we started using social networks (Facebook, MySpace) to promote artists.
– You continuously refer to some companions, soul mate friends. Who are the people you cooperate with? Who are your friends?
– As soon as I moved to Spain, I was offered cooperation with Sound School that trains Record/Music Producers, Sound Mixers, Recording Engineers and Concert/Performance Tour Specialists. Thanks to this School I’ve met a lot of great people, particularly global producers and artists. Since then we are good friends with Ken Stringfellow (a musician and member of The Posies and R.Е.M. bands) andFelix Da Housecat.
– How are you accepted by the Spanish audience? Do they understand your music or not?
– What is most interesting is that I perform mostly out of Spain now. I had a big tour when I presented my first album here. It was then, but not now. Here I create and produce my music, however, I give my performances in the USA, Ukraine and other European countries. The thing is that some other musical genres are popular here, particularly flamenco, its modernized versions, jazz and different folk streams. Indipop is gaining popularity. British involvement is noticeable here. Spanish electronic artists travel other countries as I do. Experience shows that Spanish people perceive music differently and they are not my audience.
– What are your impressions of Spain? What inspires you to create?
– First of all, it is the atmosphere. It turned out that I imagined it differently. As a creative person I have built my own castles in the air. I thought I went to refined Europe, but I found myself in underground. However, the atmosphere is so favorable and empowering here! It helped me deal with the post-Soviet close-mindedness. Here I realized who I am and what I’m capable of. That’s why this place became mystic for me. It should also be noted that my first bright impression of Spain was welcoming and kind people. I was totally fascinated by the architecture. It is very interesting to live in the city where you can read and look through all the epochs including the ancient world. Everything has withstood the ravages of time.
– Well, and Antoni Gaudi, of course…
– Gaudi is an outstanding example of artist who was popularized during his lifetime, found the resources and way for realizing his outlandish ideas. Gaudi phenomenon inspires me even more than Gaudi artist. By the way, in Catalonia there is a specific Jewish influence. Both Catalans and Jews are very pragmatic. They weight all the pros and cons and think several moves ahead. That’s why there is a sufficient number of inventive people who find daring and original methods of promotion here.
– Knowledge of language is one of the most important tools of self-promotion in different culture. How did you learn Spanish?
– I came here with a basic knowledge of English without any specific practice. Although, that time I tried to write my songs in English. As soon as I moved here, I took my one-year Spanish language courses. The beauty of it was that I had to speak Spanish straight away in spite of my language level. I could use dictionary any time, but we spoke in Spanish only. It was easy for me to learn because of my deliberate awareness of communication. In three weeks I could speak Spanish much better. Some people choose another way, save their funds, learn foreign languages by themselves step by step. But expression was of great importance for me. I needed to bring my position and my views into people’s minds whether in store or in work. I needed to make new friendly and professional relations. My knowledge of Spanish allowed me to integrate into this culture. I got acquainted with different people: writers, artists, musicians. And it was so interesting how everything is interrelated in the world. You suddenly find out that some local poet met Vysotsky somewhere in Paris and they wrote something together. Or, for instance, we had a joint project with local Rock Stars of the 1990s. Some artists gathered together and created the album based on Leopoldo Panerо creativity. This poet writes about Tsvetaeva in one of his poems. Such a synthesis of cultures was a real discovery for me. I always participated in different literary and poetry events. Some time ago I lived next door to man who was friends with great-grandson of Trotsky’s killer. So here I have the “Klondike” of interesting stories.
Cultural adaptation had a great impact on my creativity. At first I kept writing songs in Russian and in English, then gradually I started writing poems in Spanish. And when Spanish ingrained in my head, I had to improve my English to keep writing songs in English.
– Did you feel any discomfort?
– No, I didn’t. For me it was a fascinating journey through subcultures and linguistic spaces.
– Well, sure… if you do something to make your wish come true, it will be a pleasure for you! I suppose you like travelling…
– Yes. By the way, we spent the whole last year travelling. We have visited Bali, Hawaii, Turkey, Crimea and Kiev. We inspired, I recorded… different sounds of nature: the noise of the sea, sound of pouring rain. I even have the records of Easter Carols.
– I hope that in near future your love for travel will bring you to Ukraine again. Thank you for a nice conversation. What would you like to say to our readers?
– I like 2Polyglot.com project very much. It unites people, because the more languages we speak, the more we get closer to each other. I wish you success and good sailing!
Немає коментарів:
Дописати коментар