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::MUSIC NEWS::
LE Newsletter -
February 11, 2010
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Canadian Melanie Fiona Receives Grammy Nod
After Years Of Struggle
Source: www.thestar.com -
By Nick Patch (CP)
(January 28, 2010) TORONTO — Five years ago,
Melanie Fiona
flew to Los Angeles,
determined to make her music dreams come true.
The Toronto native had the right sound - great range and a
distinctive voice, equally adept at expressing vulnerability and
strength - and the right look. All she needed to do was change
everything.
"I met a lot of labels, executives and producers," Fiona told
The Canadian Press.
"They'd say: 'We love the way she looks, we love the way she
sings.' But I knew that the minute I worked with them or would
have signed with them, they would have tried to change me into
someone else completely different.
"That was something that I didn't want to do."
As it turns out, her stubbornness paid off. The past year has
brought the 26-year-old the sort of chart success and industry
respect she was willing to wait for, culminating in a nomination
at Sunday's 52nd Grammy Awards.
She's up for best female R&B vocal performance for her
heart-rending torch song, "It Kills Me."
The Grammy nod was vindication, to say the least.
"It's like the best news I've ever received," Fiona says, her
voice cracking with enthusiasm.
"Oh my gosh, I instantly had flashbacks of just singing as a
little girl into my hairbrush in front of the mirror. I went
directly there. Could I even have imagined singing around my
house and loving to sing would have me in this position now, one
day?
"It's just unbelievable."
It certainly would've seemed that way at many points during the
past few years, as time tested Fiona's resolve.
Fiona was born Melanie Hallim, the daughter of Guyanese
immigrants. She had been active in the industry since 2002, when
she was briefly involved with Toronto R&B girl group X-Quisite
(she left before their first album was released, though she
earned songwriting credits).
Her original southern sojourn came amid worries her career would
atrophy if she stayed north of the border. But she didn't
exactly move to L.A., either - in fact, Fiona says she hasn't
really lived anywhere the past five years.
How does she manage that?
"It entails crashing on people's couches, hotels, living out of
your suitcase," she said. "Just kind of being wherever you have
to be, from recording to touring. You have to be visible, you
have to be where there's a demand for you. ... I love
travelling, I've seen and been to so many places I've dreamed of
going, which was the best part.
"And then of course I was tired of being all over the place and
living from the suitcase. That's hard on the clothes, and I hate
travelling through airports, and lugging bags around the world,
but you know, it's a part of what I gotta do."
Fiona forged ahead, dabbling in songwriting (she co-penned "Dem
Haters" for Rihanna and wrote for Kardinal Offishall) while
continuing to seek out her big break. She had opportunities, but
nothing felt quite right.
"I recorded songs where I was like: 'I'm gonna do this to
experiment, but this is not who I am, it's not what I want to
do,"' she explained.
"It was singing about things in music that I didn't really feel
or relate to, just to conform with what other people were
singing about. I don't really sing about superficial things or
money, cars, and clothes.
"I didn't want people to focus on my appearance just so they
would focus on my music. I didn't want people to focus on my
sexuality, or how sexy I can be and sell sex just so they could
pay attention to my music.
"I didn't want to have people dictate who I had to be."
Ultimately, she didn't have to.
In 2007, Fiona was discovered by Steve Rifkind - the hip-hop
impresario associated with acts including Wu Tang Clan, Akon and
Big Pun - and soon, her fortunes began to change. And it
happened fast.
In the fall of 2008, Kanye West handpicked Fiona to open his
European tour ("the best performing experience of my life," she
says of the tour). She also made friends with Jay-Z, whose Roc
Nation group now manages Fiona, and Roots drummer Questlove, who
issued a mixtape with her last summer.
In February, she released her first single, "Give it to Me
Right," a feisty empowerment anthem that doubles as an
aggressive come-on. Far more confrontational than coy, the song
married a brassy vocal performance from Fiona with the classic
backbeat of the Zombies' 1968 psychedelic single "Time of the
Season."
The song was written by Andrea Martin (no, not the SCTV actress
but a songwriter and producer who has penned tunes for Toni
Braxton, Nelly and Leona Lewis).
Martin said she was immediately taken by Fiona's talent.
"Finally a voice that's not only soulful, but ear-friendly,"
Martin wrote in an email to The Canadian Press.
"Melanie is a definite addition to the world, she's truly a
light that brings life to every song she sings."
Martin produced and co-wrote much of Fiona's first album, "The
Bridge," which dropped in the summer.
Fiona recalls seeing the disc on a store shelf for the first
time at an HMV in downtown Montreal.
"I totally freaked out," she recalled. "I couldn't believe it. I
was jumping up and down. I was screaming. I was completely
making a fool of myself in the store.
"But I've been working for this my whole life, so now's not the
time to be cool, you know what I mean?"
Indeed, it was Fiona's work ethic that stood out to her
collaborators.
"(Our sessions) ended up being really intense, for whatever
reason," said Darren Lewis, one-half of U.K. production team
Future Cut, who handled three tracks on Fiona's album.
"I don't know how she did it. They had three or four studios set
up, she'd come to us and write, go somewhere else and write. She
was doing 20-hour days in that one week. She'd finish at 4, 5, 6
in the morning. It was incredible.
"And she was always the one there keeping the energy up. The two
of us were suffering jet lag and kind of falling asleep on the
mixing desk. She was still singing."
Lewis wasn't the only one who was impressed by Fiona. The New
York Times said "The Bridge" was "one of this year's best R&B
albums, and also one of the year's most promising debuts."
But major chart success still eluded Fiona - until the Grammy
nomination came in December.
Since then, "It Kills Me" - which Fiona calls gut-wrenching,
"one of those records that kind of grabs you by the throat and
makes you pay attention" - has rocketed to No. 1 on the
Billboard R&B/hip-hop chart in the United States.
Fiona says that she's particularly pleased that the Grammy
nomination is specifically for vocal performance, and not for
songwriting or anything external to her.
Others, meanwhile, aren't surprised.
"She's just got a real, old-school, killer R&B voice," Lewis
said.
"There's elements ... of her contemporaries, her idols, there's
a flavour of Mary J. Blige, there's a hint of Aretha (Franklin),
but I think actually what was good about (Fiona) was that she
wasn't just a carbon copy of people she loved. She took
inspiration, which the best people do, but it's about making it
your own."
And Fiona says she isn't worried about winning on Grammy night.
"In my mind, it's already a victory," Fiona said.
"Being a part of history, of the 2010 Grammys, it's such an
amazing feeling. At this point, it's just about being there and
hearing my name called and seeing my face on the screen and
being in the company of the amazing artists.
"It's just an amazing feeling." |
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