tuesday, October 7, 1980 daily nebraskan page 9 .... ... ,' - ...... Photo by Mark Billingsley Singer Judie Tzuke defies attempts to label her style By Casey McCabe For an English artist looking to make an impression on an American crowd, opening a show for Elton John is testing the waters in grand fashion. Despite waht some would view as intim idating circumsatnces, Judis Tzuke (pro nounced zook") is taking it all in com fortable stride. With two albums under her belt, the attractive 24 year-old Londoner has made a successful name for herself in England where her debut album went gold, while her latest effort, Sports Cary is nearing the same status. The notion that her music may fall un familiar to most of the American ears on this, her first U.S. tour, doesn't worry Tzuke, and her relaxed stage presence along with that of her six-piece band reveals growing confidence in the mater ial that has got them here. "We've done very good in England, but while I want to make it in America, I don't think it makes any difference towards our career in England," says Tzuke. "I like to do America, it's like starting over here. And I can't tell you how different the audiences are here. In England when I first started, I was playing to 500 people a nigh, whereas here I start out with 15,000." People pleasing Tzuke speaks in a thick English accent, which disappears in her crystalline, well controlled voice. As the composer, along with guitarist Mike Paxman, of all the ma terial she sings, Tzuke is interested in reaching more people with her work, but not at the expense of compromising her values, and submitting to labels. "I don't have any labels," she says. "And if anybody gives them to me, they won't stick. "I've been compared to just about every woman singer in the world, and a few men, and as long as they don't find me as one particular woman, I'll know none of them know what they're talking anout." The words she sings read almost more poetically than they do lyrically, and in deed it was an early involvement with poetry that made Tzuke seek out musical accompaniment. "I was in a boarding school where I didn't like many of the people and got along with only one of the teachers and no one else,' Tzuke said. "So I used to write a diary. What I tried to do was write a little poem about something that had happened in the day, and it just grew into writing more things about how I felt. I started to teach myself guitar and started putting the poems to music." Music of experience At 15 she met Paxman with whom she has collaborated since. They have tried to avoid any pretensions by 'Always keeping the songs about things we feel, that we really know about." Her first album, Welcome To The Cruise, was a surprising debut success in England, but certain circumstances that surrounded the record kept Tzuke from giving it her full enthusiatic endorsement. "I hated the production of the first album, that's why we decided to produce this last album (Sports Car) ourselves," explains Tzuke. "If you listen to the first album you. will know what I mean, it was totally overproduced. "It was really difficult for me because the album had done really well in England and I had to go around the country pro moting it where people kept saying to me i really like the album, but I think it's overproduced. What do you think?'. . . . thinking I was going to argue. "I had to decide whether to tell them the truth and that I agreed with them, which was then an insult to the people who were buying the album, or not say anything. "In the end I decided to tell the truth. . that it was overdone, which was difficult," says Tzuke. "I was dying to get my second album out which I could pro mote and actually. Though creative control is a highly prized value for Tzuke, she and Paxman will be handing over production chores solely to percussionist Paul Muggleton on the upcoming album tentatively entitled The Flesh Is Weak and the Hearth Willing. "Paul is doing the third one because we found we really enjoyed doing production, it was very difficult for Mike and I to be objective about ourselves," she notes. It is the sixth week of the tour with Elton John and, according to Tzuke, ''It's getting harder because we're getting tired and I'm losing my voice slightly." Tzuke cofiaberated with Elton on the writing of Give Me The Love" off his lat est album, and though part of his lavish entourage for this ILS. tour, Tzuke does not want to be cast under any shadow. "It (the collaboration) happened on the spur of the moment and has nothing to do with my career," she says. "I have my own career and he has his, I like him and he likes me. But I'm separate. 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