Karyn Paige
Oakland, California, United States | SELF
Music
Press
Karyn Paige may not be a household name yet, but in the words of Jimi Hendrix, “but you will, heh heh”. Paige is a Bay Area vocalist who is looking forward to making the 10's her decade, and she’s about to spark the movement with the release of her debut single “Want To”, which she is releasing for free on her website at KarynPaige.com. Paige says she wants the world to dance to her music, just as she did with some of her influences, including Prince and Michael Jackson. As she makes moves to the ears and hearts of fans, she has already performed with Lyrics Born, Chali2na, and even Stevie Wonder, which is good company to be with.
Forthcoming projects from her include the digital-only The KP EP, and the full-length Hola Mademoiselle, due out this fall, said to feature a diverse bland of pop, R&B, new wave, soul, and funk. New wave used to be “white people music”, but as many discover and rediscover what Prince did with it in the late 70's and early 80's, it’s allowing people to take it and twist it into their own worlds, just as Paige is doing.
Again, “Want To” will be released tomorrow as a free download at KarynPaige.com, so head there and spread the word. - This Is Book Music
Overall the KP EP’s production sounds organic and modern, very much like Prince’s latest albums. Some of the songs sounded very pop for me at first listening, but as I listened closer interesting variations in the arrangements sipped through and the whole thing grew on me. There’s a good live-feel to this EP, a lot of variations in rhythms, though always funky, within the the musical genres of boogie-disco, nu-soul, pop and r&b.
The EP is 5 songs strong and all of the tracks are of high quality. I especially like the song ”Want To” — A sweet danceable funky thang. Sounds a lot like a late Prince quality track: Bouncy synth boogie! You can listen to the full song and download it for free from her homepage by clicking on the link below:
Karyn Paige is a singer straight out of the SF bay area where she among other things is doing a lot of good work with the bay’s own Jazzmafia. The KP EP is a result of a cooperation between her and producers Matt Berkeley and Joe Bagale, which she’s also playing together with in the band Supertaster. The EP features appearances by Aima the Dreamer (The Mamaz, J-Boogie’s Dubtronic Science), Steve Bradley (No Doubt) and Joe Bagale.
- Ultra Funk Mag
Karyn Paige isn’t the only California Gurl who is turning a golden state disposition into sunny pop this summer, but her debut EP The KP EP is a solid challenger for my soundtrack.
I posted about Karyn’s debut single “Want To” back in July which kicks off her 5-song EP (self released on August 31st and available from her website). I said that “Want To” recalls Prince as well as Jam and Lewis.
Paige, assisted by Jazz Mafia compatriots Joe Bagale and Matt Berkeley, has continued to wear her affinity for the Minneapolis Sound. The electro stew of instruments includes buzzy synths, funky, percussive distorted guitars and frantic 808 beats on the uptempo tracks like “I Still Want to Believe” is clearly influenced by the work done at Paisley Park and Flyte Tyme. “Stay Away Tonight” is stripped down to a rattling drum loop, piano and chorus and takes advantage of Karyn’s vocal prowess during its soaring chorus– in an earlier time she’d fit in with the stable of strong female vocalists that His Purpleness liked to surround himself with.
It wouldn’t be fair for me to let you believe that the EP is out standing in a purple rain, however.
On ”Feel Alright, Be Alright” slows things down a bit with gorgeous chiming synths, snapping clave and blue-eyed backing vocal harmonies that remind me of the best moments of 80's synth pop greats like ABC or Spandau Ballet. When Karyn sings “Everything will be all right, feel alright… no frustration…” we are already smiling and nodding along. The quick and soft flow of Karyn’s rap that recalls Bahamadia is a great touch to this song and shows skills we could stand to hear more of.
The EP closer “Big Top” takes a snap-step-and-spin Motown rhythm and adds a pumping Talking Book electric piano to Karyn’s soaring circus warning. “Look out! There’s a Big Top up ahead.. Remember everything the ringleader said… you know you want to run away with the circus… don’t look back on yesterday…”
You can download this little bit of sunshine from Karyn Paige’s website for $4.95.
