What’s the best part about being a member of the Indigo Girls?
To work with a great musical partner and have wonderful fans. To be able to create music and make a living at it. To travel and get to know some of the world very well. Tell us a bit about the new album Poseidon and the Bitter Bug – what can we expect? 10 songs – five of Amy’s, five of mine. Two versions of the record, one being a full band arranged record and the other being just stripped down acoustic versions of the songs. It’s produced by Mitchell Froom, who brings out the best in us. What are you most proud of about the album? The fact that we made it so quickly and independently. We worked diligently on pre-production and recorded the CD without labouring over musical decisions. I think that brings a freshness and immediacy to the record. What’s your process when you make music? For me, I usually just sit down with a guitar or other stringed instrument, sometimes piano, and start playing progressions. Those chord progressions usually join up, mysteriously, with the lyrical conten