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Chalee
Tennison
Chalee
Tennison's voice is pure country - strong, soulful, cool and
tender yet tough as the Texas roadhouses where she forged her
musical style. Her early influences ran heavily towards church
hymn-singing and Tammy Wynette. But in a household with four
brothers and sisters, everything from Ronnie Milsap and Elvis
to ZZ Top, Karen Carpenter and Three Dog Night was just as likely
to be heard booming from some sibling's bedroom door.
Add
to that mix nearly a decade fronting her own band-learning to
accommodate the wildly diverse musical tastes for which Texans
are famous - as she discovered and developed a dramatically
distinctive voice of her own, and a clear picture of Chalee
Tennison, 1999, begins to emerge.
On
her self-titled debut album, Chalee shows a commanding vocal
presence and emotional depth to stand her in the company of
country's greatest singers, while still informed by the sensibilities
and brilliance of the full range of musical giants who have
preceded her. Capturing the timelessness of tradition in a cutting-edge,
contemporary context, Chalee Tennison is poised as the perfect
artist to lead country music into the 21st century. A real country
singer delivering real country songs.
Chalee
sings straight from the heart with disarming candor and conviction,
and she's not afraid to lay squarely on the table for all to
see both the trials and triumphs of her own 29 years of living.
There are no cute little ditties here. This is passion and profession
from a woman who has lived what she sings.
A
single mother of three children--ages 12, 7 and 3--Chalee is
open and upfront in talking about the turmoil of three marriages.
And it's that same honest self-revelation that gives her and
her songs power as well as tenderness, both etched with the
lines of living, loving, losing and winning that mark the heart
of every human being.
"I
have to really believe a song personally before I can sing it,"
Chalee says. "I looked not only for great songs for this
album, but songs that I also found a deep emotional connection
with. If it touches me, I know I can touch other people with
it as well.
The album's first single, "Someone Else's Turn To Cry,"
co-written by Chalee, is unapologetically autobiographical as
she wraps a performance--both sensitive and soaring-- around
what she describes as a "song of personal victory."
It is an anthem of self-worth and awakening.
"This
came one day near the end of my last marriage, when I was looking
at myself in the mirror, crying," says Chalee. "But
something had changed in me. For the first time I said to myself,
it's time to head down a different road. And in a matter of
seconds, there were no more tears. It was one of those rare
moments in life of real transition. It felt like finding an
old friend who'd been lost for years. And that old friend was
me.
"l've
made some mistakes and bad choices, and I've paid for them,
but I've also gained a lot of wisdom in the process," she
says. "But through it all I've never lost this tremendous
need to sing for people. If someone's sad, I want to make them
happy. I want to fix a life...fix a marriage. I wasn't very
good at it myself, but I believe I can help other people who
are struggling or hurting just by letting them know they're
not the first one to go through what they're going through,
or to feel what they're feeling. There's great comfort just
in knowing you're not alone."
"And
I hope I could be a role model to other women...to let them
know that if you've done everything in your power to love someone
and make a relationship work, and it just doesn't, then it's
OK to be on your own. It's OK to be a single mom. You can make
it, and you have nothing to be ashamed of."
Stand-outs
on Chalee Tennison abound. "I Let Him Get Away With
It" is simmering country soul driven with the perfect touch
of rock muscle. "I Can Feel You Drifting" is a classic
ballad with a plaintive fiddle echoing the melancholy of Chalee's
heart-on-her-sleeve admission of dying love. "It Ain't
So Easy" is a kicking country/rocker where a sassy and
defiant Chalee gives an errant old flame a taste of his own
medicine.
"Just
Because She Lives There" is an aching saga of a marriage
gone cold. And though that's sadly familiar terrain for Chalee,
she admits she still can't give up on love. "Some days
I feel certain that I'11 never marry again," she says,
"but I love to love, and to be loved deeply. I wouldn't
be honest if I said I'11 never fall in love again. I'd hate
to have to go through life without that."
"There's A War In Me" is a riveting narrative of the
battle between decisiveness and uncertainty that's as old as
love itself, while "Sometime" serves up country in
a rock-solid pocket that acknowledges a tinge of regret even
as a neglected lover finally puts her foot down. "I'd Rather
Miss You" is an emotional ballad, colored with wistful
fiddles and a towering electric guitar, and "Go On"
offers some tough-edged blues as Chalee issues a faded love
an assertive, in-your-face invitation to just call it quits.
Chalee grew up in and around central Texas. A musically gifted
child, she spent much of her young life singing__hymns with
her mother and two sisters around the house, in church and at
family get-togethers, all the while harboring dreams far beyond
her small-town roots. "I always held onto the dream of
making my life in music," says Chalee. "I had to put
it on the back burner for a while, but I never gave it up. And
it never was about ego. Music was just in me. Singing was all
I ever wanted to do.
In
between she worked to support herself and her family. "I've
worked a lot of different jobs, mostly dealing with people and
those experiences have enabled me to see life from other view
points." Of those jobs, none could have been more insightful
than the year she worked as a guard at a maximum security prison
for women.
Chalee
first visited Nashville in 1996. A l0-song CD she had recorded
made its way to Sony/Tree music publishing and into the hands
ofproducer Jerry Taylor. Blown away with the then-unknown Texas
songstress, Taylor began using her to record songwriter demos.
Chalee commuted between Texas and Nashville from late 1997 into
the summer ofB8. Industry interest and excitement about her
grew steadily over those months, leading to her signing with
Asylum and her relocation--with her three children--to Nashville.
Standing
at that magical moment where dreams and reality merge, Chalee
Tennison is a woman at peace with the past and excited about
the promise of tomorrow.
"Knowing
what I do today, there would definitely be things I would have
done differently," Chalee says, "but I'm finally happy
with myself and with life. And I wouldn't be this person if
I hadn't gone through everything I have. Where I am today is
the result of everywhere I've been. There's no point--and no
time--for should-have-been or could-have- been. Life's -in front
of me, and that's where I'm headed."
biography
courtesy of BNA records
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