Sunny Ozell is kicking off a new regular playlist feature for EF where artists select tracks that they love and tell us what they mean to them.
The New York-based folk/jazz singer is gearing up to release her debut album Take It With Me on 31st July 2015. The album is a collection of carefully chosen covers with Sunny infusing her own musical style into them.
Sunny is married to actor of the stage and screen Sir Patrick Stewart, who has helped and supported her musical ambitions. It’s not hard to see why he did as Sunny is a singer on the rise with much promise for a bright future.
Keep reading to find out which tracks Sunny has been listening to…
Estou Triste by Caetano Veloso off his 2014 record Abracaco
Iāve always adored Caetano. In fact, I adore Brazilian music in general, so much so that at university, I took a yearās worth of Portuguese classes in order to appreciate the genre more fully. Caetano is a poet, and his voice is a pure and beautiful human bell. Any chance I get, Iāll go and see him live (five times now to date) and as a performer, heās everything I aspire to be: generous, daring, meticulous, cheeky, and gracious. Caetano enfolds you with his gratitudeāIāve never met him before, but I know Caetano loves me. I could go on and on, waxing lyrically about this genius, but instead Iāll just say Iām fairly certain that Caetano Veloso is a being made of light, perhaps an angel…
Weāll Sweep out the Ashes in the Morning by Gram Parsons & The Fallen Angels off their 1973 record Live
Gram Parsons left the world all too early at the age of twenty-six. Had he lived longer, I can only imagine how huge his contribution to music would have been, given the small but brilliant catalogue he left behind. In some ways, we have him to thank for the Emmylou Harris of today, and their duet on this tune is one of the great duets of the early 70ās, in my not-so-humble opinion.
Aināt That Easy by DāAngelo off his 2014 record The Black Messiah
In 2000, DāAngeloās record Voodoo was more or less the only record I listened to all year. In fact, that record has been in heavy rotation ever since, but itās very anchored in a specific part of my lifeāmy early twenties. Fourteen years is a long time to wait for the follow-up to any record, let alone one I cared about as much as Voodoo. When DāAngelo dropped The Black Messiah, and I finally sat down and had a proper listen to this righteous record, it was as if heād somehow folded time back on itself, and I was gazing down from a high vantage point over the last decade-plus of my life. The first cut, āAināt That Easyā, is a master class in modern soul and funkāa reverent distillation of all that came before.
Hard Times by Gillian Welch off her 2011 record The Harrow and The Harvest
I discovered Gillian Welch and David Rawlings very organically; they were playing at a folk festival I attended in a little town called Lyons, Colorado, and Iāve been a rabid fan ever since. Thereās something transporting about Gillianās and Davidās songwritingā¦they have the remarkable ability to write new songs that sound as familiar as an old hymnal or maybe a melody that your grandmother used to hum. Their tunes are simple but deeply heartfelt, and laser-precise. āHard Timesā feels to me almost like a kind of benediction: āā¦hard timesā¦aināt gonna rule my mindā¦ā Who doesnāt need a reminder like this?
Youāve Got a Friend by Donny Hathaway off his 1972 record Live
I have to say up front that itās rather challenging to pick just one track off this seminal 70ās gem, but I just love this version. Donnyās vocal is some seriously moving stuff, and the audienceās involvement only adds to the impact. Some of this album was recorded in a club in Manhattan called The Bitter End. Itās still there, still open, and this venue factors pretty prominently in the life and times of much of my musical family in New York City.
Over and Over by Fleetwood Mac off their 1979 record Tusk
Iām a huge Christine McVie fan. (This is a very important distinction to make, in the worldās ongoing and much agonized-over Christine-vs-Stevie debate.) My parents have a stupendous collection of vinyl, and much of my early music exploration was thanks to them. I loved Tusk long before I was old enough to understand how heavy it was, and what it must have cost them as humans to make. āOver and Overā is a testament to the profundity that is Fleetwood Macās rhythm section: the steady, lucid pulse of the bass and drums, paired with Christineās airy and emotive vocal makes this tune feel like its perched on the head of a pin (a deliciously dangerous kind of tension).
Sugar by Stevie Wonder off his 1970 record Signed Sealed & Delivered
There is hit after hit on this album, but somehow this tune doesnāt seem to get itās due. Itās a monster jam, with crushing horn lines, drums that are played delightfully too hard, and a big powerful modulation in the middle that is a giant f pay-off. Stacked vocal harmonies round out the joy. I defy someone to not absolutely love this song.
El Dia de mi Suerte by Hector Lavoe off the 2007 compilation record El Cantante – The Originals
Iāve always enjoyed latin music, but I came to Hector Lavoe a bit later in my life, and Iām happy I did. I find his music to be rather mature, and Iām not sure if some of his more tragic and difficult tunes would have resonated with me when I was younger. Through Hector, Iāve also fallen deeply in love with the entire Fania catalogue (Fania was a NYC salsa record label in the 70ās that released some incandescent music that came right out of Spanish Harlem). The lyrics of this tune are heartbreakingāheās basically lost everything (and thereās some auto-biographical truth here for Hector) but he still believes there will be a day when his luck turns around: the ādia de mi suerteā.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wi2SgHkJ9qA
The Teacher by Paul Simon off his 2000 record Youāre the One
I donāt think too many folks are familiar with this odd little masterpiece of Paul Simonās. Itās a fairly unusual album, and the song āThe Teacherā is beautifully strange, and even a little creepy. Paul Simon is one of those rare songwriters who somehow manages to effortlessly merge sonic meaning with lyrical content, and I think āThe Teacherā is a great example of this alchemy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-_-HMTzAF0
Finer Feelings by Spoon off their 2007 record Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga
Spoon make beautiful, old-fashioned rock records. Theyāre a band that, were they to have formed in the glory days (the 70ās or 80ās) of the recording industry, theyād be selling tickets the same way The Stones do today. Their music just sounds classic. And āFiner Feelingsā I think is almost a kind of record industry lament: āsometimes I think that Iāll find a loveā¦the one thatās gonna change my heartā¦and Iāll find it in commercial appeal, and then this heartache will get chased away.ā Making music in this day and age (if you have any creative integrity) is a constant tug-of-war with the your inner voice that drives you to make something personal and truthful, and with that external, commercial voice (that is becoming more and more oppressive every day) pulling you towards what people think of as āprofitableā. I could be wrong, but I think Spoon have stared down this conflict, and have made the right choice.
Sunny’s debut album Take It With Me is released on 31st August 2015. Listen to Sunny’s Take It With Me EP below: