Kelly Willis











Kelly Willis
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As Kelly Willis planned to go into the studio last fall, she really didn’t know what to expect. She had spent the four years since co-producing her 2002 album, the lovely, laid-back Easy, on family matters: her oldest son Deral, born in 2001, got three siblings – twins Abby and Ben born in 2004 and baby Joseph, whose birth followed in early 2006. “This time around, I had absolutely no time or energy to be involved in the producer role at all,” Willis recalls. So she called a guy “who lives and breathes music,” whose instincts she loved and who she felt “really comfortable around:” Chuck Prophet, the edgy singer-songwriter who contributed guitar to both Easy and 1999’s acclaimed What I Deserve. Together, they would create the most sonically adventurous album of Kelly Willis’ seventeen-plus-year recording career, Translated From Love. In the beginning, Willis assumed she would cut an album of covers since she’d been too busy changing diapers to write songs. Once Prophet arrived at Willis’ Austin, Texas, home things changed. Half of the richly textured album’s dozen tracks are originals, co-written by Kelly and her collaborators. Willis found herself pleasantly surprised that “I was able to get some songs written that I am proud of and excited about and that give the album some of its depth and personality and soul…” As Prophet describes it, “We cooked up a cool record. Wrote a mess of songs. We got all ‘housewife goth’ with it – gingham aprons and bad blood.” Indeed, among the engaging originals and intriguing covers – derived from such tunesmiths as Adam Green, Damon Bramblett, Jules Shear, and – yes, you heard it right – Iggy Pop – there are musical nods to five decades of rock, pop, and country: girl-group drum sounds one minute, strings-drenched C&W angst the next. “We wrote some songs that just lent themselves to that encyclopedia of sounds,” says Willis, “plus Chuck really did his research about my history and my career and he knew that when I first started out I was doing rockabilly music.” Hence, the nod to Willis’ first band (at age 16!), Kelly and the Fireballs, via Adam Green’s retro-cool “Teddy Boys,” with its wry, ‘80s-style Moog synthesizer. Another of Willis’ former combos, Austin’s roots-rockin’ Radio Ranch, was represented by its former guitarist Michael Hardwick, who played dobro on “I Must Be Lucky.” The bluesy original (by Willis, Prophet, and Jules Shear) features a gutsy reading by Willis who “comes off like Link Wray’s girlfriend ,” according to Prophet. Imbued with been-there-done-that attitude, it’s a kind of companion piece to a song Prophet played for her on guitar one day – the sarcastic “Success.” Says Prophet, “She lit up when she heard that Iggy song, especially when it came to that line. ‘Here comes my face/it’s plain bizarre’.” “I’d never heard it before and it just cracked me up,” Kelly agrees. Fueled by Michael Ramos’s vintage Vox organ (“96 Tears” style) and the Gourds’ slaphappy background vocals, Willis sasses Iggy’s taunting lyrics with hard-won conviction. “In the beginning, I was a little worried about doing ‘Success’ and ‘I Must Be Lucky,’” says Willis, “because I hadn’t done that kind of thing in a long time. But then Chuck showed me this picture of me on Wikipedia – it’s a photo from my first record [in 1990]. I’m wearing this leather jacket and I have this fake pompadour, and he was like, ‘That girl could do it.’ He was right – they ended up being some of my favorites. It was so much fun!” The yin to those songs’ yang are such tearjerkers as the Willis-Prophet co-write “Losing You,” accented by Greg Leisz’s emotive pedal steel. “There’s a sadness below Kelly, as if she’s been touched by fire a time too many,” says Prophet. “You can hear it in her voice.” That yearning, triste quality really comes across in the bittersweet title track, with its evocative accordion and acoustic guitars. “Chuck brought that song in and I thought it was just stunning,” says Willis. It was Willis’ remarkable voice that stunned those in the studio, according to Prophet. “She’s one of those singers who can make a track come alive. She’s got that kind of charisma.” Translated From Love documents Willis really cutting loose, perhaps more than she ever did back in the 1990s, over the course of three country albums for MCA. “I came from the school of Nashville where you try to get as many tracks as you can in a day,” says Willis, “but this time we would spend an entire day on one song, just play it to death, over and over, backwards and forwards, and the songs would kind of morph into something else. It was a real organic process and the songs found their natural little niche.” Thus the Bobbie Gentry-esque arrangement of Willis’ ode to a lost love, “Sweet Little One;” the catchy pop-rock bounce of “Don’t Know Why,” a collaboration with Prophet and Shear; and the torchy waltz “Stones Throw Away,” another Willis-Prophet composition, this time in cahoots with Greg Leisz. “I had that title and the riff,” Kelly says of the song’s genesis, “and the two guitar players [Prophet and Leisz] started to go to town on it. Every time I’d bring in a song, it would be this kind of starry girl thing, and then the guys would just totally ‘boy’ it up!” One of those, the powerful “Too Much to Lose,” features husband Bruce Robison on vocals. “Most of the songs I write are inspired by being married for ten years and trying to maintain the marriage,” Willis explains. “That song is about weathering a relationship, all the ups and downs, and making it work – how there’s too much to lose at this point. Initially, I had Bruce sing on it because I thought that he would be the best voice for it, but then as we did it, it felt really special, like ‘Wow, he is the only person who should sing with me on that song!’” For Willis’ part, she hopes that the sonic adventures which transpired while making Translated From Love will convey to listeners what it brought to her: “I didn’t want to feel like I was spinning my wheels and doing the same old thing. The whole experience was surprising at every turn and challenging, too, doing some material that might not be what people expect out of me. I felt like I had something to prove, and I want people to do a double-take when they listen to this.” Most of all, though, says Willis, “I just wanted to go in and have fun!”
