Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 31 July, 2007

Vanessa Van Spall: S.F. Based Confessional Singer/Songwriter Whips Up A Heartfelt, Incisive And Bittersweet 'Cotton-Poly Blend' Of Rock, Blues, Gospel And Pop On Her Indie Debut

Hot Songs Around The World

A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
418 entries in 22 charts
I Had Some Help
Post Malone & Morgan Wallen
278 entries in 21 charts
Not Like Us
Kendrick Lamar
251 entries in 20 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
529 entries in 27 charts
Too Sweet
Hozier
458 entries in 22 charts
Please Please Please
Sabrina Carpenter
233 entries in 21 charts
Good Luck, Babe!
Chappell Roan
219 entries in 17 charts
Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
358 entries in 25 charts
I Like The Way You Kiss Me
Artemas
406 entries in 26 charts
Stargazing
Myles Smith
295 entries in 18 charts
Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
727 entries in 27 charts
Tu Falta De Querer
Mon Laferte
185 entries in 3 charts
Gata Only
Floyymenor & Cris MJ
303 entries in 15 charts
Grustnyi Dens
Artik & Asti
196 entries in 2 charts
Bay Area, CA. (Top40 Charts/ Vanessa Van Spall Official Website) - Everyone knows that California's Bay Area is full of brilliant techie geeks and incredible indie musicians, but we rarely think of these two different worlds colliding. Thats about to change with the emergence of Vanessa Van Spall, a powerful confessional singer-songwriter who deferred her lifelong goal of making music to enter the lucrative (and far less risky) world of information technology.

While working in corporate project management, she won the attention of a colleague, Ian Hisert, by showing him some database tricks. By night, Hisert was a keyboardist in a popular local 80s band, and he inspired Van Spall to stop being afraid of her dreams and get working on her first album.

Joined by violin/violist Eric Golub and bassist Derek Yergler, the two began performing together at Bay Area hotspots like San Francisco's Blondies Bar & No Grill and Ireland 32 and The Bistro in Hayward. The compelling result of their eventual songwriting collaboration is Van Spall's stylistically diverse debut Cotton-Poly Blend, whose 12 tracks draw from her love for rock, blues, gospel and pop, as well as a cool mix of Hisert's lighter side with her unique dark and brooding vibe.

Save Me, the infectious, Fiona Apple-flavored first single, has an impact date of May 28 at Secondary and Tertiary Hot AC Radio stations across the country. Van Spalls bands upcoming gigs include a stop at Northgate (a church in Benicia, California) on May 26; the Contra Costa County Fair on May 31; and Twelve Galaxies in San Francisco on June 14.

Cotton-Poly Blend was produced by veteran rock drummer Atma Anur, whose extensive resume boasts work with everyone from Journey and Third Eye Blind to Richie Kotzen and David Bowie. True to the spirit of eclecticism that the album title promises, Anur adds exotic elements of Indian Bangra music to the mix.

I originally met Atma when I was 16 and was on the path of having a musical career that I always should have been on, says Van Spall, whose early musical memories include harmonizing with her friend at church at age 12. ?He encouraged me to sing back then and meant a lot in my life, but we lost touch for a long time after that. I went to college, got a degree in history from San Francisco State and got married while he moved to L.A. I didn't see him for ten years and then ran into him just as our careers were moving in similar directions. It was a great experience to work with him after all that time.

While the singer attributes her edgy, brooding side to typical artistic temperament, there is an ultimate optimism in her lyrics that gives Cotton Poly-Blend an overall feeling of optimism after a series of struggles. The title of the forward thinking, easy rocking 'Hopeful' captures that sentiment beautifully, as does 'Follow Me,' in which she sings eloquently about that point in her life when she was struggling with the dilemma of finally pursuing or giving up her dreams. Her lyrics provide heartfelt, bittersweet and piercingly incisive reflections on the ups and downs she has been through. Musically, its just like the title implies, capturing multiple moods and stylesfrom unplugged acoustic numbers to more synthesized 80s influenced songs.

This album represents the culmination of a few years worth of work, spanning a number of seasons in my life, she says. A lot of the songs were written right after my divorce. In fact, a lot of them came from a period where I was in the middle of that, while at the same time moving residences and being laid off from work. I think that all of the life experiences have made me a kinder person overall. I remember being very critical when I was younger, but time and these hard experiences mellowed me out and gave me a deeper understanding about other people.

Maybe I never should have run from my dreams, she adds, but my songs reflect a broader life experience than I had starting out at 16. I hope people can relate to that and appreciate it. This music is for anyone whos ever made mistakes, been afraid or just taken the long way to get there.

That long road was paved with a great deal of musical ambition from the get-go. The daughter of a church music minister, Van Spall who moved back to her hometown San Francisco during high school after four years in Chicago-began performing for live audiences at age 5, started piano lessons at 6 and won her first statewide songwriting competition in second grade. While she performed in musical theatre in high school, the lifelong choir singer grew disenchanted with this type of performing since I didn't like the acting part and felt it was more important to express my own voice. Thats where songwriting came in.

At 16, she recorded her first demo, which was picked up by an industry person. But somewhere between getting her drivers license and finishing college, her detour began. Afraid of failure or success or who-knows-what, she started on an alternate path of seemingly sensible choices, like getting married, finishing a degree in History, working office and corporate jobs, substitute teaching (not easy), etc. During these years, she slowly came to the realization that she wouldn't find the fulfillment she was looking for in anything other than music.

I feel like everything is falling into place for me now, and it finally feels like Im all connected, she says. Before I was putting my heart into my music career, I felt like I was at odds with myself and knew I was in the wrong place. The most gratifying thing is that I haven?t been able to pinpoint my specific audience. People come to see me who are 70 years old, and I have fans as young as four! Right now, the goal is to get my music out there to as many people who will appreciate it as possible. In a way, following my dreams is harder than avoiding them, because every day is like a moment of truth. That isn't easy, but its great to feel like things are coming together and my days of being fragmented are over.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.7979510 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0069868564605713 secs


live