
Talk It Out with Jodi Leib
Summer 2003
Jodi: I'm here at Goldfinger's in Hollywood,
talking it out with Hope.
Hope: Talk it Out with Jodi Leib.
Jodi: What's up, girl? So, what are you going by, what
is the name of your band?
Hope: Hope. We're just going by Hope.
Jodi: It's Hope, and tell me about your demo deal.
Hope: Right now, we have two songs recorded, and starting
tomorrow we're going to start recording a third one, and we
actually have a fourth also that we're going to add on to it, but
we're writing a bank of them, so going to have probably six to
twelve in the end of it all.
Jodi: Awesome. Now, this is with your producer?
Hope: Yes. I have two producers.
Jodi: So, they're investing in you for your album?
Hope: They are producing the demo, and then we'll shop the
demo to major record labels, and review the song on the site www.musicresearch.com,
try to get some exposure.
Jodi: Cool. So tell me, what are your songs
about?
Hope: To be honest, the songs are a reflection of where I
was at the time when I wrote them. The songs are about my own
history and when people hear them they can relate to them because
people go through phases in their lives. Like, everything to
me is about being a strong woman in today's world.
Jodi: Totally, totally, totally. What kind of strength
do you need to make it in this world, do you think?
Hope: A lot of singers have tried to go against men and
that's not what I'm trying to do, because I love men, of course.
It's not about that. It's being strong and independent and
being able to take care of yourself, not having to rely on anyone
else and telling the truth, because people have brought me down in
my life, which is why I've had to search my soul and reach
different points and I've come to conclusions about my life, and
I've grown from them. Every experience is a good experience.
A singer like Ani DiFranco, when I was in college, helped me
realize I wasn't the only one in a place like that, and when I
sing on stage and people come up to me afterwards and say,
"Oh that song really...did you write it for me?"
It just makes me feel really good. Yeah, I wrote it, but I'm
not the only one who feels that way.
Jodi: Now, do you feel like you have punk influences?
Do you have a particular style?
Hope: Yes, I believe my style is mostly Rock with a bit of
Pop sensibility. My influences are older bands such as The Doors,
and newer artists like Ani DiFranco. My style is me,
whatever presence I give off on stage. I've always related
to a lot of people, Goth, Punk, whatever. I'm just trying to
be free, trying to express.
Jodi: Now what I'm fascinated by in Hope is hope in general.
Just the concept of hope, I find it very difficult to separate you
being a woman named Hope and the concept of hope. Do you
align yourself with that. Is that something -
Hope: I
do associate with my name. Remember the story about
Pandora's box? At one time in the world,
there were no such things as sadness or hunger, jealousy,
laziness, greed, or anything like that. There was death but it was
like a long sleep with no suffering. Even after Hermes
directed warnings to never open the box that the Gods had given as
a gift to Pandora, curiosity got the best of her and finally
caused her to decide one morning that she should take a little
peek in the box. She opened it and out flew all the terrible
things like greed and envy, hatred and cruelty, poverty and
hunger, sickness and despair, and lots more. Pandora had set them
free. She cried for them to come back but they didn't.
Even now, they bring us misery and lots of trouble. Who put those
terrible things in the box? No one knows for sure, but there
was one good thing in there. It was Hope. So now, when there is
trouble and sadness among us humans, we have Hope to make us feel
that tomorrow will be better. I guess my songs are about
pulling through difficult times and that's Hope, right?
Jodi: Do you have hope?
Hope: Of course. You got to.
Jodi: Why?
Hope: Well, if you don't, I don't know how we'd keep living
here.
Jodi: What do you mean?
Hope: You've got to have hope for something. That's
why people believe in religion. That's why people believe in
anything at all, cause you hope that there's something better.
Jodi: So life sucks and you hope that -
Hope: I'm not saying that life sucks, I just saying that
there's hope for something bigger. I think everybody hopes
for something bigger or more than what they have and if they don't
then they're awesome, more power to them, because I wish I was
there.
Jodi: I have suffered through tremendous amounts of
hopelessness in my life. I didn't realize it until recently
how truly hopeless I've been in my life. I don't know that
I've ever really had hope until recently. I always hoped for
material things and I still do, but that's not really the true
meaning hope. To me, hope is a bond. When I was very
young, about twelve or thirteen, I lost my hope. Then I saw
a glimpse of it about ten years ago but still I remained hopeless.
I only rediscovered hope a few months ago when I got sober.
You're right, hope is feeling that there is a future ahead of me
and no matter if I make it or I don't make it - if you reach your
goal or you don't, there is still a soothing knowing or feeling
like there is a possibility, a dream, that I as an individual can
move towards, and a connection that keeps me there.
Hope: Well, yeah. Like none of us ever know what's
going to happen. No one knows what's going to happen.
I've rejected the meaning of my name my whole life, because it's
my name, but truth is, it's really nice to be able to hope
for something, because if there wasn't hope, I think we'd all be
pretty lost. I've just recently found hope in my life.
It's weird to even hear those words come out of my mouth, because
it's my name after all, but um, yeah. We all go through
really difficult times, and we just grow stronger and realize what
hopes are reality. What things you were wishing or hoping
for that were kind of like, whatever, and then turns into
something that's actually possible. One of my songs is
called Chasing Rainbows. I sort of feel like I'm chasing
rainbows, I'm chasing after this illusion that started out as an
illusion, but could possibly turn into a vision, maybe that will
end up as an illusion, but, I keep chasing it cause who knows?
Right? That's what hope is. You gotta hope for the
impossible, something that might not really be there, but if you
don't go after it, you'll never really know.
Jodi: I think that's beautiful. I think that is what
is so cool. So, good luck. Peace and love and harmony.
Is there anything else you want to say to your fans or new fans?
Hope: I hope I get fans. I just hope that I can touch
someone in anyway possible like other singers have touched me.
I would love to do that.
Jodi: What actions are you going to take to reach out to
your fans?
Hope: I'm going to keep singing. I'm going to keep
trying to portray as strong as I feel at points on the stage,
because when I get off, women come up to me and they're like,
"You're so strong, how do you do that?" That's
what I want to do, because the truth is none of us are always that
strong all the time, but knowing people think that I am that
strong all the time makes me realize that none of those singers
were that strong all the time. It's a state of mind.
It's something you can give and pass on to other people.
It's a state of mind that I have temporarily and that I lose,
temporarily, and then when I lose it, I look back and I'm like,
"People know that. People tell me that I was
strong." The singers that I listen to, they were rockin'
and they knew what was up. I'm gonna maintain that. In
today's day and age, it's hard for women to stay strong.
It's strange because this is an equal world now, but it's not, and
we all know that.
Jodi: Totally. Well, I think you're brilliant. I
really do. I think you're a genius. I have hope, you
know? I think you helped me rediscover my hope.
Hope: See, that's what I live for.
Jodi: I think you're an angel. I really do.
Hope: That's what I do it for, for comments like that.
It's all worth it.
Jodi: I hope you can continue to touch the lives of people
and to bestow them with your graciousness and your grace and
you're really a very positive spirit in the world. I value
our friendship.
Hope: Me too. Now, let's get to the show.
Jodi: Great. Let's go. Let's rock on!
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