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Mellani Day



Dernière mise à jour : 15/07/2009

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Statut : Célibataire
Ville : Lakewood
Région : Colorado
Pays: US
Date d’inscription :: 17/04/2005

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lundi, avril 14, 2008 

Humeur actuelle :  fatigué
I just returned from the ASCAP Expo in Hollywood.  It was a worthwhile trip.  I met up with Madalyn Sklar, Kelly Zirbes and some of the other people I've only emailed with through GoGirls Music.  It really felt like family and made the LA experience great.  Saturday night I played a bit at Hallenbeck's a coffee shop in N. Hollywood.  It was a HepC Awareness night sponsored by GoGirls Music and HepCAware.org - run by Kelly.  It was a great night of live Indie GoGirls Music!

One other great thing that happened was I had the opportunity to have a "one on one" session with John Anderson a music publisher that focuses on TV/Film placement.  He asked for my CD and to keep in touch - which is a great thing!  I heard several times in various sessions that TV/Film is the new radio in the sense of an opportunity for Independent Artists.  You never know.

I also had the opportunity to see interviews with Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambura as well as Jackson Brown.  Of course all successful songwriters but with very different approaches to songwriting.  As Jon Bon Jovi said, "If I knew what made a hit, I would bottle it."  Yet, he does...

Anyway, I know it's been a while.  I'll try not to make it so long before the next one!

Mellani
mercredi, octobre 04, 2006 

Humeur actuelle :  vidé
After a year of agonizing delays and tests, I found out this morning that I'm not a suitable candidate to donate a kidney to my Mom after all.  Can't really go into detail, but now my sister is going forward to donate one of hers.

Mell
mercredi, septembre 20, 2006 

Mellani Day and Dazed: Chill Songs for Hot Times

By Mark Kirby, MusicDish

There is a Chinese curse that states, "May you live in interesting times." That says it all for the last half of 2006. It's a shell-shocked world of uncertainty, with chaos abroad and tension at home (or vice versa depending on where you live). Our media culture is chock full of sensational images and narratives of conflict and violence. From gangsta rap to heavy metal to FOX News, it is an endless litany of explosions, dark fantasies, and common criminals made into primordial demons. In this climate the most radical of responses that an artist can make is to create harmonious, gently real, or uplifting music. Mellani Day and Dazed are such artists.

Their EP Shy to Sure and the follow-up CD Mostly True Eric Gunnison and The Dazed Band & Mellani Day - Mostly True.. are heavily based on a mixture of jazz, calypso-reggae, pop and blues. Picking up from where Joni Mitchell collapsed in her derailed-by-death collaboration with Charles Mingus, Ms. Day takes a singer-songwriter's approach to lyrics and a jazz player's rooted but boundary breaking approach to music. From the opening cut, the bar bluesy "If They Only Knew" Eric Gunnison and The Dazed Band & Mellani Day - Mostly True - If They Only Knew.., to the final song, the country/Irish folk influenced "True Love (A Wedding Song)" Eric Gunnison and The Dazed Band & Mellani Day - Mostly True - True Love (a Wedding Song).., Ms. Day and her group convey a range of emotions without screaming, melodramatic whispering, or maudlin sentimentality. They also avoid the pu pu platter approach to music (here's jazz, now here's blues, and now a reggae song), and contrived homogenization (great for yogurt, bad for music).

This musical odyssey had an unlikely beginning. "Even though I grew up in LA, my first musical memories are of mountain folk songs, country tunes and old hymns," she said. "My Dad was from Virginia and my Mom from Missouri, and both came from musical families."

"My dad used to sit in the corner of the living room every night and play his guitar and sing - lots of Johnny Cash and cowboy and Elvis Presley songs -- and my mom would start singing with him and then when the mood hit, all us sisters would join in as well. I took piano lessons from the age of four, so sometimes I would play along. I would be practicing and playing a song like, "Happy Days Are Here Again" and my dad would join in and then my mom. On my dad's side of the family things were sincerely like the soundtrack of "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou." When I saw that movie, it was like going home! Mom's side of the family was more cosmopolitan. I have an old cassette tape recording of my Granddad and his brothers singing a bunch of old pop songs (like "The Sheik of Arabie"), playing guitar and with full harmonies. Mom was also the one who made sure we got the church music side. We sang all the old hymns in choirs and shows."

