Wild Child, Brave Journey of Just a Girl




Like all forms of music, folk and country are inundated with an
overflow of artists. This is just as true for indie and alt versions of
these styles as it is for the commercial forms. The egalitarian,
do-it-yourself philosophy that punk rock and the internet has
championed has had the unintended consequence of allowing the
talentless, the mediocre, and the downright delusional, to add to the
cultural noise. The upside of this movement is that deserving artists
can also break through. Lee Lindsey is a singer songwriter who blends
old school country music, Irish fiddles, and electric folk rock to
create a unique, personal sound.

When one goes to her website, there is a photo of her sitting and
smiling, the picture of openness. Her psychedelic, red paisley pants
harken back to an era that is so old, it's new, and gives the listener
a clue as to what to expect - music with a story and plenty of color.
For this, she can, in part, thank her parents' taste in music. "My
parents mostly listened to people like Neil Diamond, Kenny Rogers,
Elvis, Dean Martin, and loads of country music. And the songs on the
radio that I loved were by the Eagles, James Taylor, Carly Simon, Paul
Simon, Neil Young, Bob Marley and Marvin Gaye."

In those freewheeling days of yore, the golden '60s and '70s, it was as
normal for an R&B artist like Ray Charles and a folkie like Bob Dylan
to both adopt/adapt country and rock and roll to their music, as it was
for the Beatles to play Motown songs and Ramsey Lewis, a jazz artist,
to reimagine the Beatles. While not as stylistically radical as these
artists, on her new CD Above the Madding Crowd, Ms. Lindsey presents a
body of songs that, in the past or distant future, would be played on
pop, rock and country stations right alongside The Little Willies (with
Norah Jones as a band member) and those notorious, dangerous,
subversive Dixie Chicks. Sadly, we don't live in that world but you can
still check her music.

Above the Madding Crowd is a musical rendition of the emotional
landscape she has traveled, a "based on actual events" audio diary. The
first cut on the CD is called "Journey" and, were her life a TV
melodrama, this would be the theme song. A country rock groove of
hard-hitting drums and heavy bass, colored by fiddles playing a pensive
riff, underscores her singing a song about adventurous travel
physically and otherwise: "I put on my old leather boots / And I
tramped the city streets of Amsterdam ... Smiled to myself / Cause I
know that I can help / Help myself / But the journey is long / And the
past fades away..." The chorus is a pure, pub sing-a-long tune that
gets its hooks into you, and musically contrasts the tense, somewhat
dark melody on the verse. This captures the emotional peaks and valleys
of the rest of the album and of life's journeys which, like all of us,
started early.

[Kirby] When did you start playing music?

[Lee Lindsey] When I was 12 and I got my first guitar. The first song I
played was "The House of the Rising Sun" like all beginners! And then I
started writing my own songs when I was 13 and got a song on a school
record.

[Kirby] Was there any support for your artistic leanings and pursuits
from family members?

[Lee Lindsey] No support from my father. However, my mother loved to
hear me play and sing and so did my sisters. We all sang and harmonized
when we were little, but when we became teenagers, I don't know what
happened. It all stopped, family wise.

[Kirby] Was there an active music and art scene of any kind where you
were growing up?

[Lee Lindsey] I grew up in Deschenes, Quebec, right across the river
from Ottawa. I had one teacher in intermediate school, at the age of
13, that let me and two other girls skip English class, just to focus
entirely on song writing. We did a whole year instead of regular class
like that. It was pivotal for me.

This turning point led to Ms. Lindsey leaving home at age fifteen.
Besides the usual teenage conflicts with parents, her father tried to
squelch her creative fire. So she left home, quit school, got a
part-time job, started modeling, and eventually moved to Toronto. The
second song on the CD, "Wild Child," is influenced by, if not actually
about, this period of her life. The chords and melody are upbeat, more
joyous than the previous song: "Chevrolet convertible roars along the
desert road... One foot on the gas the other on the dashboard /At only
19 years she ain't no angel / God help anyone who tries to tame her /
Yeah, she's a wild child." The fiddle is featured and the song is
based, as all the songs on the CD, on her strong acoustic guitar
playing and the kind of authority that comes from lived experience and
the road.

