Lucy Bonilla
| Established. Jan 01, 2014
Music
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Soundline.ca
Canada’s Newest Music Magazine
LUCY BONILLA EPK Review
By RACHELLE FORD
Staff Writer
Amazing, and powerful. That’s how I would describe the vocals coming out Lucy Bonilla.
One would think she was part of a choir in a sweaty church in some southern state. It is full of soul, and is raspy yet beautiful.
She has an abundant amount life experience behind her strong lyrics. Every note is harmonious and flows into the next.
The songs by Lucy Bonilla have a wonderful jazzy blues feel to them. She belts out some notes like a mellow Janis Joplin. The songs on her website are fresh and modern, with an elegance about them. Just listening to her sing gives me empowerment.
Her style is smooth and gentle, predictable, yet in a comforting way. Imagine dining out at a luxurious restaurant with round tables. Romantic, and relaxing. Or maybe she would rather be sitting on a lone stool holding her microphone as she meets the eyes on those in the front row. Either way, I’m sure it would be a wonderful experience to see her in action.
Rock Meets Jazz.
Lucy Bonilla has a refreshing approach in her singing. This is not my usual taste of music, but it’s great feeling the normality of the sound. Everyone everywhere, who has heard any type of jazz or blues will be able to relate to the sound, who knows maybe even share them with friends. So stop by her website and give her music a listen, trust me it’s worth every minute.
- soundline magazine
“On Saturday night in the [Bank St] Café, Brooklyn vocalist Lucy Bonilla sings. With diverse but Roman- candle vocal heroics, Bonilla creatively and movingly infuses all manners of blues, soul and folk. She's an amazing talent.” - Rick Koster,
"...she sounds like a sweaty, 300-pound Louisiana gospel singer... " - J Paul
“On Saturday night in the [Bank St] Café, Brooklyn vocalist Lucy Bonilla sings. With diverse but Roman- candle vocal heroics, Bonilla creatively and movingly infuses all manners of blues, soul and folk. She's an amazing talent.” - Rick Koster,
There’s that moment when a talented but struggling artist begins to see the light at the end of the tunnel – or the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. For Lucy Bonilla that moment could be right now. After all, she has an excellent new CD out called “The Big Picture.” She’s touring in new and bigger venues. She’s expanding her base from her hometown of Brooklyn to the tri-state area. And she’s even getting a regional magazine or two to do a cover story on her!
Lucy will be back in Connecticut this month singing the blues at Black Eyed Sally’s in Hartford on January 28th and Stash’s Café in New London on January 29th. Many will see her for the first time and be blown away by this beautiful, petite woman with the powerhouse vocals. On stage she can get down and dirty for one song, sexy and sensual for the next tune, and rock the house after that. Her songs are personal and intimate portraits and her band sizzles.
I talked to Lucy by phone around the end of November. We discovered that we have one very cool thing in common. We both come from families of nine children where there were seven girls and two boys. Lucy is the baby in her family.
BH – Did you come from a musical family?
LB – “No but most people in my family have some artistic flair. I had a couple of sisters who played some wind instruments in the high school band but no one ever really pursued it beyond that. I have one sister that was a dancer and she pursued that for a while and I have a brother who was a photographer and he pursued that for a little while but nobody is as crazy and hell bent as I am.”
BH – What kind of music did you listen to growing up?
LB – “I had a couple of brothers and sisters who were into the disco era and all those forty nine piece bands that played their asses off. I also had a kind of hippy sister that was into ‘Godspell’ and ‘Jesus Christ Superstar,’ that kind of stuff. My mom would watch the gospel shows or whatever and they would have music on that and I remember watching that and hearing music. Yeah so kind of across the board I listened to everything – soul, reggae, rock.”
BH – Was there any one particular album that had an impact on you?
LB – “I can’t say one, no, because I take a little bit from so many great artists. And if it was good music I listened to it. And if it inspired me to do something then that was great.”
BH – When was the first time you sang for an audience?
