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Sonya Kitchell

About Me


7/21/08
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Singer, songwriter, and guitarist Sonya Kitchell has delivered the goods on her new album This Storm — 12 timeless tunes that document her evolution from emerging artist into a sophisticated musician and songwriter with something meaningful to say about the human condition. Her lyrics are sometimes personal and often political, but all are insightful and deeply felt.
Kitchell’s growth as an artist is apparent from the opening moments of the album’s breathtaking lead track, “For Every Drop.” A clear departure from mild singer-songwriter fare, the track’s jittery heartbeat pulses over a lightly tinkling piano before building to a massive chorus, where Kitchell’s otherworldly voice rises commandingly over unrestrained guitars. Musical surprises abound throughout, from the edgy, impassioned rock of “Fire” to the country-blues twang of “Running” to the drifting, textured alt-pop of “This Storm” and “Who Knows After All.” Not that fans of Words Came Back To Me will be out of luck, either: tracks like “Walk Away” and “Robin In The Snow” are quintessential acoustic Kitchell.
At all times, the songs are a showcase for Kitchell’s worldly voice, which, with its intimate tone and feathery falsetto, has earned her attention not only from critics, but also from one of the most respected figures in jazz: Herbie Hancock. After hearing Kitchell sing, Hancock invited her to perform with him and his all-star band at the Sonoma Jazz Festival in 2006. The two developed a warm rapport and Hancock tapped Kitchell to sing in his band as he toured the West Coast last year in support of his Grammy-Award winning album River: The Joni Letters. (Kitchell also sings on “All I Want” on the Amazon and ex-U.S. iTunes versions of the album.)
“Herbie encouraged me as far as improvising goes and gave me the nod to go ahead and experiment,” Kitchell says. “If he thinks I’m a good singer, that’s a huge compliment and a pat on the back. It made me realize, ‘Okay, I can do this.’ Each night he’d stretch out and improvise, and I’d stretch out and improvise. It was like this dance we did every night. And to do that with someone like Herbie Hancock makes you feel like you can do it with anyone.”
Not that Kitchell is lacking in admirers. Her debut album, 2006’s Words Came Back To Me, released when she was only 16, had critics falling over themselves to offer praise. “Such warm honey-textured tones, arching smoothly through shifting layers of emotion, don’t usually emerge from a 16-year-old,” raved the Los Angeles Times. The Washington Post noted that her jazz and folk-laced debut “reveals Kitchell’s great promise without once betraying her age.” Other critics were as impressed with her songwriting as remarkable as her voice; Jazz Times called them “remarkable treatises on life and love.” People magazine summed it up presciently: “Sonya Kitchell is destined for great things.”
This Storm was recorded with Grammy Award-winning producer Malcolm Burn (Daniel Lanois, Peter Gabriel, Emmylou Harris) after her tour with Hancock ended. “I wanted the experience to be the kind of thing where we all sat down with these songs and let them grow and unfold and become creatures on their own,” Kitchell says of her time in the studio. “And that’s exactly what happened.” With Kitchell on electric and acoustic guitar and Burn on bass, the two were joined by multi-instrumentalist Brad Barr and his brother, drummer Andrew Barr (both of the band The Slip), at Burn’s home studio in upstate New York. In this comfortable setting, Burn drew remarkably deep vocal performances out of Kitchell, setting off the classic feel of her songwriting with his thoroughly modern production, which layered dry vocals over a wide-spectrum bed of multi-tracked guitars and mysterious sounds. It’s an album where every part and sonic nuance exists for a reason.
“I want people to feel excited when they hear the album,” Kitchell says. “That ecstatic, elated feeling you get when something is so good that it makes you want to listen to it over and over again. I hope to create music that has as much of an effect on others as artists like Joni Mitchell, The Beatles, Janis Joplin, and Leonard Cohen had on me. I know that’s setting the bar very, very high – but that’s my goal.”
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www.youtube.com/sonyakitchell

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 3/21/2005
Band Members:
HOMETOWN Northampton, Massachusetts
URL sonyakitchell.com
MANAGEMENT Jeff Krasno Velour Music Group Bryna Gootkind Velour Music Group
BOOKING Ron Kaplan Monterey International
PRESS Nick Baily Shorefire Media
LABEL Sean Hoess Velour Music Group David McDonagh Decca Label Group
DESIGN Josh Coyle GRP82


Sonya Kitchell
This Storm
2008

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Sonya Kitchell
Words Came Back To Me
2006

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Sonya Kitchell
Cold Day
2005

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iTunes
Influences:
Type of Label: Major

My Blog

Istanbul

I had a lovely day off in Istanbul, spent with my mom and her friendNancy. My mom has always wanted to go to Istanbul and managed in away only my mother can, to figure out how to make a two week trip ...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Mon, 28 Jul 2008 12:31:00 PST

France

Exploring the streets of Vienne, FranceNîme Festival, Vinnie ColaiutaLionelleDave HollandPeople at the Paris ShowThe Venue in Vienne...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Thu, 17 Jul 2008 01:01:00 PST

US Canada Dates

Flying into Vancouver... Concert HallMy favorite part of the night: sitting by the side of the stage,looking out at the captive silent audience as Herbie plays MaidenVoyage and the notes ricochet thro...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Tue, 15 Jul 2008 01:55:00 PST

Time off at Point Reyes, CA

After Brazil and before I began the summer tour with Herbie we allhad a week off. Since I currently have no home, I went up to Marin,CA to visit my very dear friends and old band members John Shannona...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Fri, 11 Jul 2008 10:32:00 PST

Sao Paulo, Brazil

Sao Paulo, Brazil Milton Nascimento - one night we went to go see a Milton Nascimento concert in a small club in Sao Paulo. I had been a little down because the weather was cold and gray, and we wer...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Wed, 09 Jul 2008 02:46:00 PST

Letters from the road.

I write to you now from the road, as we barrel down a highway somewhere in Portugal. The grass is yellow and wind blown. Scraggly trees line the fields and the sun beats down hot. I've been on the roa...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Mon, 07 Jul 2008 02:46:00 PST

A New Year

A new year has rolled 'round, yet again, and I often find when I look back, magnitudes have occurred, change has been abundant, and still some things seem like yesterday and some things are still very...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Tue, 15 Jan 2008 07:48:00 PST

Herbie Hancock Tour and The Wisdom of Wayne Shorter

The night ended with laughter, six people in a small yellow Italian restaurant. The tour had come to a close and everyone was tired, but outwardly content. We had just finished taping a segment live a...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Mon, 26 Nov 2007 08:45:00 PST

What is it? Whats going on?

I'm listening to songs of Leonard Cohen, my black cat curled at my feet, in a room that will soon no longer be my own. Candlelight and dying orchids sit beside my bed. Everyone else is asleep& finally...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Wed, 12 Sep 2007 09:17:00 PST

Barcelona

A day in Barcelona...I woke up and was so tired I wanted to stay in the dark of my room and hide from the world. "Please, just a few hours," but no, I was in Barcelona, and one cannot stay in their ro...
Posted by Sonya Kitchell on Tue, 12 Jun 2007 03:15:00 PST