Date Venue City State Note
No Tour Dates Available
02/14/2008 - Kelly Willis and Her Wandering Ways - Read More
10/12/2007 - Willis needed help with return to music - Read More
06/28/2007 - Willis to mark release of 'Love' - Read More
03/19/2007 - Yes, You Can Find Country at South by Southwest - Read More
More News
No Blogs Available
06/01/2007 - Kelly Willis Q&A - Read More
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Average Rating : 0              Total Reviews: 19


Kelly Willis  01/03/2004            
monkeyjohn
Titties and beer
Kelly Willis  12/30/2003            
PhatPimpPete
Coolest chick of country, great voice. Forget the Dicksie Pricks
Kelly Willis  09/15/2002            
Kelly Ray
If I could rate this cd 10 stars, it would get it....I have been a fan of Charlie and Bruce Robison for awhile now. I have heard Kelly on a couple of Bruce songs, and thought I would check her out, after all, Bruce is great, so his wife must be too, right? besides, she has the same name as me. I didn't expect to be blown away, and this cd definately is one of the finer points of Texas music. Buy this cd, you won't regret it, I swear, it will be "Easy" to justify your purchase after listening to it. Great job Kelly...
Kelly Willis  07/02/2002            
ROBIN
GREAT WRIGHT UP IN THE TEXAS MUSIC MAGAZINE. ROBIN TEAXS MUSIC FAN
Kelly Willis  12/05/2001            
Seth
Kelly Willis is as talented as she is gorgeous! I have all of her cds and you can really see some great maturation in her work - manifesting with "What I Deserve" I caught her and Bruce doing a show in MD and it was perfect! See them if you get the chance and if Bruce ever leaves her, tell her to call me! :)
Kelly Willis  10/29/2001            
A Fan
This is one of the TOP 5 CDs on this site. A must have!!!
Kelly Willis  06/07/2001            
SFC ROBERT WHITE(WHISKEY-2 )
I have been listening to Kelly Willis for several years now,yet I am still perplexed that after several excellent albums,an appearance on AUSTIN CITY LIMITS(WHERE BY THE WAY SHE WAS ABSOULUTLEY FABULOUS)her rendition of Loreta Lynn's "Fist City" was the type of performance that instantly turns a maybe/so- so fan, into a running around like your hair is on fire, walking, talking, testamonial of her greatness,she always has a very tight,excellent hillbilly/honkytonk band backing her up.The voice of an angel combined with drop dead good looks, always seems to allow her to mesmerize an audience.There is something about her stage presence that makes you feel as if you know this person,a simple this is it! type appearance and as performers go this cannot be over emphasized,especially these days in an era of FAKEY Faith and Twain wanna-bees.When Kelly Willis ays "THANK YOU WE'RE GLAD YOUR ENJOYING OUR SHOW" I believe her and so will you. I personally cant wait for a new and maybe even live album, nationwide tour etc.So go buy her albums and see her shows. YOU WONT BE SORRY. SIGNED -WEST-BY-GOD VIRGINIA'S REIGNING EXPERT ON TEXAS/HILLBILLY/HONKYTONK MUSIC.SFC ROBERT E WHITE US ARMY PS IN THE NEXT FEW DAYS WATCH FOR MY REVIEW ON UNLEASED LIVE (ROBINSON,INGRAM AND ROBINSON).
Kelly Willis  01/08/2001            
Jessica Smith, commercial music student
Kelly Willis ROCKS! Pours her heart and soul into every note and word that is in every one of her songs about life expeience. She's the one who, when I have my albums on Lonestarmusic.com, I'll say was one of my inspirations and big influences! Love her!
Kelly Willis  10/25/2000            
big fan
An Angel on the Stage. She's basically the Sheryl Crow of "Country" music.
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