[Lee Lindsey] I didn't run away (from home). I moved to my
grandmother's house and paid her rent. I ended up going back to school
after a four-month break. I was an A student and completed my high
school education in the last two months of the year. I moved to Toronto
at sixteen, continued modeling and singing and playing. Then moved on
to Hamburg, London, New York, Paris, Ibiza, Aspen, back to Ottawa for a
spell, then back to London. I met a guy, got married young, he bought
me my Martin guitar which I still have now, had kids, and started
seriously song writing. The husband was like the Dad; he didn't want me
to work in music or work at all really. So when my kids were babies, we
got divorced and I put my suit of armor on and carried on with the
battle on my own (breathe). And here I am now!

While in London honing her skills and performing, she started the
London, UK division of Tall Poppy Records, an urban roots and folk rock
label. She also started a music showcase that featured local, unsigned
artists. This weekly series of events created a splash in the
independent music community of London. Coming full circle, she moved
back to Canada, and is now residing in Vancouver.

[Kirby] What made you decide to leave London, and move to Vancouver?

[Lee Lindsey] London was killing me or would have. I needed to come
home. I needed to be around my family and my people.

Making this CD forced her to look back and access her journey thus far.
She had to face various issues and states of mind. This is reflected in
the other songs on the CD. "Brave" finds the singer facing hard times,
fear, and melancholy, while hoping for a better future (Will the
flowers bloom again for me / Cause I don't wanna be here). "More Than
You'll Ever Know" is a classic break up song with more complex depth
than most songs of this type. Holla if you've been divorced! Other
songs deal with searching for answers ("Life Ain't No Rehearsal),
vulnerability ("Just A Girl") and redemption ("One Day at a Time" and
the title song).

In Vancouver she is busy with her two kids, music, and expanding the
activities of Tall Poppy Records. In addition to presenting the label's
new artists, she is creating a showcase for live performers similar to
the one in London. This series will include artists from all over
British Columbia and Alberta. Besides taking charge of her own music
career, she intends to pursue her vision of empowering like-minded
artists in the independent music community.

http://www.leelindsey.com
http://www.myspace.com/leelindsey
http://www.tallpoppyrecords.com
http://cdbaby.com/cd/leelindsey2/

Interview by Mark Kirby

.



Relevant Pages

  • Blake Shelton To Sing National Anthem at Dallas Cowboys Game
    ... You can also check out Blake's video "Nobody But Me" airing on VH1 Country, ... Christmas Song of the Week ... gaining airplay on country and pop stations across the country ... The Heart" featuring these three great artists will also appear on MMG's ...
    (rec.music.country.western)
  • Victoria Boland "Dont Give Up On Me"
    ... Dave Schmidt's Top 10 Super Country Hits ... songs and artists will be a valuable asset to our company as we look forward ... song plugger for Jimmy Darrel Music. ... Montage Music Group Announces Executive to Oversee National Radio Promotion ...
    (rec.music.country.western)
  • Music Box Announces Nominees For Awards Program
    ... Categories New Artists Female for Music Box Listener ... GEORGE CANYON TAKES HOME 4 CCMA AWARDS AND A GOLD RECORD AT COUNTRY MUSIC ... Whiz Fans' Choice Award, Single of the Year (for his song "My Name"), Male ...
    (rec.music.country.western)
  • Making money from your music
    ... potential places to put your music, if the rights can be cleared. ... singer/songwriter who hopes to have a song appear on a soundtrack. ... artists, or whoever was sold the rights). ... commercial licensing markets. ...
    (rec.music.makers.songwriting)
  • Spotlight: Wild Child, Brave Journey of Just a Girl
    ... The upside of this movement is that deserving artists ... old school country music, Irish fiddles, and electric folk rock to ... this would be the theme song. ... spell, then back to London. ...
    (rec.music.reviews)