| Elles Bailey : Wildfire Bristol-born blues  songstress follows fateful path to deliver debut album.
   Whilst some tread a somewhat meandering path to  discovering their vocation in life, there are many for whom the chance to  fulfil a role that was truly meant for them, remains ever elusive. For the very  rare few, life's calling is distinctly inherent; appearing almost as if their  fate were etched into their DNA. For Bristol-born singer songwriter Elles  Bailey, that seems undoubtedly the case. At the tender age of just two years old, Elles  contracted both viral and bacterial pneumonia. It was to prove near fatal. On  arrival at Bristol's Southmead hospital, her parents were bluntly informed that  she would need a tube inserted in her throat within the hour, in order to  survive. The immediate problem allayed by a rapidly enacted procedure, little  Elles was far from out of imminent danger. Twice her lungs began to collapse,  and in fact she was to spend much of the subsequent months incapacitated in  hospital, as her frail body struggled to repel the vagaries and complexities of  her condition. Inevitably, Elles' mother Lynne and father Richard lived in a  perpetual state of fear and high anxiety.
 Blessed with an inner strength that was later to  become all too apparent, and thanks to the great care of medical staff, one day  at a time, Elles was to recover. Dubbed 'little miss miracle' in the local  press, the now three year old was allowed to return home and begin the long  recuperation, learning how to walk and function normally again, having been  bed-ridden for so long. That her recovery was completed seemed nothing less  than miraculous; yet the experience was to leave its mark in another way.
 Lynne and Richard had been surprised at the husky tone  of their daughter’s voice post-treatment. A visit to an ear, nose and throat  specialist revealed no permanent damage, but as the specialist himself put it  "if she ever wants to sing, she’ll be a natural blues vocalist..!” No one  in the room at that time could possibly have realised the significance of the  remark.
 Growing up with a family immersed in the music of west  coast Americana, and father Richard playing in a bluegrass band, it comes as no  surprise to hear the influence this had on the young Elles; "Mum and dad  had really eclectic taste. Everything from the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band to Ike  & Tina Turner via Howlin’ Wolf. And it gripped me from the outset. There  was something raw and honest and guttural that spoke to me, even then as a  little girl growing up in the outskirts of Bristol," she laughs now.  "I guess a lot of kids first experience music through the tastes of their  parents, and I was no different. The fact that I could go and watch dad's band  in the flesh, and play these incredible records he used to put under my nose,  just made the connection so much more real."
 It wasn't long before Elles and brother Henry were  writing songs of their own and playing in bands together. Their musical  explorations blended their upbringing with a reflection of their own era,  taking in the likes of the Kooks, Jason Mraz and Ryan Adams. It was ever  apparent though that the budding writer in Elles was always to return to her  Americana roots. It was to prove her compass reference point, a place of  comfort and expression.
 By the time of her early twenties, now having struck  firmly out on her own, Elles was ready to record and release her debut EPs, the  brilliantly blended ‘Who I Am To Me’ and further accomplished ‘Elberton  Sessions.’ The EPs were to be the first major showcase of the raw and gravelly  voice with which her early life experience had blessed her. Bookended by a  touring schedule that took in legs across Europe as well as the UK, it was a  period of honing her craft; what many a musician would recognise as that of  'paying her dues.' Tours with Wille & The Bandits, and festival appearances  alongside Lisa Simone, The Mystery Jets & Wilko Johnson took her  performances to a new level, as well as creating themes, time and space for an  album writing process. A debut long player was an inevitability.
 The actual recording process came about quicker than  expected when a planned family road trip across the Southern States saw fate  intervene once again. Elles takes up the story, “We had arranged to cut a demo  in Nashville along the route. You know, ‘when in Rome’ and all that..? But what  was intended to be just the solitary track took on a life of its own. Before I  knew it, boom, we had a whole album!”
 In fact it was a little more than that. Produced by  Brad Nowell at Blackbird Studios, ‘Wildfire’ was recorded by a host of  Nashville’s finest; including Grammy Award winner and two-time CMA ‘Musician of  the Year’ Brent Mason on guitar, three-time ‘Musician Hall Of Famer’ Bobby Wood  on piano, joined by Chris Leuzinger (Garth Brooks) on guitar, Mike Brignardello  (Lynyrd Skynyrd, Amy Grant) on bass, Wes Little (Stevie Wonder, Melissa  Etheridge) on drums and even legendary Ivor Novello Award winning songwriter  Roger Cook came on board to help add some extra sparkle.
 As producer Nowell himself puts it “We wanted to make  sure that the quality of Elles’ voice was backed by the very best musicians in  the world. We originally shot for making just a few songs; I never imagined  that everyone would gravitate so strongly to her, devoting the extra time and  energy to make a full album!”
 Yet that is precisely what happened, and it rapidly  became apparent that plans for the rest of the road trip had to be put on ice.  When Wood, the pianist for the likes of Johnny Cash, Dusty Springfield and even  Elvis says “Elles is one of the most soulful artist I've heard in years,” you  know its time to stop what you’re doing and pay attention.
 ‘Wildfire’ is a proper record then, showcasing  Bailey’s ‘lived in’ vocals every much as you might hope and expect, allowing  her to convey the impact, the vulnerabilities of her subjects; but always with  a focus on the song, not the singer. Witness the calculating revenge of ‘Barrel  Of A Gun’ or the withering attack on modern-day materialism that is ‘Shackles  Of Love,’ and it becomes clear that this is a writer who knows how to tell a  story. Written specifically about Janis Joplin, ‘Girl Who Owned the Blues’  almost literally drips in the solitude of its subject matter.
 "The song is the thing.” Elles explains, “That's  the theme that runs through my music. I've only known the notion of  storytelling through song, so it's completely natural for me to continue in  that long tradition." Its one of the reasons the Nashville band stuck  around the studio for far longer than planned. As guitarist Brent Mason said  after the event, “Elles just  knows how to milk each and every drop of soul that a song can muster.”
 And so it is then that the miracle girl, the one with  the ‘made for the blues’ voice, gets to drop her debut album. As steeped in  soul, in yearning country as much as it is in the blues, Elles Bailey herself  prefers to refer to the storytelling, and letting the audience decide exactly  where she fits in. Fateful it may be, but ‘Wildfire’ is no less of an album for  it. For the artist, it is a marker; Elles Bailey has arrived.
 |