Music was clearly introduced to Ms. Day as a spiritual and healing force, as well as something satisfying and fun. Those who love and appreciate one form of music have a tendency to love and appreciate other forms of music, which is how artists and listeners develop a passion for it.

"I'm embarrassed to say I used to love the Monkees, and Sonny and Cher. When I was in junior high, I used to listen to the radio and use a cassette tape recorder to create my own mix tapes. Songs like, "Have You Seen Her?" and "I've Got a Brand New Pair of Roller-Skates" stick out in my mind. But when I was playing piano, I wore out a couple books of boogie-woogie and a Reader's Digest Book of classic pop and show tunes. I would play those songs over and over. My sister and I would fight over who got the Elton John song book. In the end, I let it go to her."

In addition to this musical nurturing at home, Ms. Day sang in school groups and church choirs. But what was her first real band like? "My own first band would have to be while I lived in Germany. I went to Germany the first time right after I graduated from high school. I stayed with a German family for a month-long exchange student program. I fell in love with it. Then my husband and I went back on our honeymoon for two weeks. We decided to get jobs and stay for a couple of years. One of the places I worked at was an International University in Heidelberg where I formed a band called The Administration Blues Band. It started as a surprise joke for the students, but we continued it. We sang at student events, and even in a street festival in downtown Heidelberg one year, to represent the university."

When Ms. Day and her husband left Germany for Denver, CO., she wrote songs and started singing with a cover band. "I originally thought I would be a songwriter and pitch my songs to others. But instead of doing short demos with other singers and musicians, I chose to do a 3-song EP with the best people I could find to work with. I felt that I could use the recording as a demo to pitch the songs, but also as a product to sell at shows. Along the way, each song on that first project, Shy to Sure, had some success in its own right. And it received some amazing reviews. So that gave me the confidence to continue, start my own band Dazed, and record a full-length project, Mostly True."

Shy to Sure is more genre-rooted, with "Losin'," a down and dirty rhythm and blues, and the title song, a hard swingin' jazz tune that Anita O' Day would've loved. The third cut, "Jade to Sapphire," hints at Ms. Day's jazz adventurism and early interest in show tunes. Mostly True, which features keyboardist and co-producer Eric Gunnison and Dazed, is a more unified effort. The opening cut, "If They Only Knew," contrasts Ms. Day's smooth jazz vocal style with a blues that takes a while to catch fire and then burns with blazing guitar by Jamie Krutz, and the muscular might of bassist Michael Willis and Keith Whiting on drums.

The recipe of smooth melodies and explosive instrumental music was followed by Motown and other old schools of rock and pop with results that are self-evident, yet missing almost completely from today's music. Like great music of the classic rock and soul era, there is meaning to the singing: "They're angry, and they're fightin' away / Planning pointless battles, don't know what they're fightin' for / Girls next door and presidents shake their fist against the Lord and his anointed one / They say, "Take your rules and regulations, we won't be bound by obligation to your so called Son."

These words are not as intense as those once sung by jazz great Abbey Lincoln, but they resonate today. "Something to Swear By" is the type of jazz ballad that could have been played thirty years ago and could be played thirty years from now. It has the type of structure that old soul and classic jazz has: a memorable melody, harmonies that take you on an emotional journey, and emotionally satisfying sentiments expressed by a great voice. In other words, it's a great song and Ms. Day sells the hell out of it. It starts with ethereal keyboards and percussion, then she sings what it's all about: "You're wondering about me, You've been this close before / You wanna' know, is this the real thing, If not you're out the door / Well rest your mind you have arrived, And I'll make you believe."

Her intro gives way to a rock groove. The chord changes move over unexpected hills to resolve in the valley, carrying the listener on a gently exciting ride. Like all good pop, the music and lyrics are merged perfectly. The musicianship, once again, elevates the song above the mundane. Mr. Gunnison plays a fluid solo, with melodic runs and counter chords that burst from the song's emotive underpinning. Percussionist Sky Canyon solos on the rich and rarely heard vibraphone with the type of soul vibraphonist Roy Ayers is famous for.

[Kirby] When did you start playing and studying jazz? What drew you to this music?

[Mellani Day] I am naturally drawn to the spirit of jazz. I approach it as a kind of rebel music that doesn't conform and doesn't necessarily have to repeat itself and I love that. I feel like that defines me - I get bored quickly. I have learned a lot from working with Eric Gunnison and the musicians in my band. I think I acquired the taste for vocal jazz from my early piano-learning years, where I played the old show tunes and pop songs that are now considered vocal jazz standards.

