Thursday, November 28, 2024

Daneshevskaya’s New Album ‘Long Is the Tunnel’ Explores Russian Food

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When Anna Beckerman got the opportunity to go on her first-ever tour this past summer, she had to have an awkward conversation with her boss. It was definitely weird, Beckerman, a 29-year-old social worker at a Brooklyn preschool, recalls with a laugh. She reenacts the moment she revealed her side gig, staring bashfully at the ground: I was like, ‘I make music…. You can look it up…. D-A-N-E… That would be Daneshevskaya, the name she uses when she performs her tender, scintillating indie rock (and also her real-life middle name). It’s pronounced ‘Dawn-eh-shev-sky-uh,’ though Beckerman admits even she pronounces it wrong. The name belonged to her Russian-Jewish great-grandmother, so it’s fitting that we’re meeting inside Varenichnaya, a quaint Russian restaurant in Brooklyn’s Brighton Beach.

It’s an evening in early November, and we’re the restaurant’s only guests. The room is warm and European, with tile floors, brick walls, and artificial grapes and greenery hanging in every direction.

Beckerman didn’t grow up eating Russian food in her family household, but became a fan of it simply by living in New York City.


Beckerman takes the reins on placing the order: kompot juice, potato vareniki, boiled-meat vareniki, a salad, pumpkin samsa, and hot borscht. She’s a big fan of the beet soup: “I had a box of it once,” she says, her blue eyes lighting up. “I was putting it in cups and just drinking it like it was juice.”

On Nov. 8, Beckerman released Long Is the Tunnel, her second EP (following 2021’s excellent Bury Your Horses) that marks her first release on Winspear. Tunnel contains seven songs that feature Beckerman’s velvety vocals backed by instruments ranging from violin to saxophone, creating a cozy, surrealistic landscape of sound. This tends to stand in contrast with the lyrics, which can be raw and unflinching: “I never wanted to tell you that this was goodbye/Tell me one thing that you said to me that wasn’t a fucking lie,” she sings over twinkling keys on the album highlight “Bougainvillea.”


“I like how the anger and the pretty feelings and the sadness all sit within the same song, Beckerman observes of the track, which she co-wrote with her friend Madeline Leshner back in 2017. Some songs have more sadness than others, like the gorgeous opener “Challenger Deep.” It’s a stripped-down track that features Beckerman over finger-picked guitar, with a chorus (“Will you wait for me/Where there is no later on”) that was based on a poem written by her late grandmother, Gloria. Later, Beckerman texts me a photo of the poem, titled “Loss”:

I am not sad nor angry,just distraught by space that does not fill.

It’s not even that you aren’t herebut that there is no later.

“She was someone who called bullshit and was really independent and smart,” she says, quietly explaining that Gloria died of dementia during the pandemic. “To see that person be an infant version of themselves, it breaks your brain. Family goodbyes and breakups are definitely a theme in most of my songs.”

Another theme is water, prevalent in the submerged-sounding production of “Challenger Deep” and other tracks.

”I definitely find water imagery to be a safe place to be inspired by,” she says. “I was one of those kids that would see how long they could stay on the bottom of the pool. I feel like it’s so easy to write corny lyrics about a lot of things, but I feel like water for some reason doesn’t end up getting corny. Everyone has a relationship to it, one way or another.”

BECKERMAN WAS BORN in San Francisco and moved to New York when she was 7. Her father is a music professor at NYU, while her mother studied opera. The first CD she ever bought was Hilary Duff’s Metamorphosis (“I remember opening it and being like, ‘This is the most beautiful thing’) but she credits her two older brothers with introducing her to indie albums like Rilo Kiley’s The Execution of All Things and Neutral Milk Hotel’s In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. Beckerman attended NYU, interning at several music labels — 300 Entertainment, Mom + Pop, ATO, and Domino — before deciding to go to Hunter for a graduate degree in social work. Being a social worker by day and an indie rock musician at night was never part of the plan.

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