“Love, regret, sadness. When the chips are down and it hurts, we find solace in art and sometimes bad things. Perhaps it’s the measured hurt that Lily shares and her voice – so honest and naked – lifts us and reminds us of the duality of love. Love and pain, two sides to the coin, both faces but so true to the human condition … “A chill has fallen on my heart”.
One day this song will be recognized for its beauty. Her honest understated vocal blends with the music so well. It’s a great reading of the song … her hurt is there for us to share.”
John Young (Contemporary Musicologist)
“If music can be just like putting on a dress, Lily is wearing a soft flowing wine-coloured one with a fitted bodice”
If music can be just like putting on a dress and each one has a different style, shape, colour and texture, then Lily is currently wearing a soft and flowing wine-coloured dress with a fitted bodice. Short and just a little bit left of centre, it’s a perfect Fremantle dress and equally perfect attire for the two songs the dark-haired, creamy-featured singer has recently recorded.
Fuelled by Eurasian heritage, a lust to wander and a well-stamped passport tucked into that bodice, contemporary songbird Lily calls the West Australian port city of Fremantle home. Her recordings of Billie Reid’s songs are soulfully country and with an undeniable feeling and yearning for the coast.
“We’ve treated the songs with a breezy tone and have taken a really human approach to them” Lily says, “It’s nice to work in a style which hasn’t been expected. It’s totally different from what I normally sing, which is part of the point. I was totally immersed in this project and somehow the songs have become part of my own story too”.
While there were original “drafts” of Billie’s to listen to, Lily got the chance to interpret each song in a way which resonated with her and spoke truth from a woman’s perspective. “Once we started working on the songs, where to take them became quite obvious. With ‘Love Song 612’, his sentiment is really something I could relate to, so it was really easy to interpret the lyrics in a meaningful way. For ‘Dreamer’, I had to push it a little more to really create my own relationship with the song. Equally, that’s part of the challenge of taking on someone else’s songs. I think it’s a greater challenge to be working with existing melodies”.
In her heart, Lily is a girl bursting with stories to tell. Irrelevant of era, genre or format, the ability to tell a worthy story makes for a beguiling song. Like any good story – even someone else’s – the chance for Lily to tell it in her own voice is a truly beautiful and honourable thing.
Lily can’t quite put her finger on which genre of music she loves the most though. The petite singer has always known that music was her destiny. With a father who continues to sing and drum in numerous bands and a mother who was also a singer, Lily has always been surrounded by music, so it really felt inevitable. “Unlike a lot of kids, I was quite proud of my parents’ musical taste. There were a real mix of styles and genres constantly in our ears. There was a lot of Motown. Growing up, my brothers and I were surrounded by Earth Wind and Fire, the Chi-Lites and Aretha Franklin. It didn’t take me long to get suckered in by the powerful emotional pull of women like Billie Holiday and Nina Simone. This music became a tradition in our household”.
The singer made her debut at an end of year school performance. Frightened out of her wits, she sang ‘Summertime’ from ‘Porgy and Bess’ and absolutely loved the experience. Next stop was the school jazz band and she never looked back. Now with music by her side – and an ever-evolving wardrobe – Fremantle is the perfect place for Lily to take a deep cleansing breath and open her musical heart to Billie Reid’s songs.
Ara Jansen