Click Here to listen to “Want To” by Karyn Paige from The KP EP as well as her upcoming full length Hola Mademoiselle.
Click Here to visit Karyn Paige’s website and sign up for her mailing list
Click Here to visit Karyn Paige’s Facebook Fanpage - Play B-Sides
Not for nothing was Karyn Paige voted the most fashionable student in her eighth-grade class. At 27, she still lives up to the title: boutique dresses, lace leggings, Cleopatra eye shadow, studded bracelets with rhinestones. Two years ago she was working in the corporate world, shopping at H&M, and trying to balance a nine-to-five with her singing gigs. At a certain point, the office job just got in the way. Even Paige's supervisor could see it coming, and the singer said their breakup was mutual. She had to shift most of her energy into music, and the rest into, well, just being fabulous.
And it worked. Paige just released her first disc, The KP EP. Conceived with a little help from drummer Joe Bagale and keyboardist Matt Berkeley, it's a bumptious, good-timey romp through the whole gamut of Eighties-era pop styles: new wave, chunky industrial, bubbly electro, minimalist funk, and girly piano love ballads. Paige even recruited a few seven-year-old backup singers for "I Still Wanna Believe" to give the song its nursery-rhyme quality. It's an interesting twist for a reformed musical theater geek who once suffered from crippling stage fright. Paige's friends accuse her of self-reinvention. But the singer insists she always had an inner-material girl.
In fact, The KP EP is the culmination of a life spent listening to, and successfully emulating, styles from every sect of the pop ecosystem. It's also a sign that Paige finally overcame her natural disposition. "I'm a goody two-shoes," she said during a recent interview, casting her eyes demurely downward. Born in Vancouver, she grew up mostly in Union City. As a kid, Paige internalized the Eighties-pop trifecta (Prince, Michael Jackson, Madonna) and the soundtrack from Rent. She learned by ear and sang mostly in her bedroom. "I always knew I could sing, but I was really shy," she said. Moreover, she was self-conscious about having an unusually high-pitched, kewpie-doll voice. "When I was younger I tried to sound lower — both singing and talking," she said. "Because I thought people would take it more seriously if I didn't sound like a Munchkin." It wasn't until her junior year of high school that Paige came to terms with her vocal timbre, and worked up the nerve to audition for a student choir. It was a wrap. Once onstage, she couldn't get off. It turned out she loved hamming it up in front of an audience. What she lacked in volume, she made up for in range. Her voice is pliant — high and sweet when she's happy, husky when she's tired or blue. Not surprisingly, she consolidated her career in the jazz and soul worlds before waxing retro.
Paige went to San Francisco State University as a prospective theater major, but wound up in the gender studies department instead. Upon graduating she moved to Oakland, got a job as a receptionist, and joined a pub band called Groovus. She showed obvious promise as a singer and got steady work, despite a tendency to undersell herself. Then, in 2008, her big break came along when Jazz Mafia bandleader Adam Theis asked her to sing in his Brass, Bows, & Beats hip-hop symphony. Paige wrote her own vocal parts, singing in tandem with Bagale, Rich Armstrong, and Chris McGee. In the months leading up to the symphony's debut, she got more and more caught up in rehearsals and late-night recording sessions. She found the show-biz lifestyle addictive. Leaving the straight world was risky, she said, but it turned out to be an auspicious move. The gig fairy smiled on Paige, who currently sings with several different bands — among them Groovus, the Jazz Mafia offshoot Supertaster, and Bagale's funk outfit — in addition to doing session work with rapper Lyrics Born and Crown City Rockers drummer Max McVeety. She spent the last seven months holed up with Bagale and Berkeley in a studio, recording the EP. Paige set the tone and wrote the lyrics, while Bagale and Berkeley composed the music and handled most of the instruments (with a little help from percussionist Nino Moschella and trumpeter Stephen Bradley, among other guests). By now, the three of them have worked together so long that they poach from each other mercilessly. Bagale even lifted a lyric from Paige's song "Want To" and used it as the name of his current band, The Fantastic Fabulous.
