INTERVIEW
| JULY, 2000
by Dimitri Ehrlich
Imagine
being a little-known artist who suddenly finds his paintings
hanging between works by Picasso and Van Gogh. That's
how Peter Salett felt when his songs got sandwiched between
tracks by Tom Waits and Elliot Smith on the soundtrack to
Edward Norton's Keeping the Faith. The Brooklyn-based
singer has been playing around Manhattan bars and selling
his CDs independently via his website for the past few years;
while he has built a strong following, it's nowhere near
the six million people who heard "Heart of Mine"
in the movie. The song has a lilting melody that sways
with gentle resolve, expressing hopeless romanticism in
a way that it is hopeful nonetheless.
"It
was the strength of Peter's voice and his old-school lyricism
that really struck me," says Norton, who first met
Salett
when the two attended Columbia School of Theatrical Arts
in Maryland. "Peter's got these wonderful melodies,
but there's also a bittersweet longing in them that I was
looking for.
Ultimately,
the secret of Salett's success may lie in the fact that
he's not doing anything trendy. "I try to write
classic sounding tunes," he says. "And not be
afraid to hark back to love songs from a time gone by."