Liz Lee profile picture

Liz Lee

About Me


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Liz Lee’s long-awaited debut album, “The Road That Leads to You,” draws from seven years of songwriting and performing.
A singer since childhood, she didn’t begin writing her own music until after college. Inspired by Sarah McLachlan and her female-fronted music festival Lilith Fair, Liz had a feeling that she could be a songwriter if she learned how to play an instrument, so she grabbed her father’s guitar and answered an ad for guitar lessons. “After my first lesson, I felt absolutely reborn,” she recalls. “I had songs backed up in my mind, and I had to get them out. I practiced for hours everyday just to get to the point where I had enough chords to start writing songs.”
Liz soon found that synchronicity supported her efforts. On her way home from a guitar lesson one evening, she stopped for coffee on the campus of her alma mater, Emory University. “I met a woman who had an extra ticket to see Alice Walker speak that night. She offered me the ticket, and of course I accepted. Before the talk, Doria Roberts, a local singer-songwriter, performed a set. Midway through a song, the strangest thing happened—we had a fire drill, of all things. We had to evacuate the building, and I ended up standing a few feet from her. I decided to strike up a conversation with her and ask her advice on how to get started writing songs. She may not remember this conversation, but she really motivated me. Alice Walker was inspiring, of course, but I knew that this conversation with Doria was really what I came for.”
After writing a few songs and fumbling through open mics and coffee house performances, she began to steadily develop her songwriting style and warm stage presence. “I realized that what was more important than nailing a performance was connecting with my audience,” she reveals. “Getting applause is great, but what really matters if having people tell me later that they were really touched by a song—that they could really relate to it.”
Friends started asking Liz when she was going to start recording, so in the summer of 2002, she created a four-song demo with producer/singer/songwriter Mic Levine, setting the stage for her collaboration with some of Atlanta’s most talented musicians and songwriters. It was through Levine that she met Michael Wynne, who would eventually produce “The Road That Leads to You.” In addition, she found herself working with such talented local artists such as Matthew Kahler, Number 99, and Chip Houston.
After releasing her demo, Liz took the next several years to refine her writing style and round out her repertoire. “I also found lots of great ways to distract myself from recording an album,” she admits. “I got a master’s degree, went to yoga teacher training, lived in Spain for two years, came back to Atlanta, and eventually had nothing left to do BUT record.”
Even after seven years of songwriting, producer Michael Wynne encouraged Liz to consider co-writing a few songs to add new energy to the record. These writing sessions resulted in the title track as well as two ballads, “Listen to Me” and “All There Is.”
“I’m really excited about the ballads,” Liz admits. “They are such a departure from what I’ve been trying to do for years, but Michael’s intuition was right on. I think people will really like what they hear.”
What else can we expect from this album? Musically speaking, they cover a broad range of styles, touching on everything from the pop-influenced “Not Dreaming” to the rootsy Tennessee mountains-inspired title track “The Road That Leads to You.” Liz carefully chose each of these songs for its contribution to the overall idea of the album. “For me,” she says, “what draws theses songs together—lyrically and thematically--is a journey from complication to simplicity. We make up all kinds of stories for why we can’t connect with another person, but it ultimately leads back to ourselves and our willingness to be open. These songs have been my way of working toward this realization.”
Liz expects everyone to get something different from the album. “I just want people to enjoy it. Making it was such a joyful, creative experience, and I really hope that comes across in the songs.”
“The Road That Leads to You” is now available through Snocap at www.myspace.com/lizleemusic.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 19/07/2006
Band Website: www.myspace.com/lizleemusic
Band Members:
View Liz Lee's EPK
and
Dirty South TV
Sounds Like: Sarah McLachlan, Aimee Mann, Ani DiFranco, Alanis Morrissette, Dido, Natalie Merchant
Record Label: Unknown Indie
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

Shout-outs, thank yous, and downloads

Thank you so much to all who tuned in to "Live Sessions from the Dirty South" last night at www.dirtysouthtv.com. I ended up playing a much longer set than I anticipated, but it was SO much fun. I can...
Posted by on Tue, 05 Aug 2008 03:54:00 GMT

The Road That Leads to You

Apparently Snocap is more than willing to put up individual tracks in no time, but they take, comparatively, a geologic age to put up an album. That said, my individual tracks are up...in alphabetica...
Posted by on Wed, 09 Jan 2008 13:36:00 GMT

Manifestation

As I've been packing to move into my new house, I've also embarked on an archeological dig through the strata of the last several years of my life. In the layer of things pertaining to my Europea...
Posted by on Mon, 19 Nov 2007 20:54:00 GMT

Being me

It was one of the first times I had sung in front of an audience. I was seven years old, and it was time for the spring recital organized by my teacher, Mr. Wajner. I stood in front of a sea of p...
Posted by on Sun, 08 Jul 2007 07:38:00 GMT

I'm finally recording!

It's almost unreal, but now it's moving along so fast. A year ago, when I was preparing to leave Barcelona to come back to Atlanta, a job popped up for me before I even set foot in Georgia. "It's...
Posted by on Tue, 08 May 2007 21:33:00 GMT