[ Decca / CD ]
Release Date: Friday 17 April 2015
This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.
Before Adele and Amy, there was Lulu. Now she's back. Britain's first great female rock and soul voice has made the album of her career.
This is no hyperbole. Hearing is believing.
Making Life Rhyme is the first album which Lulu has written for herself, a deep, rich, emotional, autobiographical stew of musical flavours, harking back to the raw groove of her classic 1965 debut smash Shout and fast forwarding to the most soulful pop music of today. Faith In You has the Brit-gospel resonance of Emeli Sande. The Answer Is Love is an epic anthem of life lessons blessed with an unforgettable melody. Cry is a heart-bleeding soul ballad of tough love. Hypnotised is a horn-laden, hand-clapping, souped-up 21st Century Motown belter that would have Pharrell and Taylor Swift dancing in the aisles.
"I don't know why it's taken so long," admits Lulu, the most youthful 66-year-old you'll ever meet. "I should have done this years ago. But life is what life is, and now to write an album about how I see my life, it feels like it fits so well."
Lulu has been in the music business for 51 years. Yet she seems utterly undimmed by time, slim, vivacious and energetic, with an appealing combination of bright eyed sprightliness and a very adult, no-nonsense directness. "I was thrown into this business in my childhood. It's a minefield, you see so many people harmed by believing in their success. You think you're invincible, then crash, it all comes down. I've managed to look like I'm holding it together but it ain't been easy. This is what I'm talking about, everything that I've been through in my life. It's really about going beyond the problems everyone's got. I've been there, done it but now I'm living in the solution. That's what it's about!"
Making Life Rhyme is Lulu's first album in ten years. "I was in no hurry to make another record. It had to be something special." Its roots lie in an invitation to perform a blues set with vintage American session players at BB King's Bar & Grill in New York in February, 2013. A glowing New York Times review hailed "the power and the passion" of her voice. It was a reminder to Lulu of what music meant to her. "I really like pop music but if I could describe my own voice it would seem like rock with a little blues feel. I started going that kind of bluesy way, going back to my roots."
For the original sessions, Lulu began recording blues covers with a small band of hand-picked musicians, overseen by her musical director and the album's co-producer, Richard Cardwell. "It was just great musicians in a tiny little studio. It was like starting again." Lulu was inspired to bring a couple of her own songs into the sessions and "it took on a life of its own." Decca Records liked Lulu's new material so much, they encouraged her to keep writing. "Everything they heard they just loved. I've never had this before. Decca empowered me."
The singer has dabbled in songwriting over the years and, indeed, Tina Turner enjoyed a major global hit in 1993 with Lulu's song I Don't Wanna Fight. Her (18-month younger) brother Billy Lawrie has always been her closest collaborator and came on board as the album's other co-producer. "Billy has always been a writer. I push him, and he pushes me. We love melody and we know each other so well, he'll know what I'm thinking before I say it." They worked with other writers, including
Ben Mark (Take That), Jim Cregan (Rod Stewart, Cat Stevens) and Martin Sutton (Celine Dion, Mike & The Mechanics). "It just grew and grew, every song we did it went further."
"I love every single thing on this album, every single thing!" enthuses Lulu, animatedly describing her hands on role in the studio with Richard and Billy. "It was so exciting. Richard would be mixing something, driving us mad playing it over and over a thousand times, and a counter melody would come, and we'd have to put that on too. New songs were practically being written over the top of songs. I didn't want to stop."
The music has roots in Sixties and Seventies styles with the sonic clarity of contemporary pop. "I definitely didn't want to sound like a throwback. Because I only listen to modern music, really." She excitedly cites Bruno Mars, Pharrell, Ed Sheeran, Taylor Swift, Emile Sande, Beyonce, Sigma and Labrinth as artists bringing retro soul up to date. "My influences are from way back but the ones I like today are influenced by the same people. And their recording technique is fabulous. The crispness of the handclaps! I love it. The young musicians I'm working with have got so much to give. Young and old together is good, experience and enthusiasm, it's fabulous."
"Making Life Rhyme is about how I'm living my life now," she says. "I've dealt with demons, I've dealt with anxiety, I've dealt with sadness. Now I like who I am, I feel good about the realisations that I've come to and the way I conduct myself. I feel like I've grown up in a way. And yet, the opposite is true. It's like I'm just beginning." She laughs at the absurdity of it all. "You know, at heart, I think I'm still waiting to be discovered!"
Faith in You
Every Single Day
The Answer is Love
Cry
Poison Kiss
Hypnotised
Heaven Help
Make Life Rhyme
Angel
Messed Up World
Wayfarin' Stranger