Class Actress

American singer-songwriter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elizabeth Vanessa Harper[1] (born 1982 or 1983),[2] known professionally as Class Actress, is an American singer, songwriter, and record producer. Class Actress was originally conceived as a trio, consisting of Harper, Mark Richardson, and Scott Rosenthal.[3][4]

Born
Elizabeth Vanessa Harper

1982 or 1983 (age 42–43)
OriginBrooklyn, New York, US
GenresSynthpop
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • record producer
Quick facts Born, Origin ...
Class Actress
Born
Elizabeth Vanessa Harper

1982 or 1983 (age 42–43)
OriginBrooklyn, New York, US
GenresSynthpop
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • record producer
Years active2009–present
Labels
Websiteclassactress.com
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History

Formation and early years

Harper majored in drama in college and moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career as an actress, but she was unable to make it work and soon found herself disillusioned by it. After relocating to Brooklyn, she decided to pursue a career in music instead.[5] She formed Elizabeth Harper & the Matinee,[5] and in 2004, Harper's self-titled debut solo album was released by UK label Angular Recording Corporation.[6]

Harper later contacted Philadelphia-based producer Mark Richardson, who had remixed a song from her debut album.[6][7] She preferred Richardson's version to the original, and the two began recording songs at her house,[7][8] trading Harper's previous guitar-based sound for electronic music, which she had long been interested in exploring.[3][5][8] Along with multi-instrumentalist and engineer Scott Rosenthal, Harper and Richardson formed Class Actress—the name being a joke on Harper's original career choice.[5][8]

2009–2012: Journal of Ardency and Rapprocher

Class Actress released their debut extended play, Journal of Ardency, on February 9, 2010, on Terrible Records, which is run by Grizzly Bear's Chris Taylor.[4] The New York Times described it as "an alluringly precise recapturing of the winning chill of early '80s electro-pop".[9] The EP also drew comparisons to New Order, The Human League, and Depeche Mode, while Harper's vocals were likened to those of Blondie's Debbie Harry and Saint Etienne's Sarah Cracknell.[10]

The trio's debut studio album, Rapprocher, was released on October 18, 2011, by Carpark Records. Harper stated that the title—which means "to come closer" in French[11]—was inspired by "a French lover who broke [her] heart".[12] The album received generally positive reviews from music critics, obtaining a rating of 69 out of 100 based on 16 critics on review aggregate site Metacritic.[13] AllMusic named it one of the best indie pop and rock albums of 2011.[14] Rapprocher reached number 21 on Billboard's Dance/Electronic Albums chart and number 27 on the Heatseekers Albums chart.[15][16] The song "Keep You" was used in an episode of the fifth season of the teen drama television series Gossip Girl.[17]

2013–2015: Movies

As a solo artist under the moniker Class Actress, Harper signed to Casablanca Records in 2013.[18] That same year, she moved into a bungalow at The Beverly Hills Hotel in order to write and record songs.[19][20] Class Actress premiered the track "More Than You" on May 20, 2015,[21] and on June 2, it was announced that her EP Movies would be released on June 23 via Casablanca and Republic Records.[18] Taking inspiration from "the films of '80s excess, glamor and self-discovery",[18] Harper wanted Movies to tell "a dark story of a woman who explores the glamorous fantasy life of a Hollywood party girl."[22] The EP was executive-produced by Giorgio Moroder and Evan Bogart, and features production by Harper herself, Moroder, Neon Indian, and Mess Kid.[19]

2016–present: New music

On June 30, 2016, Class Actress premiered a song titled "Glass Ceiling", along with an accompanying music video, through Terrible Records. The track was produced by Mess Kid.[23]

Discography

Studio albums

More information Title, Album details ...
Title Album details Notes
Rapprocher
Track listing[24]
No.TitleLength
1."Keep You"3:14
2."Love Me Like You Used To"3:51
3."Weekend"4:01
4."Prove Me Wrong"3:52
5."Need to Know"4:12
6."Limousine"4:26
7."All the Saints" (omitted from LP edition)4:24
8."Bienvenue"2:58
9."Missed"4:23
10."Hangin' On"3:16
11."Let Me In"4:54
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Extended plays

More information Title, Album details ...
Title Album details Notes
Journal of Ardency
  • Released: February 9, 2010[25]
  • Label: Terrible
  • Formats: CD, 10", digital download
Track listing[25]
No.TitleLength
1."Careful What You Say"5:12
2."Journal of Ardency"3:45
3."Let Me Take You Out"3:18
4."Adolescent Heart"3:16
5."Someone Real"7:32
6."Terminally Chill" (bonus track[26])3:45
Movies
Track listing[27]
No.TitleLength
1."More Than You"4:07
2."The Limit"4:08
3."High on Love"2:59
4."GFE"3:09
5."Love My Darkness"4:31
6."Movies"4:26
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Music videos

More information Title, Year ...
Title Year Director(s)
"Journal of Ardency" 2010 Patrick Cleandenim[28]
"Adolescent Heart" Jessica Lauretti[29]
"Let Me Take You Out" 2011 Brett Haley[30]
"Weekend" Bek Andersen[31]
"Bienvenue" 2012 Clement Gino and Gregory Faure[32]
"Need to Know" Jessica Lauretti[33]
"More Than You" 2015 John Merizalde[34]
"GFE" Rachel Maude and Gabriel Reilich[35]
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References

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