M: So, Juliet, you have a very powerful voice, with a wonderful range from high to low. Does it take a lot of looking after?
F: Not more so than anybody else, I don't think ... um, but, I'm very lazy, I'm sure I'm doing a lot of things wrong, but, so far so good. I do look after it in the fact that I try not to get very tired, or wear myself out, because you know, talking does as much damage, and laughing the wrong way, as singing does.
M: It that so? I didn't realize that ...
F: Yeah. Some people talk, if you talk like this, you put a lot of strain on the back of your cords there, that does a lot of damage to your vocals over a number of years, so I try and talk the way I'm talking now, not very fast, not very high-pitched, and without much pressure on my voice.
M: When you're singing, you sound, your voice sounds wonderfully relaxed , but that's not the idea that most people would have of the music business as a whole. Is the life-style very stressful?
F: Yes, as a matter of fact, it's very demanding, it's probably like an executive job, where you can't come home at a certain nine-to-five, you can't spend a lot of your time with people around you, you feel detached because you know, I don’t necessarily have a schedule, I might work weekends, but I don't actually mind, but it's like your family, your boyfriend, or your husband, or whatever, they can’t get to see you, it’s like last night, I was supposed to be going out to dinner with the old friends, you know with some friends, and, I ended, I was at a stdio, and I said: “Oh I should be finished around seven,”