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Billy
Gilman
One Voice
His
voice exuding infectious enthusiasm, Billy Gilman is talking
about his goals. "All I really want is to sing my best
and make the audience happy." Spoken like a born entertainer.
And ifthere's anyone these days who qualifies for that description
it's Gilman. A performer since age seven, Billy, with the release
of his Epic-Nashville debut, One Voice, is now, at a ripe twelve
years old, a recording artist to be reckoned with.
Billy
burst onto the music scene with a show-stopping performance
that resulted in a standing ovation at the recent Academy of
Country Music Awards. "It was a life- altering experience,"
he told music legend Dick Clark backstage.
When
his debut single "One Voice" entered the Billboard
chart, the B7" powerhouse edged out Brenda Lee to become
the youngest person ever to have a song on the magazine's Country
Singles Chart. The "One Voice" music video, an emotional,
deeply moving clip, became a top request the very week it hit
the ainvaves.
An
album of immediate appeal and remarkable assurance, One Voice
is in fact the culmination of the young musician's earliest
dreams. The 11 cuts were delivered by the triple-strength production
crew of David Malloy (Reba McEntire, Eddie Rabbit), Don Cook
(Brooks & Dunn, Lonestar) and Blake Chancey (Dixie Chicks).
Yet the voice - and what a voice - is all Billy's own. From
the inspirational message of the title track and first single
to the danceable zest of "Little Bitty Pretty One,"
from a high-energy remake of Sixties classic "Little Things"
to the uplifting dynamism of "There's a Hero," this
is music that instantly engages the listener - and then lingers
in the heart and soul.
Of
his studio experience, he again waxes zealous, "It was
more than fun. It was better than any dream I've ever had."
"On stage, I can just go crazy," he says - and indeed
he's a dynamo live, a whirlwind not afraid to cut loose and
be himself- "but in the studio, you have to focus in a
different way." Whether on a ballad or a rocker, either
the timeless "What's Forever For" or Bobby Braddock's
ode to love gone wrong "The Snake Song," Billy delivered
- and it's a an unforgettable voice, strong, supple and of crystalline
clarity.
And
it's a true reflection of Billy Gilman. A rare combination of
intimidating talent and genuine boyish charm (Norman Rockwell
could have painted his portrait), Billy is that unusual phenomenon
- a natural. "At school, for Show 'n' Tell, the other kids
would bring in comic book stuff or science projects," he
says. "I'd always sing." While in recent months the
singer has enjoyed his television debut on TNN, meeting with
the impressive likes of Dolly Parton and Dixic Chicks, and sharing
stages with George Strait and Tim McGraw, his upbringing is
decidedly down-home, emphatically small-town American.
Raised
outside Providence in the tree-lined neighborhoods of Hope Valley,
Rhode Island, Billy grew up listening to pure country. "Tammy
Wynette, George Jones, Eddie Arnold, all the classics,"
he lists, of the records his grandparents played. Interesting
fare for a New England youngster, but it was the emotional singing
style of country's classic performers, he says, that hooked
him.
His mother and father, while delighted with their son's gift
and supportive of his efforts from the start, are hardly stereotypical
stage-struck parents hovering in the wings, egging him on. "No,
Billy says with a chuckle. "I always say that they're not
bringing me into the music business, I'm bringing them."
Through
a series of introductions, Ray Senson, of the legendary Asleep
at the Wheel, became one of Billy's guiding lights. Ray recorded
a demo with Billy in Austin, Texas and then introduced him to
the Nashvile scene. "He's a tall guy," Billy says,
"but to me it's like he's 10 feet tall" -- and it's
obvious that the boy is speaking not only about Ray's height
but how large the man figures in Billy's estimation.
One
Voice, then, is his musical calling card - a kind of passport
to the life of music making he's long envisioned "I can't
remember when I didn't want to sing," he says. "This
is what I've always dreamed of."
And,
whether it's a TV appearance with Rosie O'Donnell, a Grand Ole
Opry performance, his first Fan Fair or recording a future Christmas
album, Billy is ready. One gem on his album boasts a title that
could serve as an apt description for his drive: "I Wanna
Get to Ya."
The
odds are overwhelming that Biily Gilman will succeed. An expressive,
delightful, articulate and powerful vocalist with a dynamic
stage presence, he possesses qualities rarely reserved for a
young man of Billy's years. The challenge is not to justify
Those qualities but to embrace them and present them in a way
that honors his talent, dreams and ambitions.
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