Showing posts with label Singer Songwriter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singer Songwriter. Show all posts

Monday, 8 July 2013

Interview: MCX Showcase Part 2 ft Shan Smile



Recently we sat down with the young talent that is Shan Smile. With only a matter of weeks to go until the MusicConnex July showcase where Shan will be taking the stage, she was understandably excited.


Shan Smile is a singer/songwriter from South London. Having attended the famous Brit School, Shan is now studying Music at Middlesex University.


CC: Can you tell us about one of your first memories of singing?

SS: When I was at my Secondary School at a talent competition. I sang 'I love your Smile' by Shanice, which is who I was named after. My sister was also in the competition and it was such a great experience and from that is where my love of music started to grow.

CC: What made you decide you would like to take your training to another level and attend a music school?

SS: I suppose it was going to Chestnut Grove Secondary School and from taking part in competitions and pretty much anything to do with music - I was involved with so much musically, even playing the trumpet in the orchestra, from there I felt like I had reached a limit musically at Chestnut Grove so someone suggested I apply to The Brit School and that's how that started.

CC: What influence has your training at The Brit School had on you as an artist?

SS: A big influence! It's encouraged me to do things for yourself. Taught me about how to work with people and working as a team. It's also made me enjoy it so much more.

CC: Who are your biggest influences music wise?

SS: I have so many. I am influenced by a lot of things and people and artists. I can't really put a finger on it because I have such a big play list. There are so many artists on there. I would say at different times, different people influence me. My dad has definitely introduced me to so many artists; Sam Cooke, Michael Jackson and those types of artists.

CC: How do you go about the songwriting process?

SS: I always sit down and just play my guitar and so much can come from that. Or if i see something happening, or someone going through something, or if I am going through something, I will sit down with my guitar, write and let it flow.
 



CC: How did you go about finding your own sound?
 
SS: When I started at the Brit School, I started guitar lessons and it took me about 4 years to learn to play properly and be able to accompany myself. So from that, gigging, writing with people etc, that's where my sound developed. In fact it's still developing.

CC: Describe one of your favourite performances so far?
SS: My launch was on the 22nd of May that was an amazing experience.

CC: How do you get ready for a performance?

SS: I pray and I try to stay happy. I try not to be nervous. I analyse my surroundings to work out how to perform in that space. I rehearse and then just try to enjoy it. You have to enjoy it. That's the most important thing.

CC: If you could collaborate with any other artist dead or alive, who would if be and why?

SS: I would say Michael Jackson or Sam Cooke. Sam Cooke's voice is so touching, I find his voice amazing. The soulfulness of it is just amazing. Michael Jackson? I would have loved to be able to go into the studio and write a song with him.

CC: Musically what’s the best piece of advice you have been given?

SS: No one else can invest in your dream more than you can.

CC: What advice would you give to an aspiring singer/ songwriters?

SS: Practise, practise, practise!

CC: What do you see in your future?

SS: I see more projects being released. Me collaborating with more people. Songwriting and touring I hope.

CC: What was the last track you listened to?

SS: The gospel song 'I Trust You Lord' by Donnie McClurkin or it could've been Chaka Khan!

CC: Describe your perfect day?

SS: In the sun, in the park, with my loved ones, with my guitar, jamming and having a laugh. Oh and food of course!

It was a pleasure to be able to get to know more about this budding talent and we are very excited to see Shan Smile perform at the next showcase! Tickets are available now on the website, we look forward to seeing you there!





Article By: Claire Cripps

Monday, 1 July 2013

Interview: MCX Showcase Part 2 ft Reese Robinson




We recently sat down with the talented young singer Reese Robinson to get to know a little more about her before she appears at the MusicConnex showcase on July 20th.  When we spoke, Robinson was preparing for a night full of rehearsals for the many upcoming shows she will be involved in over the next two weeks. 

CC: Tell us about one of your first memories of singing?
 
RR: My first memory of singing, I must have been about 7 and a solo came up in the school nativity play which was Silent Night and it was to play the Angel Gabriel. I went for it and I got it and I just remember being on stage and my Auntie bursting into tears. Really embarrassing.

CC: You were classically trained from a young age, how has this helped you as a vocalist?

RR: When my mum first suggested it to me, I was dead against it. I thought it would be really boring, take up too much of my time etc. But now, it’s really given me a good basis and a good understanding of how to use my voice. Understanding that actually this is an instrument and its not just here to make fun pop music but actually I can use it in different ways depending on what the genre is or whatever the task at hand. From that side its been nothing but helpful.
 