In some ways, The KP EP is very much a product of its time. Many of us are fascinated with nostalgia-based trends. We like the lo-fi, metallic sound of new wave music. We like old gear -- archaic drum machines, MPCs, analog synths, snares and clap-claps. We brought back leggings, rhinestones, spikes, asymmetrical haircuts, the color pink. Paige caught the retro bug and embraced it. She rediscovered Hilltop Mall. She asked her stylist to give her a layered David Bowie look. She fantasizes about being reborn in the Eighties and out-styling everyone else. She sings "Want To" in a husky come-hither that could have earned tons of radio play in 1984. If you don't hear the Prince influence, you're not listening.
Yet there's also a personal side to this disc, particularly evident in the second track, "Stay Away Tonight." Every time I hit your cell, I never get an answer, Paige sings in a voice that sounds almost wounded. In subsequent verses, she begs, pleads, bats her eyes, and tries to bribe an absent lover, alternating these promises with lines about loneliness and regret. As torch songs go, it's fairly innocuous, but we still get a glimpse of the shy girl who's afraid of getting turned down.
Paige says she's managed to get those two sides of her personality to coexist. And she rejects the allegation that she's a living Cinderella story, transformed, overnight, from a corporate square to a budding pop star. When another singer asked how she did it, Paige scoffed. "The diva was always there," she said. - East Bay Express
Discography
The KP EP (2010)
"Want To" - Single
"Stay Away Tonight" - Single
Photos
Bio
Born in Canada and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, California, Karyn Paige has been surrounded by music her whole life. Staring at a Michael Jackson poster through the bars in her crib, she grew up hearing her father’s vinyl records of Stevie Wonder, Miles Davis, the Isley Brothers and the O’Jays.
While shy as a child, Karyn started to gain confidence through music and at 10 was singing along with Mary J. Blige’s “What’s the 411?” album and was introduced to early hip-hop and R&B such as Jodeci and TLC.
It was during her freshman year of high school that Karyn would discover she had a benign tumor on her brain stem. The doctors removed the tumor, but the process left her legally blind. As traumatic an experience as it was it motivated Karyn to stop being shy and pursue her dreams of singing on stage in front of people.
She joined the choir and began to audition for plays and musicals, getting cast in everything she tried out for.
Choosing Theater as her major at San Francisco State University, Karyn became disillusioned with the theater scene and decided to audition for local bands instead. Just as in High School Karyn got everything she auditioned for and felt a renewed sense of motivation to continue pursuing her goals.
It wasn’t long before Karyn would connect with Joe Bagale, Adam Theis and Jazz Mafia; a local Bay Area collective comprised of talented and diverse musicians who played live regularly in the San Francisco music scene. Karyn fit right in and was soon living her dream of performing on stage in front of people.
Developing her own unique style and sound, Karyn started to create a very girly, synthed-out electro R & B vibe. Influenced over the years by groups like Blondie and the B-52’s, Karyn cites Prince, Michael Jackson and Madonna as her biggest inspirations.
When asked who she would compare herself to Karyn responds with 80’s TV Icons, Denise Huxtable (The Cosby Show) and Punky Brewster. “I like the way they always did what they wanted, even if it wasn’t conventional.”
It’s this rebellious and sassy attitude that has helped to make Karyn Paige as unique and original as her musical idols.
Having worked with Producers of Mariah Carey, Toni Braxton and the Pussycat Dolls, Karyn is as professional as they come. From session work as a backup singer to performing as lead vocalist with the Jazz Mafia, her talents have given her the opportunity to share the stage with Bay Area Icon Lyrics Born as well as Musical Legend, Stevie Wonder.
Karyn Paige’s EP, titled “The KP EP”, is an eclectic collection of songs as unique and diverse as the singer herself while maintaining a common thread of sensuality and strength derived from Karyn’s powerful and melodic voice.
Produced by Joe Bagale and Matt Berkeley, the EP reflects the style and confidence of seasoned musicians but maintains a flair of energy and groove that cannot be denied.
Inspired by love and the strength of other women, like her mother, who stand up for themselves against adversity, Karyn Paige looks to a future full of endless possibilities and more dreams to fulfill.
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