LB – “Let’s see, the very first gig I did was a Bar Mitzvah and I got paid twenty-five dollars. I was fifteen years old. I was actually the drummer for some songs and then the guy who was singing and playing guitar would switch and play drums and I would get up and sing some of the songs. I think I sang Cyndi Lauper songs. I really can’t remember, it was whatever the kids wanted.”
BH – What about after that, through high school and into your late teens?
LB – “I was a drummer. I had an all girl band called Hard Knox. We had a lead singer and we all sang harmony, which was pretty cool. We had four part harmony. They always gave me the ridiculously high harmony.”
BH – When did you go out on your own?
LB – “Well I also played guitar, but I didn’t play guitar in a band. So I started writing my own songs in my later teens. And that’s when I started going out on my own, doing the singer/songwriter stuff.”
BH- Your first recording, “Something Out Of Nothing,” was that your first time in a studio?
LB – “It definitely was the first time I was in a studio besides little demos here and there, but yeah, that was my first.”
BH – How did that recording come about?
LB – “I had been writing a lot prior to that album and gigging around the city and I wanted to try to record and take my career to the next level. So I just put some money together and hired some musicians and did an EP because that’s what I could realistically do at the time. I guess I just did what any other musician did. I kept writing and chose the songs that I thought would be pretty good for the album and that’s how it came about.”
BH – Once the CD was out did it help your future gigs now that you had a product you could sell at your shows?
LB – “Yeah it definitely did. I sold a bunch at shows and I had used it to send to industry people and it helped me to try to get into some better situations.”
BH – Where were you mostly playing at the time?
LB – “Manhattan. I played solely in Manhattan. I did a lot of stuff at The Bitter End. I did The Bottom Line once and the Mercury Lounge. I played Arlene’s Grocery and Brownies too.”
BH- You got your website (www.lucybonilla.com) right around this time too didn’t you?
LB – “Right around the time ‘Something Out Of Nothing’ came out. (1998) I was trying to build something by getting a website, getting the CD out, getting a nice press kit together. The website has been a big help, especially with radio stations playing some of th - Bill Harriman
Lucy Bonilla has a killa voice and THAT is the secret to her success. And while her five-song EP isn't a live CD, one gets the impression the NYC artist is an absolutely electrifying live performer.
Lucy seems as if she could sing absolutely anything! Her versatility is matched by few in the industry. Funk, gospel, blues, rock, jazz, country -- you name it, she can do it. You can hear hints of all of it right on this CD.
But let's get the lyrics outta the way before anything else is said about vocals. While they aren't exactly bad, the lyrics probably wouldn't win any contests. (Commercial radio, would, however, quite possibly embrace these tunes for precisely that reason. So, maybe it's a good thing.)
"Please Please Me" opens the CD. It's a nice pop-sounding tune that settles into a really sweet groove, but it's got phrases like "come on, I can't hold on anymore," and from the chorus "please, please me baby like you do, like you doooooo..." Ironically, the phrase "words get too cliché" appears in this song. Hmmmmm.
What saves this one is the overall sound and feel. The instrumentation is well done and Lucy's voice is allowed to stay out front. The backup singers do an adequate job, but she just doesn't need them.
"...I can't watch you sleepin'. I gotta get some more of what you give... I'm crazy, boy, I'm crazy... what's a girl like me to do?" (From "Let's Get Back to Midnight") Again, basic sentiment expressed without a lot of creativity. BUT, the groove-centered, piano-driven melody -- with a soft hint of a Southern Rock band -- really gives it just the right touch.
So, enough of the lyrics. (The last two tunes, "Nobody's Man" and "Turn My Hill into a Mountain" are actually a bit better in that respect.)
As mentioned, the instrumentation and overall production are very solid. But it's Lucy's incredible golden throat that make this CD worth listening to over and over and over.
Remember the Maxell audio tape commercial where the young guy sits in his chair and his butler pops the pre-recorded tape into the stereo and the sound sweeps the guy's hair straight back? Well, that's what happens with this CD.
