Happy is a ever morphing project consisting of the songs of Sherry-Lee Wisor and the rapturous playing of gorgeous musicians that she somehow wrangled into her bands... we play pop sets under 'happy' and roots stuff under the name 'Sherry-Lee and her Handsome Fellas'... it began in November 2007. We've released one E.P., and a full length record is in the works...
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____PRESS:Happy-go-lucky Wisor starting to turn heads
EDMONTON JOURNALSavvy singer using Internet to get messages across to growing fan baseBy Francois Marchand
July 22, 2009Sherry-Lee Wisor has put together her own band, Happy, after years of playing in other groups.JournalSherry-Lee Wisor's latest musical endeavour may as well have been named "Lucky."The seasoned veteran, who for the past 15 years has provided her bass-playing skills to the likes of Jr. Gone Wild, Old Reliable, Carolyn Mark and Po'Girl, is now carving her own path with her band Happy, and the release of a debut EP, Kiss. Bang!But Happy and its Appalachian, foot-stamping, bittersweet folk-pop are getting much more than just a dutiful nod from the local scene. Wisor, 37, is fast becoming a household name in Italy--where her European label handles Happy's digital distribution-- and also turning heads in important U. S. centres New York City and Seattle, where her publicity agent is located.To top it off, a licensing agency out of Burbank, Calif., that takes care of song placement in television, advertising and movies has already added Happy's songs to its catalogue."If my daughter could hear one of my songs on Ugly Betty or Smallville, that would be it--she could die happy," Wisor chuckles."Actually," she adds, whispering, "I like those shows too."Wisor admits much of the ideas for distributing her music and giving Happy more exposure have stemmed from the Internet, from where suggestions and invitations have come pouring in."I don't sit here with a business plan and a list of contacts to call every day," she admits. "But I do have a 'yes' philosophy and I very much believe in the power of intuition. (The licensing company) wanted a Leslie Feist-ish, Joni Mitchell-y kind of voice and I signed a deal with them. It's just another conduit to get my music out there."Kiss. Bang! is a logical extension of Wisor's musical direction throughout her career, which has taken her from punk to folk to pop and back."I always knew that I would put a band together," Wisor explains. "Along the way, I picked up certain things. In Po' Girl, they had a Wurlitzer piano and I just loved that sound so much--I knew when I had my band that the Wurlitzer would be in there. I knew that I loved real, raw guitar and an evil kind of influence underneath. And I knew that I loved pop music--the major scale and those pretty melodies."So the Wurlitzer brings a pop sound, and the evil, driving guitar balances out the sweet melodies --I don't want to come across as too bubblegummy. I like to surf the sweet and sour."The poppier aspect of Happy's music is also often counter-balanced by a stark, weary outlook on life and storylines that aren't afraid to send you up and down and up again.On one song, Wisor talks about recovering from an illness through the eyes of a cat ( Seven) while on another she takes the experience of almost being hit by a train in the dead of night and turns it into a metaphor for anger management ( Malta Train).Ultimately, the songs usually conclude on a similar note--when the dust has settled, it's OK to be happy."There's a lot of guilt that goes along with being happy," she says. "For me, at least, when you're happy, there's always the knowledge that there's people really suffering. We're in the eye of a hurricane here in a lot of ways. But I believe everybody has the right to happiness, and if we're not happy, we can't spread happiness around."© Copyright (c) The Edmonton Journal
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____Sherry-Lee’s Happy PlaceThe veteran local musician emerges as a pop songwriter par excellence on her Kiss. Bang.SEE MAGAZINE,
