BGS 5+5: Laura Cortese & The Dance Cards

Artist: Laura Cortese & The Dance Cards
Hometown: Ghent, Belgium, by way of Boston and San Francisco
Latest album: BITTER BETTER
Personal nicknames (or rejected band names): Taysee, Cortez, Laur, Cortese

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

It’s such a hard question! But I’m going to say Leslie Feist. I still remember driving on Memorial Drive in Boston and hearing “Mushaboom” on The River 92.9 for the first time and thinking that pop music was about to become a lot more interesting than it had been in the previous 10 years. To me, her songs always seem to be about her own artistic endeavor, as opposed to what she thinks people will like. I find it inspiring and invigorating to try to be more committed to communicating your unique ideas and becoming more yourself, without being too concerned about what genre you’re fitting into.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc — inform your music?

For this album, in particular, I have no specific links to other art forms, but I find that if I don’t live a balanced life — reading books and articles that inspire me, going to modern art museums, watching intriguing films, reading poetry — I begin to feel less inspired and have no well to tap into to write. So I can’t point to a specific poem or piece of art that I experienced in the last three years that led to a song, but I try to engage with other art forms regularly to stay inspired.

What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?

I wouldn’t use the word “tough”, because it was enjoyable, but “Treat You Better” took a lot of work to get it right. I had the first verse and felt like it was an idea about the struggle that goes into a longterm relationship, but also had an infectious rhythm and symmetry to the words that were used, and it was a challenge to keep that symmetry in the words and also tell the emotional story that I wanted to tell. In the end, there are a lot of co-writers and there was a lot of discussion and a lot of drafts to come to what is “Treat You Better.” The final words were decided at the moment I was singing them in the studio.

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

In the studio, one of our rituals is having really good meal times, and making sure the moments of rest are extremely enjoyable. I do occasionally do push-ups before a show because I find that when you walk onto a cold stage, it takes a minute to shake out the cobwebs, get rid of the nerves, and start to really transmit energy. But if you’ve done pushups ahead of time, you’ve already begun that energetic flow before you walk onstage.

Since food and music go so well together, what is your dream pairing of a meal and a musician?

Maybe I’ve just had enough of quarantine and wish I could travel, but Marina Satti is a Greek-Sudanese singer I’ve learned about recently. The video for her song “Kούπες” is particularly engaging. I want to hang with her in Greece and eat at her favorite restaurant, she can order.


Photo credit: Beth Chalmers

BGS 5+5: Laura Cortese & the Dance Cards

Artist: Laura Cortese & the Dance Cards
Hometown: Boston, MA (pining for San Francisco)
Latest Album: California Calling
Rejected Band Names: The LC Sass Factory, LC & the Bangs, LC & the gonnabegreats

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

Not surprisingly, this moment took place when I was playing for Pete Seeger’s 90th birthday at Madison Square Garden. I was playing on a song called “Dear Mr. President” sung by Michael Franti and Patterson Hood. As you can imagine, there was an immense crew making sure the entire night went off without a hitch. They came to get me in my dressing room. I felt good and relaxed. They walked me down the long maze of hallways to wait for my entrance on the stairs. When they said, “go,” I started to walk up the stairs and peed the tiniest bit in my own pants. Apparently, I was more nervous than I thought.

What was the first moment that you knew you wanted to be a musician?

It wasn’t so much about realizing that I wanted to be a musician, as much as it was about learning that being a musician was possible. I was a 16-year-old fiddler in the front row of fiddle class, when I saw a female fiddler in a position of power for the first time. That was Catriona Macdonald, Shetland fiddler. The moment of realizing that a life in music was possible for a woman was huge for me. We recently made a music video showcasing about 65 other female, female-identifying, and femme musicians. I hope this video gives many young women the encouragement to follow their dreams.

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

In the words of Fleetwood Mac, “You can go your own way. Go your own waaaaay.”

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

Water is big for me. Looking out over it, putting my feet in it, or submerging myself in it. If someone dares me to jump in, I rarely resist. Water brings me back to center and manages to weasel its way into more than half of the songs on California Calling.

How often do you hide behind a character in a song or use “you” when it’s actually “me”?

I haven’t been giving much thought to this. Should I be? (Classic self-doubt sets in.) But seriously, I’ve been giving much more thought to not imposing my cis-gendered hetero privilege on my audience. I want to connect with people on an emotional level. I want to make space for other truths to be heard.