
The armies of club-goers sweating to the fusion of hard hip-hop, exuberant pop
and complex, sensual dancehall rhythm in CHENELLEs debut International single, I
Fell in Love With the DJ, are ahead of the curve in discovering her, as the club
underground always is. But her new album, Things Happen For A Reason, makes it
abundantly clear that CHENELLE is a multi-leveled talent, a beauty, and a
personality who will soon prove herself irresistible to the massive mainstream
of the worldwide urban and pop audience.
Already a hit songwriter in her home country of Australia, where she opened for
Kanye Wests 2006 Australian tour, CHENELLE, at 23, signed her first recording
deal in America with Virgin Records, discovered by club DJ and radio vet Sir
Charles Dixon. She completed her Capitol Records debut album -- almost entirely
self-written -- with production help from hit-making A-listers including Sean
Garrett (Fergiess London Bridge; Beyonces Ring The Alarm Chris Browns Run It;
and Ciaras Goodies) and a list of hot up-and-comers from New York, Toronto,
London and Australia. A satisfying combination of compulsive rhythmic music and
soul-deep, intimate ballads, Things Happen For A Reason, serves notice that a
major new singer-songwriter is on the scene. And it announces unmistakably
CHENELLEs unforced yet irresistible knack for drawing lines between every form
of contemporary rhythm-based music, creating a fresh, essential music for the
new urban world of the millennium and beyond uniting both music and listeners.
CHENELLE, born in Malaysia and relocated to Australia at age 10, was raised in
an environment where music and singing without notice of genre boundaries was a
daily feature of home life. Her father, a civil engineer and architect, loved
the classic pop balladeers of the Sixties, and her mother brought home every
kind of rhythmic dance music, singing her daughter to sleep with her favorite
new R&B and reggae songs. As every child does, CHENELLE charmed her parents with
her singing, but she also amused and astonished her father in his karaoke lounge
when she ignored the flashing lyrics to improvise her own, and invented her own
words so that she could sing him songs shed heard just that day in a video. I
was so young I didnt even remember it until he told me that recently, she
laughs. He said he knew it wasnt how the songs went, but then he noticed that
the words made sense. Maybe thats where my lyric writing began, subconsciously!
CHENELLEs hometown, Perth, is a city of over 1.5 million residents on the
western coast of Australia, on the opposite end of the continent from the
countrys largest city, Sydney. Despite the countrys distinguished history in pop
and rock, which claims such international stars as Olivia Newton-John, Peter
Allen, Men at Work, INXS, and, more recently, pop-dance icon Kylie Minogue and
the rock band Jet, the Australian music business had never launched a major
international star in any urban-related idiom.
Without any local role models (but, consequently, without any suffocating
formulas to unlearn), CHENELLE was drawn naturally toward the music that
fulfilled her most: hip-hop, reggae dancehall, neo-soul ballads, and the new
R&B. Whitney Houston, inevitably, was a key influence, but so was the local club
scene, which thrived on hip-hop and dancehall. Something in me was hungry for
that, because I wasnt brought up with Motown or R&B, she recounts. I was looking
for Luther, Mary J., all the jazz cats, Ella Fitzgerald. There were a few of us
who used to go to the one under-age hip-hop dance, which was once a week and on
school holidays --maybe 200 people, cramped up in the room. CHENELLEs brief but
impressive professional history and her music itself are living proof in
microcosm of the influence of hip-hop as a universal grounding force a force as
natural, powerful and essential to global youth as gravity, or sunlight.
At age seventeen, CHENELLE was initially confused to walk into her university
music class and find it filled with electronic keyboards and computer equipment.
She had performed with a top 40 cover band on weekends since her mid-teens,
honing her skills as a live entertainer, but began to long for the satisfaction
of singing her own songs. In order to make her own song demos, and without money
for a producer, studio time or vocalists, she mastered the technology so well
that she set up a bedroom studio at home, working with an outdated computer and
borrowed software. At the same time, she knuckled down to learning music theory
and song structure, and taught herself the demanding art of arranging and
singing background vocals. Finishing her degree in music, she signed to a music
publishing company as a staff songwriter about two years ago.
At the time, CHENELLE considered herself primarily a ballad singer, finding
kindred spirits in India.Arie and Musiq Soulchild, whose life-like,
conversational works are paralleled in the album highlights My Pledge and Right
Back. But she also began writing songs in the hard club style of hip-hop and
dancehall, following the footsteps of such empowered female
singer/songwriter/producer triple-threats as India Arie, Missy Elliott and
Alicia Keys. She cut vocals prolifically for local hip-hop and reggae mix-tape
producers, winning competitions across the country, establishing her voice on
the local urban radio and club underground, and attracting notice as far away as
Sweden, London and the U.S. west coast. One of the songs she co-wrote, Hell, No!
was chosen as the debut single of Ricki-Lee Coulter, a finalist in the second
season of the Australian Idol competition, and it scored CHENELLE her first
national top 5 hit as a songwriter, with an impressive 21-week run in the
Australian top 100 chart and a gold single certification.
Although CHENELLE counts that hit as a relatively modest start, Things started
happening really fast after that, she says. My production manager, Sir Charles
Dixon, found my website on myspace.com; we were in contact about seven months,
and he flew down to see me in Perth. Within a week after he went back,
literally, he told me that Virgin Records wanted to bring me over to New York.
They had a deal waiting for me.
Now, shes fashioned an album of genuine accomplishment and emotion, confidently
working across the wide, eclectic spectrum of the new urban music. Although her
personal history could be called a reflection of urban musics own best
multi-cultural instincts, which have surfaced recently in everything from the
crucial South Asian elements of Jamaican dancehall and Caribbean soca, to the
massive eruption of Spanglish bilingualism in reggaeton, the truth is that
CHENELLEs ethnicity is transparent in her music, and its her personality thats
crucial to her lyrics -- as any individuals would be. Perth is a laid-back,
relaxed place, and straightforward. Thats the Australian part of me, she says.
The storytelling my issues, feelings, relationships, how I see myself coming up
as a person, thats the side that comes from my Malaysian upbringing.
But its only CHENELLEs philosophy and outlook thats laid-back, judging from her
compelling and magnetic work on Things Happen For A Reason,: in this debut, the
unbounded joy of music is front and center. What youre seeing now is seven or
eight years of work, she says. Recording is like my physical release, and
songwriting is my mental release -- the stories and issues Ive heard about and
want to express. Performing is the product of those releases. Every artist is
given a blessing to release their feelings through music. To View Che'Nelle's
Myspace Page.......click
here.