Olivia Dwells On Lyrics

70s

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Olivia Newton-John article Olivia Newton-John article

The cool Miss Newton-John, who opens here tonight, suddenly finds herself hot property in the world of pop-country music.

By John Huddy, Herald Entertainment Editor

America's most honored female singer these days, whose triumphs and prizes in the past year alone would take up a column of space, is pretty and proper in a flower-like, fragile fashion and her pristine voice seems to complete the picture: It is a sparkling clear sound, pure and without flaws, much like a cool mountain stream.

Otherwise, just who is Olivia Newton-John, this soft spoken lady in the fluffy white gowns who seems so much younger than her 26 years? Known as an Australian singer who's nipping at the heels of another frontrunning Aussie named Helen Reddy, Miss Newton-John admits she was born in Cambridge, England, not Australia, and hasn't lived Down Under in years. She's currently living in California, with an apartment in London on the side.

And although we think of the young recording star as a country singer after tunes like If You Love Me, Let Me Know, and Let Me Be There (both sound as though they were hung in a shed with the smoked ham for a month) in fact, Olivia Newton-John played Nashville for the first time just last month. And tonight she will open a nine-day engagement at the Diplomat Hotel.

SO WE start over, discovering that we know rather little about the winner of the Best Female Pop vocalist award at the recent Grammy ceremonies, holder of four American Music awards, the Rising Star of the Year honor by the American Guild of Variety Artists, the best-country-singer title, the People's Choice prize as Favorite Female Singer and the Record of the Year award for I Honestly Love You.

Is she a country singer? A folk artist?

That's a good question, the small voice laughs on the phone from Malibu Beach. I guess I don't put myself in any category, although probably my earliest influence was folk music: I like to sing that sort of stuff. I prefer folk, too, compared to straight-out pop. I like the simplicity, the basic quality, the pretty melodies and the good words. But I try to listen to all kinds of music.

Largely because her earlier record producers were toying with pop-country sounds, the daughter of an English college professor who moved to Australia when Olivia was five became identified with what disc jockeys call middle-of-the-road country music. Not hard country in a Merie Haggard sense, but more like the tunes of Mac Davis and John Hartford.

AFTER WINNING the country music award as best C&W singer, Newton-John fought a brief skirmish with country purists who protested the top prize going to a non-American, non-Southern belle.

The dispute quickly passed, however, and Olivia Newton-John began a nightclub tour that took her first to Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe in Nevada, and this week into the Diplomat Hotel's Cafe Cristal supper club, through April 5.

For this engagement, the Diplomat will inaugurate a new proximity-cover policy, charging from $7.50 to $15 depending on how close one sits to the stage.

IN HER FIRST Miami interview, she struggles to tell about herself. It's apparent that this is one star who doesn't talk about herself with that much enthusiasm: I play a lot of tennis, but I'm not that good, she says, adding that she spends a good deal of time with her sidemen, disapproves of drug use, makes it a point to listen to all kinds of music.

And from time to time, while living in a rented Malibu beach house, she listens to old tapes, done in the days she sang in working men's clubs in England, or before that, as a folk singer in Australia. You'd kill yourself laughing if you heard my old tapes, Newton-John says. I sound like Joan Baez, only louder.

TODAY the dynamics are much softer. I haven't got a terribly strong voice, but it's a lot stronger than most people think. I just find that it is not attractive to belt. I used to sing much, much louder till I learned better. Now it is more important for me to get the lyrics across.

Her attention to those lyrics, and the soothing effect of her laying back may explain the unexpected success in nightclubs, after two years of college concerts across the U.S.

When I first opened in Las Vegas, was terrified, Newton-John says. I expected the people to be terribly sophisticated. But they weren't, really. They were no different than any other audience. Very nice, very attentive.

The next trial of sorts came on a tour of the South, including a stop in Nashville. It's an important music town and I expected everybody to be involved in music. But it was a typical audience. Very friendly, no different than the others. I guess I'm always a bit nervous, but I can control it.

Olivia Newton-John controls more than the opening night nerves, the interviewer discovers, Not even Johnny Carson on a recent Tonight Show interview could break through the singer's shell during a discussion of love affairs.

I'm old-fashioned, I guess, the singer tells the Miami caller. That's one phase of my life I like to keep private. I never discuss my sex life or personal relationships with other people. There's so very little of your life that is private, what you do have, you keep protected.

Appearing at the Diplomat Resort, Cafe Cristal supper club, Hollywood-by the Sea, Florida, USA, March 28 to April 5 1975