"It is such a complex art, and I am relatively new to it in practice. When non jazz industry people hear my stuff they say oh yeah, that's jazz, but when jazz people hear it, they say oh that's pop. So I'm kind of in this twilight zone. I've had a couple jazz experts tell me that my music has a wider audience than jazz. Hard core jazz lovers will reject my music outright, but then the next listener says, "It's so jazzy!" My distribution company put me in the "jazz vocal" category (and I threw in "pop" - you know - for that wider audience), so I'm trying to learn how to live with it!"

Going back to the 1940s when they used songs by popular music composers such as Rogers and Hart and the Gershwin Brothers, Ira and George, jazz musicians have always taken pop songs and reinvented them. In that tradition Ms. Day does a rendition of "I Want a New Drug" (Eric Gunnison and The Dazed Band & Mellani Day - Mostly True - I Want a New Drug..) . Any great interpreter of songs, whether it's Al Green turning the Beatles' corn ball "I Want to Hold Your Hand" into a love cry of desperate passion, or Johnny Cash turning "Hurt" by Nine Inch Nails into the flip side of "My Way," finds another side, another emotional realm, in said song. Here, Day and Daze achieve the same thing. Her moody jazz blues version of the New Wave, get-wrecked bar anthem by Huey Lewis and the News reveals the joy and sadness of a person separated by minutes or years from a special source of love. Like the man said, love is the drug.

[Kirby] What do you consider to be the jazz element in your music, which has elements of rock and pop?

[Mellani Day] That's an "on-target" question relating to what I am trying to understand about jazz and my music myself. For me, the jazz element is that, while the basic melody structure and lyrics stay within a recognizable song form, the presentation can, and probably will, be slightly changed each time, especially in the solo sections. I choose to have jazz musicians playing my tunes so that they will infuse more complex phasing into each song. Although jazz builds on the past, by default it is an ever-changing form.

"If you have a musical makeup, if you are a creator of new music, then you find yourself absorbing music from wherever it hits you, and reproducing it in your own creations. The world music, Latin and reggae I've heard; the classical music and opera I heard in my 13.5 years in Germany; my early music influences and the pop and rock of my adult years, are all in my musical makeup. I appreciate music of all kinds for all my varying moods. I love native rhythms. I love unusual instruments. I love complex sounds and clever lyrics and stories. All of this I dream to incorporate into my music. Yet vocal jazz pulls me closer into pop because of the verse, chorus/hook song form. The jazz element comes out when you play live with musicians."

[Kirby] Name your top five songs and why.

[Mellani Day] Right now I am fascinated by Fiona Apple's "Extraordinary Machine." When I first heard it, I thought it was some old school jazz diva. What a surprise when I found out it was her. Now I am a fan. The song is fresh and syncopated, and not your everyday pop. I am also very intrigued by Matisyahu. If you listen to his lyrics, here is a very spiritual man, not shy - joyfully expressing his faith. "One Woman For Me" just sticks in my head. How corny and yet how very, very sweet, uplifting and refreshing in this culture. If I were to do a jazz standard besides "Summertime," which I often sing, I would like to do "Peel Me a Grape." I love the attitude! In trying to get scat in my head, I bring out Ella Fitzgerald's "How High the Moon." She's the master and it's awe inspiring to listen to what must be at least three minutes of straight vocal athletics. "Morning Has Broken" rates high - an old hymn that Cat Stevens turned into a hit. It's spiritual and soothingly melodic.

[Kirby] What do you love about music?

[Mellani Day] It's an outlet for my creative side. If I stop for a while, I feel like there's a huge hole in my life. I love music because it connects with me and seems like it wants to draw me in. Sometimes it has a life of its own. Every culture has it. It can be freely shared. It can be therapeutic and healing. It can reflect a variety of emotions. It's transportable. It can change lives.

www.mellaniday.com

lundi, septembre 04, 2006 

Humeur actuelle :  optimiste
You have to do it all, songwriting, performing, promotion, you can't let any of it drop or your little music business won't sustain.... I'm talking to myself here. Fortunately the business side can be very interesting. Yes, really, it can. It's a grand experiment, a creative brainstorming process to break out of the expected. You have the chance to fail and you have the chance to succeed. There are so many great players out there that it is sometimes overwhelming, it is also expensive. I heard a principle, that you should budget at least the same amount on promoting the CD as you spent on producing and manufacturing it. I'm trying that... I'm proud of my music, and I want to give it every chance to succeed. If you have any avenues out there for me, let me know!

