Spencer LaJoye – An Education that is Life-Giving, not Life-Limiting
Singer-Songwriter Spencer LaJoye is making room for people to listen
Spencer LaJoye couldn’t find a way to shake off their experience growing up in a family of musicians. The singer-songwriter is currently part of Denver’s folk scene, and they’ll be headlining the Stain’d Open Mic at Whittier Cafe on December 21.
This past year, LaJoye released her sophomore album, Alters, and most recently dropped a new single, “Take the Blood,” in November.
“I had recently had an argument with my wife, and I remember being reminded of that argument at that moment, thinking, ‘I can’t fix what I did,’” they explain. “‘I can’t take it back. And I think I broke something. But you’re still so beautiful.’”
“Alters, for me as a songwriter, I was trying to make much more sweeping claims about humanity and systems in the world and talk about a lot of transformational experiences that I had in the past two or three years of coming out and my relationship with religion,” LaJoye says. “We all went through the 2016 election.”
LaJoye is currently earning a master’s degree from the Iliff School of Theology.
“Studying [theology] has helped me really integrate all of my worlds…to think with different imagery and a different symbol set,” LaJoye says. “A lot of the songs on Alters deal with me talking directly to the church or directly to this cis, white, straight, hierarchical deity and just giving them a piece of my mind, which is cathartic.”
LaJoye’s goal is to rearrange the syntax of religion to make something that is more “life-giving” rather than “life-limiting.”
LaJoye admits they can feel embarrassed in telling others that they are studying theology as people are going to think — that religion can seem at odds with their identity.
“We were made good, we are good, and the systems of the world are being really oppressive to us,” LaJoye says. “There has to be another way — like, the way of peace can’t be left or right.
“It’s interesting in the arts communities right now; since 2016, I feel they have gotten really collaborative,” LaJoye adds. “It’s hard to feel like you [have a voice]. I think that’s why arts communities tend to spring up out of oppressed communities.”
LaJoye launched a venue in Lakewood called The Chimney Place at Lakewood United Methodist Church that invites artists in to perform. Unlike at a noisy bar or club, the audience is expected to participate and listen deeply.
“I think [there’ll be] more venues where the artists feel valued, and I think those venues are going to be started by songwriters themselves,” LaJoye says. Certain venues here can make you “feel like a commodity,” and noted that BarFly at the Alamo Drafthouse Sloan’s Lake is one venue that’s making strides for the artists it brings in — and it’s one of the few accessible stages in Denver.
“Musicians are sticking up for musicians,” LaJoye says. “There are enough places to play that are going to pay you okay, be a big name for you. But I think the thing that keeps us doing what we’re doing is making us feel like we have a voice and that it matters what we’re saying.”
Attribution: Westword, December 17, 2018