CC: Who would you say are your biggest influences music wise?
RR: My first was my Aunt, who is a professional singer. I remember watching her from a really young age, when she was on stage and feeling like ‘I really want to do that’. She would sing "I Will Always Love You" and bring the house down every night. So after hearing her sing that, I really wanted to be able to do that! Listening to the whole Bodyguard soundtrack age ten (trying to learn it). Now, Kim Burrell is a huge inspiration to me. She is a just amazing. To the point where I don’t even necessarily want to learn it, I just want to sit back and listen. It’s amazing what she is able to do with her vocal.  Also you can’t help but be influenced by people like Beyonce, who has taken this music thing and turned it into an art form. The woman is a dynamo. Whether you enjoy the music she is creating or not, you cannot fault her talent and business acumen.

CC: How do you go about the songwriting process?
RR: I’m very much lead by inspiration. If I hear something that I like, paper, pen and I’m done in 20 minutes! It’s always been like that. I find it quite difficult to write cold, because for me writing is about more than putting words on a page. It’s about sharing a story or conveying a message. So for me inspiration is the key.

CC: How did you go about finding your own sound?

RR: That took years! I started recording in a group and we used to go to the studio, three of us, and they other two had really interesting voices and for me being classically trained, my voice was straight down the middle of the line. I sang all of the notes as they should be but didn’t really have much personality past that. So it took years of exploring sounds of other singers and really trying to dig in deep to find what is now my sound. I suppose I didn’t really find it until I found what I call my ‘ugly’ and then I was able to say ‘ok, that’s what I sound like’. It’s that point for a singer when you go past singing notes well and actually express yourself. That point where your voice breaks and you think ‘oh I wasn’t meant to do that, but now I know how to do that, so let me do that again and start to use that technique as a tool’. Also in teaching. That has really helped as I have students come in and ask me about various techniques and I have to go away and figure it out and then come back to them. Everything that’s happened to me in my life and career has helped to develop what you hear now.
CC: Having performed with and for such a variety of artists, describe one of your favourite performances so far?

RR: Of my own performance’s, would be at Ronnie Scott's last year. It was an honour to be called down to headline that show upstairs at Ruby Sings. My band are amazing, if I do say so myself, not only because they are really good musicians but because we are close friends as well. You know my BV’s have been with me since we started this thing, so we have a lot of fun on stage, we have a lot of fun in rehearsals. But when we are on stage and we are locked in and we’re on a vibe, it doesn’t even matter what’s going on in the audience. It was just really cool, I had a lot of friends and family out to support and it was just a really nice night. We are actually due back there this month, which is really great.
 
CC: How do you get ready for a performance?

RR: This is the point where I should say ‘I go in and I warm up’ but I just don’t do that. For me, sound check is really important you know. Going in, making sure its all working properly, and after that I kind of like to just chill. Not get too stressed about what’s going to happen, because I think once you’ve come in, done the sound check, there’s not that much more you can do. So you have to get yourself into that head space where you are ready to convey the message that you penned maybe 6 months/ a year ago. There is a song I am working on at the moment which I wrote when I was 15 for example, so when the time comes for me to perform it, I will have to take myself back to the place that I was at at 15 and figure out what it was I was trying to say then so that I can convey that message back to my audience in this present day. I am definitely not one of those people that needs fresh white towels and all that nonsense (laughs). I make sure that the band and management are happy and that everything is set to go and then I just relax and get in the zone.
 
CC: If you could collaborate with any other artist dead or alive, who would if be and why?
RR: Oh Wow. I would love to collaborate with Robert Glasper, I think he’s amazing. I went to see him at the Royal Festival Hall last year and I was just like ‘Wow! This guy is just on a different wave length’, so definitely him.


CC:
Musically what’s the best piece of advice you have been given?
RR: Be yourself. Be yourself! My vocal tutor, Mark De Lisser once said to me ‘you’re biggest problem is that you are trying to hard to sound like what you think you’re supposed to sound like’.

CC: What was the last track you listened to?
RR: This morning I was listening to (Nirvana) ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’. I am doing a rock show next week with the choir and I’ve also been asked to do some arrangements for a show that we will be doing the following week and a lot of it is rock, and I’m kind of just discovering my inner rock chick actually!  So it’s been fun! It’s great to explore other genres and be able to take from that and put it into your music. I don’t think I realised how much I liked that song!

CC: What’s your preference: Download, CD, tape or Vinyl?
RR: I like a good CD. I am an 80’s baby you know. I like to buy a CD and put it in my front room and just watch the collection grow. Even though I never touch them! It's really silly actually because I buy the CD, then transfer it onto my iTunes and then it just sits in my front room. I should probably join the revolution and download but I just don’t like it.

CC: Describe your perfect day?

RR: Get up really late. I’m not a fan of the mornings! Have some breakfast, listen to some good music, find my way to the studio at about 3pm in the afternoon and then just write. Press record and just let me go! That day is a good day to me.

It was a pleasure to sit down and speak with this young talent. She comes across as both confident and sure of the direction she wants to go as a vocalist and songwriter. We are eager to watch that journey take shape and be a part of the fan base which gets to experience the rise and rise of Reese Robinson. 




Article by: Claire Cripps