Leila Adu “Cherry Pie” Album Release/Tour
Media Release for IMMEDIATE use.
Leila Adu
“Cherry
Pie”
Album Release/Tour
Raglan: 10 June @ Raglan Town
Hall
Auckland: 11 June @ The Odeon
Leigh: 12 June @
The Leigh Sawmill
Takaka: 22 June @ The Mussel
Inn
Christchurch: 23 June @ Creation
Dunedin: 24 June
@ Arc Cafe
Riverton: 25 June @ Riverton Arts
Centre
Wellington: 8 July, in store @ Real Groovy 5pm & Happy 8pm
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OK, to describe the
striking and spellbinding music of Leila Adu you first need
to use a vast range of singers, Joni Mitchell, Nico,
Stereolab and PJ Harvey – to name a few, then there’s the
varied genre descriptions of jazz, soul, gamelan, Latino,
funk, gothic and bossa nova.
But however you chose to describe Leila Adu’s “delightfully dissonant droning harmonies” (Sunday Star Times), it doesn’t matter as Leila herself says “Convenient tags give people preconceived ideas that aren’t always correct.” Her sultry voice and captivating music are unique and very much her own.
In June, Leila Adu’s second album, Cherry Pie, will be released and she will be performing a highly anticipated tour across NZ. Cherry Pie was produced by David Long who also features on the album. Long was lead guitarist for The Mutton Birds and produced Fur Patrol’s debut album Pet, for which he won Producer of the Year Award 2001. The album also features drummer Ricky Gooch (Trinity Roots,) bass player Thomas Callwood and Jeffrey Henderson (Syzygy, Urban Taniwha.)
Leila Adu
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London-born, New Zealand-raised and of Ghanaian heritage, Leila’s broad scope of influences is more than merely geographic. Leila studied post-graduate music composition at Victoria University and has composed a short film soundtrack to Forty Degrees Something as well as electronic, instrumental and orchestral pieces. Along with her post-graduate studies, Leila recorded her debut album, Dig A Hole in 2003.
Her music has seen her touring in NZ, London, Moscow, Canberra and Melbourne. In Melbourne, Shane Moritz of Beat Magazine said, “Dig A Hole, her self-released debut, is a strange fusion of edgy soul and stuttering beats, complimented by moody strings and an incomparable intensity that smoulders under smoky, stage lights.”
Leila has collaborated with a diverse range of musicians including hip-hop, rock, punk and electronic music and has been part of the Wellington improvising scene performing at Bomb The Space and the Wellington International Jazz Festival.
Responses to Leila Adu’s previous album Dig A Hole
Rip It Up, Zoe Winkler,
Feb/March issue, 2004
“Few debut artists are as daring
as Leila Adu”
The Sunday Star Times, Grant Smithies, 18th
May 2003
“Dissonant delight . . . Full of striking
imagery and delightfully dissonant droning harmonies, the
nearest reference point lies somewhere between sad-eyed
Brazilian crooner Astrud Gilberto and London-based avant-pop
darlings Stereolab.”
The Dominion Post, John Kennedy, 1st
May 2003
“Her voice is as distinctive as any you’ll hear
on these shores – dark, sonorous, uninflected and
unflinching.”
Beat Magazine (Melbourne) Shane
Moritz
“She has a hypnotic voice, moderately spiced,
sprinkled in firewater. Some call it sultry, and it is, but
it’s also heavy and soothing and gets under your skin in the
most welcoming way.”
Live, Lucy Parr
“Leila Adu and
her back-up musicians are definitely talented so look out
for an opportunity to see this group live; it’s guaranteed
to be a spirited performance.”
www.leilaadu.co.nz
Brianne Kerr
Publicity
briannekerrpublicity @
yahoo.co.nz