What kind of elements are present to make Lucy sound so great? She's got a sort of Broadway musical/cabaret quality. Powerful, controlled. Passionate and theatrical. She delivers with confidence whether high or low. She can slither and also belt out a soulful note with equal skill. You could call Lucy's the ultimate voice -- the one every musician wishes they had, all the booking agents wish they could pitch (pun intended).
Lyrix, schmyrix. Sure, wordcraft is important. But not every time. Not this time. Lucy could sing about mathematical theorems and she'd still make you feel like you'd died and gone to heaven. So pop this CD into your stereo and crank it!
- Les Reynolds
There’s that moment when a talented but struggling artist begins to see the light at the end of the tunnel – or the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. For Lucy Bonilla that moment could be right now. After all, she has an excellent new CD out called “The Big Picture.” She’s touring in new and bigger venues. She’s expanding her base from her hometown of Brooklyn to the tri-state area. And she’s even getting a regional magazine or two to do a cover story on her!
Lucy will be back in Connecticut this month singing the blues at Black Eyed Sally’s in Hartford on January 28th and Stash’s Café in New London on January 29th. Many will see her for the first time and be blown away by this beautiful, petite woman with the powerhouse vocals. On stage she can get down and dirty for one song, sexy and sensual for the next tune, and rock the house after that. Her songs are personal and intimate portraits and her band sizzles.
I talked to Lucy by phone around the end of November. We discovered that we have one very cool thing in common. We both come from families of nine children where there were seven girls and two boys. Lucy is the baby in her family.
BH – Did you come from a musical family?
LB – “No but most people in my family have some artistic flair. I had a couple of sisters who played some wind instruments in the high school band but no one ever really pursued it beyond that. I have one sister that was a dancer and she pursued that for a while and I have a brother who was a photographer and he pursued that for a little while but nobody is as crazy and hell bent as I am.”
BH – What kind of music did you listen to growing up?
LB – “I had a couple of brothers and sisters who were into the disco era and all those forty nine piece bands that played their asses off. I also had a kind of hippy sister that was into ‘Godspell’ and ‘Jesus Christ Superstar,’ that kind of stuff. My mom would watch the gospel shows or whatever and they would have music on that and I remember watching that and hearing music. Yeah so kind of across the board I listened to everything – soul, reggae, rock.”
BH – Was there any one particular album that had an impact on you?
LB – “I can’t say one, no, because I take a little bit from so many great artists. And if it was good music I listened to it. And if it inspired me to do something then that was great.”
BH – When was the first time you sang for an audience?
LB – “Let’s see, the very first gig I did was a Bar Mitzvah and I got paid twenty-five dollars. I was fifteen years old. I was actually the drummer for some songs and then the guy who was singing and playing guitar would switch and play drums and I would get up and sing some of the songs. I think I sang Cyndi Lauper songs. I really can’t remember, it was whatever the kids wanted.”
BH – What about after that, through high school and into your late teens?
LB – “I was a drummer. I had an all girl band called Hard Knox. We had a lead singer and we all sang harmony, which was pretty cool. We had four part harmony. They always gave me the ridiculously high harmony.”
BH – When did you go out on your own?
LB – “Well I also played guitar, but I didn’t play guitar in a band. So I started writing my own songs in my later teens. And that’s when I started going out on my own, doing the singer/songwriter stuff.”
BH- Your first recording, “Something Out Of Nothing,” was that your first time in a studio?
LB – “It definitely was the first time I was in a studio besides little demos here and there, but yeah, that was my first.”
BH – How did that recording come about?
LB – “I had been writing a lot prior to that album and gigging around the city and I wanted to try to record and take my career to the next level. So I just put some money together and hired some musicians and did an EP because that’s what I could realistically do at the time. I guess I just did what any other musician did. I kept writing and chose the songs that I thought would be pretty good for the album and that’s how it came about.”
BH – Once the CD was out did it help your future gigs now that you had a product you could sell at your shows?
