By Ozioma Nwabuikwu
The grandson of Bob Marley is here to shake up the genre with hip-hop, dancehall, and Afrobeats energy.
For the Nashville-based and platinum-certified singer-songwriter, Lindsay Ell, yoga, a therapy session and a quick flight to Salt Lake City for a show later that evening marks “a slow day.” A busy one, she tells RANGE, “Depends on where I am. If I’m on the road, in the morning, I’ll wake up and see my band. We’ll maybe have a soundcheck at the venue. I might have some press in the middle of the day. Might have some meet and greet VIP things to do. Then we usually do a show, and usually an after-show or sometimes hangs with fans. Then I go to bed and wake up and do it all over again. If I’m home, a lot of it is working in my studio and just trying to rest and recover.”
This kind of hectic schedule has been the norm for Ell for quite some time, as the Calgary-born star celebrates a prolific decade-long career in country music. Since breaking out in the early 2010s, she’s scored herself three number one singles and more than 400 million global streams – not to mention having opened for some of today’s biggest stars, including Josh Ross, Keith Urban, Blake Shelton, OneRepublic, and Maren Morris. Ell actually first entered music through the world of blues, attracting quite a few famous fans along the way. Having started by learning blues guitar at the age of eight, she was ultimately discovered by Randy Bachman, who lent a hand in songwriting and production on her first album, released in 2008 at age 19. Since then, she’s kept up a collaborative spirit and a passion for guitar.
Recently inking a deal with Universal Music Canada and earning the CCMA Music Humanitarian Award for her Make You Movement charitable organization that supports sexual trauma and domestic abuse survivors, Ell is wrapping up this milestone year on a high note. Releasing her first project in four years, she’s embarking on a new chapter and leaning into her authentic self more than ever. On her new EP, love myself, she’s vulnerably sharing her healing journey and opening up about some painful experiences she’s had in the hopes of inspiring and helping others. The project also marks a shift away from the more contemporary pop-country sound she’s established herself with and towards a new sonic direction, finding a home in genre-defying experimentation and alt-pop.
“I feel like I’m just evolving, you know, as an artist. Ever since I was a little girl, I was so inspired by country music, especially from the songwriter’s perspective — what a song said, the messages a song wanted to give off. And then moving to Nashville, being around the songwriter community here, I feel like Nashville’s been my home for a decade and a half and always will be,” she says. “But yeah, sonically I just feel like I’m so inspired by so many things right now and it’s really inspired me to make the projects I’ve always wanted to make.”
With a vibrant, bright alt-pop sound that’s both refreshing and accessible, love myself serves as an autobiographical journey and a reflection on the human experience. From confronting her harsh inner critic on the lead single “story i tell myself,” to grappling with overthinking and self-doubt on “what did i do,” which explores an unhealthy past relationship, the album navigates the challenges of self-love and acceptance on the title track “love myself,” while capturing the resilience built through experience on the standout song “pain tolerance.”
“This EP is so personal and so important to me. It’s the first batch of music I’ve released in a long time that I can say represents who I am and what I sound like live and just the way I really look at the world,” she says. “For a long time I think I was creating music from a place of, ‘Okay, these are the marching orders I’ve been told. This is what I feel like I need to do sonically to be successful in the lines I was living in. I just don’t think music needs to be created from that place.”
Further cementing her move away from a Nashville-influenced contemporary country sound, love myself was made in Brooklyn, NY alongside her co-producer Doug Schadt, who is primarily known for applying his skills to some of the tracks that turned one of Ell’s current artistic influences, Maggie Rogers, into a breakout artist. In addition, this is the first time that Ell has co-produced one of her projects, giving her more control over its direction.
“Working with Doug has been such an eye-opening experience in the best way. He’s never afraid to chase a certain direction, which has been so inspiring to me because I think I created a lot in containers where you are looking far more at the clock than you are really trying to chase what a song needs and what a whim of your creativity wants to explore,” she says. “It’s been so incredible being able to work with him. He knows the depth of where I want to go with this project. He seemed like the perfect person to ask to record this record.”
Ell is presently touring with the Queen of Country herself, Shania Twain, performing as her lead guitarist. This is also a full-circle moment for the singer-songwriter, as Twain is one of her idols who inspired her to pursue music.
“It’s been such a cool experience being able to work hands-on with an idol of mine. She was the reason I started singing when I was 8 years old. I remember my mom bought this plastic microphone from the dollar store, so I could sing Shania Twain songs in the mirror. I wanted to be her,” she says. “Now, fast forward years later, I am singing those songs with her, on stage, three feet away from her. It’s truly a reminder that you can make anything happen if you truly believe in yourself enough. I know they say never meet your idols, but Shania is definitely the exception to this rule.”
As a singer/songwriter, advocate and philanthropist with a substantial online platform, Ell is no stranger to being in the public eye. While being so open and vulnerable with fans is now second nature to her, it took her some time before reaching that point.
“It is challenging and it is beautiful. It is hard and it is easy sometimes,” she says. “I discovered really early on when I started to share my story of being a survivor when I was a little girl, of just the power that music has or that even anybody with a platform has. The fact that I can write a song that can inspire somebody on the other side of the world, is wild to my brain. (…) It has been the leading cause for me to be like, ‘Okay, if I become vulnerable and I share my journey and my stories of what I’m going through in my life, it can actually have a positive impact on other people.’”
“Being vulnerable is so scary,” she continues. “People can definitely take that vulnerability, that delicate part that you share with them, and try to crush it. But if anything, it just gives me more courage to just dig deeper and to peel off more layers. When we are authentic with ourselves as human beings, that’s what connects us to each other.” Striving to continue showing up as her authentic, unfiltered self, Ell shares one last piece of wisdom.
“I think it’s a really important time for all of us, specifically women, to listen to the messages we’re telling ourselves in our heads, and know that we are in control of those messages at the end of the day.”
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