Mell
jeudi, août 17, 2006 
I'm donating a kidney to my Mom. We expect the surgery to be scheduled the end of September. It was scheduled for April 21st but the doctors at the UCLA transplant center decided my Mom needed more tests. She passed them all and is now cleared.

It will happen there in Los Angeles where she lives. I feel o.k. about it. I went through the whole mind game/decision making process almost a year ago when she was first put on the transplant list. She's been on dialysis for about 3 years now and doesn't have much of a life anymore. My 90 year old Grandmother (her Mom) is taking care of her! Isn't that amazing.

I won't be able to travel for about 10 days, so will be recuperating at my sister's house in Malibu! Poor me! HA! Actually, the worst part of this whole thing has been the waiting. We expected it to happen the first part of the year, I completed all the compatibility tests myself by January, so I put off planning gigs, etc., during that time. Then it was finally scheduled for April, so I didn't plan anything around that time. When it was post-poned, we thought, o.k. it will be in the Summer sometime, delay delay delay, between each new test they had her do, there was a two or three week wait for the results and scheduling for the next one. So I struggled with planning gigs over the Summer, just in case. So with the new CD coming out, I just said I CAN'T WAIT ANYMORE! So went ahead a planned something for August and September to celebrate the release. She is now cleared, so technically I could go out there in a couple of weeks and do it, but now, I have the gigs scheduled.... I said to my Mom, "Can we schedule it for the end of September -- there is a gap where I can do the gigs, and then have time to heal before starting up again in November." Geez, then the guilt starts. Notice I'm not EVEN talking about the planning that has to go on for me to miss work (my day job) for two weeks. Mom is weak and sick and how can I drag it out like that -- Mom didn't say that, I do it to myself! But of course, there's the CD Release now, venues arranged and the musicians hired and the promotion and the contracts signed. Also, it seemed like her doctors weren't in much of a hurry, so a few more weeks won't be so bad, right?

Anyway, I'll let you know how it goes. I don't have a tattoo yet, but I'm thinking that kidney donation scars are a great reason to get one. It just has to be the absolute coolest and perfect design. I'm open for suggestions!
vendredi, juillet 14, 2006 

Humeur actuelle :  artistique
Online Interview with WildWritings.com
(To be featured September 2006)

WW: Hey Mellani, welcome to WildWritings.com! How are you?

Im great, thank you! Im excited to share with WildWritings everything thats going on with me and my music.

WW: Tell us about your childhood. Did music always play an important role in your life?

Yes very much so. I am blessed to have grown up in one of those families where Dad sat and played guitar most nights and sang and Mom and all us sisters (there were 5 of us) joined in. I also sang in church and school choirs every year as I grew up. I started learning piano at age 4. I did a brief stint at the violin in 3rd grade, and then a year of guitar in high school. When I started college I started out as a music major. Life got in the way and that changed, but Ive always had the music.

WW: When did you know you wanted to become a singer?

Ive never actually put that in a future tense Ive always been a singer. To want to be a singer with my own music and band, I guess is what you mean? Well I guess that kind of evolved a few years ago. I had been writing songs for a while, and singing lead for a cover band, Live Wire, in Denver. We incorporated a few originals, and I wanted to do more. I kept writing and the songs started piling up, and I just thought I need to do this!

WW: Who were your musical influences while growing up?

I have to say that I have an eclectic group of influences. I have to believe that in some ways you are influenced by everything you hear from the old to the new. You take what moves you and leave the rest. As a singer/songwriter there are two sides, the lyrics and the music. On both sides I have been inspired by such varied songwriters and artists as: Don Henley, Bernie Taupin and Elton John, Johnny Cash, Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, the Carpenters, Sade, Cher, Tina Turner, Sting and the Police, Peter Gabriel, the old hymn writers, old show tunes, old country and folk tunes, other classic rock and R&B artists, an odd list of international artists from my years in Europe (I lived in Germany over 13 years), reggae artists like Boney M and Bob Marley, more recently I've been soaking up classic jazz and blues.


WW: When did you write your first song? What was it about?