LB – “Yeah it definitely did. I sold a bunch at shows and I had used it to send to industry people and it helped me to try to get into some better situations.”
BH – Where were you mostly playing at the time?
LB – “Manhattan. I played solely in Manhattan. I did a lot of stuff at The Bitter End. I did The Bottom Line once and the Mercury Lounge. I played Arlene’s Grocery and Brownies too.”
BH- You got your website (www.lucybonilla.com) right around this time too didn’t you?
LB – “Right around the time ‘Something Out Of Nothing’ came out. (1998) I was trying to build something by getting a website, getting the CD out, getting a nice press kit together. The website has been a big help, especially with radio stations playing some of th - Bill Harriman
"A woman with a voice that extends way beyond her years...
A MUST SEE FOR ALL. Her soulful voice exudes through her tiny
body like a soul sister with attitude..." - Christine Santelli
"A woman with a voice that extends way beyond her years...
A MUST SEE FOR ALL. Her soulful voice exudes through her tiny
body like a soul sister with attitude..." - Christine Santelli
Discography
I Like it
Chime
Springtime
Moments of Grace - single (top 40 FMQB radio charts)
Big Ideas - single
Something Out of Nothing
The Big Picture
Rolling Higher
Photos
Bio
Lucy Bonilla
With larger than life vocals packed into a diminutive package, Brooklyn native, Lucy Bonilla has the world wondering, "Where the *#$% does she fit all that voice?!"
Simply calling her a powerhouse doesn't do her justice. Her raw energy on stage and passionate vocals defy definition. Her shows leave you feeling fired up and ready for more.
For as long as she could remember, Lucy had a passion for music. Everything in sight was a potential instrument. If it could make noise, she had to play it. As Lucy's passion for music continued to grow and she began teaching herself to play a wide variety of instruments including drums, bass and guitar. Her main instrument of course is her voice.
Her first release, "Something Out Of Nothing," gained recognition on the college radio charts and Lucy began to create a buzz around NYC. With her second release, The Big Picture, she performed at major U.S and international music festivals and opened for artists such as Matt Guitar Murphy, 2x gold record artist Grayson Hugh, Ronnie Baker Brooks Jr., Sean Costello, and Sam Taylor. The album featured Paul Ossolo on bass (G.E. Smith Band & Buddy Guy), Jason Langley (Shemekia Copeland and many others). The album was co-written by smooth jazz artist Matt Marshak. Little Green Dress from The Big Picture was used in a national commercial for The Discovery Channel, Discovery Health and TLC.
Lucy completed her third release at The Clubhouse in Rhinebeck, NY, under the expert guidance of producer Jim Weider (The Band, Bob Dylan, Mavis Staples, Los Lobos). She also welcomed the creative writing talents of Dean Batstone, Jerry Lynn Williams (Eric Clapton) and Jim Weider (www.jimweider.com) to pen various tracks. The title track, Rolling Higher, combines Lucys feisty vocals with slick guitar licks that hearken to blues greats of yesteryear. The song You Are My Refuge, climbed the indie pop top 30 charts and Top 100 singles under the guidance of legendary radio promoter Bill Jerome.
Her 2012 single climbed to the top 40 of the FMQB national radio charts. This single beautifully balances powerful rockin and dynamic vocals with the tenderness of hope and promise.
She's very proud of her newest releases, I like it, Chime and Springtime. With promotion from 4x4 Management she's excited for this new chapter in her career. Lucy says these songs are such a reflection of the last 2 years of my life.
Over the years, Lucy's talents have not gone unnoticed. She was chosen to participate in the East Coast Advanced Songwriters Workshop. ASCAP took notice of the songwriter when she captured one of the coveted spots in ASCAP's Demo To Deal program. Lucy was also a semi-finalist in Jewel's Soul City Caf songwriting contest and has also written with Maggie Ryder (Anita Baker). She has expanded her tour grounds from Canada down the U.S East Coast.
Lucy Bonilla continues to astound audiences with her breathtaking voice, and she's glad you're with her for a musical journey that will last for years to come.
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