Published July 9, 2009 by Paul Matwychuk in Music FeatureWith musicians, sometimes you have to watch yourself even when you’re paying them a compliment. You just never know: that band you’re telling them they sound like just might be their idea of everything wrong with the music industry. So it’s with enormous trepidation that I tell singer/songwriter Sherry-Lee Wisor that “Seven,†the peppy slice of power pop that concludes her band Happy’s new EP Kiss. Bang., reminds me of the songs that Kay Hanley from Letters to Cleo performed on the soundtrack to Josie and the Pussycats. As soon as the words are out of my mouth, I regret them. I mean, could I have chosen a more out-of-left-field comparison? And my God, what musician would be flattered to hear that the album they’ve poured their heart and soul into sounds like a girl group from an animated cartoon?Well, Sherry-Lee Wisor, for one. “I love that soundtrack so much!†she says. “I think the songs are so brilliant! That’s a huge compliment — to me, that’s pop songwriting at its epitome.â€Bullet dodged! And to be fair, Kiss. Bang. offers a lot more than just bubblegum pop pleasures. I could just as easily have talked to Wisor about the songs that reminded me of the hard-bitten country-folk of Lucinda Williams, or the droll jazz-pop of Rickie Lee Jones. Wisor calls her sound “original Canadian pop goodness (for the people),†and while she’s only really been writing songs in earnest since 2003, she’s been soaking up influences for two decades as a fixture on the Edmonton music scene. She started out playing bass in Evelyn Tremble, and put in time with a long succession of other local bands too: Jr. Gone Wild, Hookahman, The Mike McDonald Band, Po’ Girl, The Bodkins.“There were all these great musicians in The Bodkins,†she recalls, “and the rule was that everyone who came into the band had to bring three songs for themselves to sing. Mike McDonald was in there, Terry Cox, Luann Kowalek — and they were all very, very different songwriters stylistically. The first rehearsal was just, ‘Oh my God, how are we going to do this?’ But eventually it became a cohesive thing — all these disparate sounds wound up creating a cohesive sound, and I think the same thing happened with Happy.â€Wisor wrote all the material herself, honing it during her regular gig hosting the open stage at The Rose Bowl, and songs like “Like Quicksand†and “Malta Train†have a breezy sophistication that does not sound like the work of a first-timer. Indeed, she says the only hurdle she had to overcome to become a songwriter was psychological, not technical.“I think the challenge was to get to a place where I felt free enough to express myself,†she says, “to do something over and over again enough times that the mechanics are no longer in your way and you can just be while you’re doing it. I’ve never proclaimed myself to be a technically great player, but I do bring a great energy. I get a lot of joy from playing — it’s a very visceral experience for me.“The EP’s called Kiss. Bang., which is kind of a reference to my romantic tendencies. I’ve recently gotten out of a pretty torrential marriage, so a lot of that is reflected in it — a lot of it is about being single after that kind of situation. But it’s not a ‘settling scores’ kind of record. I always try to take something positive out of everything and understand things from all angles. That first song, ‘Like Quicksand,’ is targeted equally at me as it is the guy who’s the subject of the song.â€So is Sherry-Lee Wisor literally in a happy place? “I am happy!†she says. “I’m sad that Robin Hunter [who plays guitar on the album] is leaving for Vancouver and has only two more shows with us, but I’m happy to have so many projects on the go. And I’m happy and proud that I did this album by myself — writing it, funding it — and I’m happy to be living in a musical scene that let me develop my skills.â€
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____ALBUM REVIEWS: NEW SOUNDS- HAPPYVUE WEEKLYMike Garth /
[email protected]'s debut cleverly weaves together a range of folky styles, instrumentation, tempos and lyrics. Sherry-Lee Wisor's breathy, at times near-whisper vocals are reminiscent of both Martha Wainwright and Lucinda Williams' stylings, while an accordion and B3 organ accompany the rich, yet simple and catchy, songwriting. "Fishin'" sees the group perfect its "weave," Wisor's vocals balancing the instrumentation of Robin Hunter, Graham Guest and Al Pickard beautifully. No two songs cover the exact same ground, making for a broad scope that showcases the group's wealth of songwriting prowess, as opposed to a consistent flow. Nonetheless, an impressive debut EP from one of Edmonton's finest musical collaborations.
View Happy's EPK