Yikes, my first song I keep those early ones stuffed away only to bring out once in a while and shake my head at them. I started writing poetry as an assignment in college required and found out that I loved it. I was driving in my car one day, I was living in Germany then, and started singing the first line of one of my poems. The melody just popped into my head. I realized then that I could put the poems to music. It was a long road though to learn about song form and writing memorable melodies and learning the rules, so that you could know when to break them, all that. What was it about? Well, the lyrics started like this: Sometimes it seems youre stumbling blind, what more is there to see? How can you know the way to act, what should youre choices be? Kind of schmaltzy, but amazingly I do remember them still

WW: Where do you draw the inspiration from to create music?

Its an internal creative drive, I guess, an outlet for ideas and thoughts that otherwise could get jammed up inside, HA! Its also very therapeutic and spiritual for me at times. I get ideas from all sorts of places in life from personal experiences to news articles to conversations and so on. You just have to be aware and be looking for them. For example, Yesterdays Lei was written after I was driving down the highway in Hawaii, and I saw a beautiful partially wilted lei on the street. The thought popped into my head: used up and thrown away like yesterdays lei metaphor for a relationship, and the song idea was born.

WW: Your solo debut received rave reviews from the independent music industry. Tell us about your debut record.

I had been writing for a few years, and decided to test the waters with a 3-song EP of my own (then added tracks without vocals as an experiment). I wanted it to do double duty act as a demo to present to sell the song itself, and use it as a CD as an artist. Industry people say that could be confusing are you a songwriter or an artist? I just say, yes! I met Eric Gunnison who agreed to produce it and hired the best musicians I could to record. That was before I had the band Dazed. I had to learn all the ropes on the business side as well. I hired a local promotion company for press, and an on-line promotion company for Internet-promotions and went through an Indie distribution outlet. I also entered two of the songs, Shy to Sure in the jazz category and Jade to Sapphire in the world category, in the Billboard songwriting competition and they both won honorable mentions. I have received a lot of Internet radio play, and note that a couple of my songs have been downloaded as podcasts as far as Japan, France and Switzerland! I also submitted to 99.5 The Mountain a Denver commercial radio station that has a homegrown program to support local music. They loved Losin and it ended up being played on other shows of the station as well.

WW: How would you describe your music?

I describe my music as jazz-infused vocal originals with blues, jazz, island/reggae and world influences. Seems awkward doesnt it? But because of my varied background, I have actually come to jazz later in the game (theres a lot to catch up on), and I enjoy spreading the jazz approach over various other styles. Which to me is the way the spirit of jazz works. The musicians I work with are so talented that they really do get what Im trying to do cross-genre. Of course, that makes it really tough for the music industry that wants to categorize it does it go into jazz vocal? or pop? or blues? or world? Well, put a little bit of me into all of that!

WW: You're also a part of a band called Dazed. How did Dazed form?

Along with the decision to put together the CD Shy to Sure, I gave myself permission to be an artist as well as a songwriter. Does that sound strange? Once I crossed that hurdle, I reached out to the best players I could find. I had a few changes in guitarist and keyboardist, however the band now seems to have really gelled. In the band Dazed, I have Keith Whiting who plays drums, hes been with me since the beginning and plays on Shy to Sure as well. Then theres Michael Willis, an amazing jazz bassist, Jamie Krutz a versatile guitarist who also plays electric violin and is a singer/songwriter in his own right, then the newest member of the band is Jerry Weiss, a jazz keyboardist (who studied under Eric Gunnison for 5 years by the way). All of these guys (yeah, Im the only girl) also play solo and with other bands as well, so we have a lot of talent to share all the way around!

WW: What are your plans for the future; where can we catch you?

Im still writing and playing and recording, just begun, really, so there will be more to come. For now, the new CD Mostly True is available as of August 8, you should be able to find it on all your favorite on-line music stores, you can walk into your favorite music store and order it, or you can get it directly from me at www.mellaniday.com. Also if you are in the Denver area, we play regionally about once a month, so go to our website for the latest show info.

WW: Thanks Mellani! Best of luck to you.

Jimmy TickeyWildWritings.com: Connecting Teens & Entertainment!
samedi, mai 13, 2006 

Humeur actuelle :  fatigué
So much to say, there's a lot to life. Nice little compartments of work, music, family, The Experience, friends, home, Tuffy. I guess music is the point here. I'll focus on that, but I'm too tired right now.