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R&B & R&B/Soul/Pop artist from Northampton, MA. New songs free to stream or download. Add to your playlist now.

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Celia

Celias music is indie soul pop and she, as singer/songwriter, will put a spell on you with her major voice. With elements of funk and R&B, the music is a paradox of acoustic guitars with drum loops, haunting keys and hip bass lines next to her raw toasty voice. She is passionate and moody and quirkya powerful performer who disarms you with an authentic feel. Shes Fiona Apple meets Mary J. Blige, according to some reviewers, and shes tying her influences together with sharp and evocative lyrics, and an aching compelling voice.
Tell me about your history? How did you get where you are now?
From a gospel upbringing, a South London adolescence, and Midwest hootenannies comes Celia and her debut album, "Break". This acoustic soul pop album has got East Coast audiences and D.J.s talking about her voice and sound. Celia began her career singing gospel choruses in her preacher-fathers church. Someone told her then she should make a life of singing/performing. It was years later that Celia started singing her poems she'd set to music at various clubs. After a bit of incubation, Celia taught herself piano and guitar and began gigging regionally in New England. She was selling a 9 song demo and performing in NYC and Boston clubs... Celia met Robby Baier from soultube.com and asked him to produce her next album. Celias raw elements of blues and funk-folk and gospel were emphasized in this fresh setting of sampled and live drums, hip bass lines and acoustic grooves. Released in July the album already has DJ.s saying things like "Break sits firmly in my top ten releases of the year" (Donny Moorhouse, WRNX) and "Cool and entrancing" (Music Director Johnny Memphis WRSI). Gigging with a band in Massachusetts called "a veritable super-group" by local reviewers, Celia is looking for more opportunities to showcase her voice and sound.
Have you performed live in front of an audience? Any special memories?
Playing live is what I live for. Without it I wither and fade...Finally, with this latest release "Break", I have relinquished the instrument playing, for the most part, to my band, and have set my voice free. I just go off at the mike.
Your musical influences
Stevie Wonder Etta James Nina Simone Billie Holiday Rickie Lee Jones Meshell Ndgeocello
Anything else?
PRESS EXCERPTS Celia's new CD Break is cool and entrancing, wonderful-strange-fascinating-speaking-in-tongues pop. Johnny Memphis-Music Director, WRSI ...Celia has quite the band, a veritable super group of local veterans that includes Jim Weeks (guitar), John O'Boyle (bass), Sue Burkhart (guitar), and Chris Ryan (drums). It's no wonder she'd prefer to have them around. She just as likely would prefer to have every weapon available to re-create the brilliant sound of "Break," the 10- song set of Celia originals that has to rate as one of the more compelling local releases of the year. Celia has the ability to float above genres with her ethereal voice. While the music touches on folk, jazz (Norah Jones fans will love this), and electronic pop, Celia's voice soars above it all, worthy of a descriptive phrase that has yet to be spoken. Donny Moorhouse, Springfield Republican Celia's music is soulful and sensitive. Her voice is flexible and her songs resonate. "Like You" is a groovy number. Celia blends folk with r-n-b and it works well. "Magical" is a sultry song where Celia sings like Lauryn Hill. "Hell is in Your Mind" is a rockin' song that sounds rather like PJ Harvey. It puts the emphasis on Celia's extraordinary voice. "No Good Man" is a classic blues belter. Celia puts her heart into this song of a bad man. "You mistook me for your ma" she chides. "Don't Dance" shivers with rage. It's one of the singer's more folksy songs. "Break" is the work of a gifted artist. Anna Maria Stjärnell , www.collectedsounds.com "...'Break' would be worth the purchase just to have the second to last song, 'Tenement Waltz', which is utterly haunting and subtely psychologically disturbing, like some half-remembered Poe tale. The calmly insistent piano melody supports Celia's beautiful breaking vocals and aging-centered lyrics, which are dealt with in such a straightforward manner it's unnerving. This is something to cry yourself to sleep to and could quite possibly be the most bittersweetly depressing song ever written - something only...some obscure Eastern Europan art film...could evoke." Val Barbaro, Northeast Performer August 28, 2003 http://valleyadvocate.com/gbase/Music/content?oid=oid:30750 Brontë Rock Celia , a singer-songwriter based out of Northampton, sings wastrel white girl blues folk rock, along the lines of Fiona Apple but with an odder, janglier inflection. She seems to be one of those deeply introverted people who, rather than write bad poetry, or fall into narcissism, has found a way to tranform her oddly-calibrated perspective into art. Break , her new album, is pretty great, drenched in a hothouse atmosphere, like something by Apple or Tori Amos, but distinguished by more complicated beats. There's a little bit of Mary J. Blige in there too, and many of her songs could, with little dissonance, accomodate an MC rhyming through the resonant vocals. If she sounds two-thirds as good live as she does on her album, her show at Harry's on Sunday, the second of what seems to be a series of CD release parties, it'll be worth the five bucks. Daniel Oppenheimer, The Valley Advocate