|
STAR OF THE MONTH: TÊTE-À-TÊTE WITH DONNA RAWLINS (Donatella)
Singer/songwriter Donna Rawlins musical career has spanned 30 years in various Rock/Pop bands that toured nationally, globally and also with the USO, beginning with poetry writing in her teens in her homeland, the foothills of the Appalachians. Donna's entire family received their musical gifts from their Appalachian / Welsh background. All are musicians and singers; her parents Esther (piano) and Harry Rawlins (singer) perform in Lancaster while sister Emily is a European opera singer, and sister Harriet staked her singing claim on Broadway in New York. Now a resident of Venice, California, Donna splits her time between singing and writing for the band she co-fronts with friend, Stacy Robin, Imaginary Friends as well as Rosemont Crossing a band based in the Midwest, while also working as a Voice Over artist in Los Angeles. Her velvety alto voice has been heard on many National TV and Radio ads. Donna's songs have been licensed several times to Films, TV Shows and Radio Commercials, including the series Dawsons Creek, Felicity and The Shield. In 2003, Donna released her first solo CD, Donatella: Under The Moon. She is also a Voice Over Actor represented by the William Morris Agency here in Los Angeles, so along with her singing and performing career. She also record voices for commercials, documentaries and cartoons. She has been the spokesperson for United Airlines, May Company, Sears Diehard Batteries, Rosetto Pasta and Tilex (to name a few) and was the character on the first season of .Hack//Sign on the Cartoon Network.
Q: What's one of the most beautiful sounds to your ears? Donna: A cat purring. Q: And the most beautiful sights to my eyes? Donna: Walking inside a forest. Q: If you had to go back in time is there anything you would like to change in your career? Donna: Yes. I would have come to Los Angeles earlier than I did by about ten years. Q: Is there a song written & sung by someone else you wish you wrote? Donna: Yes by Shawn Colvin. Q: How would you do it differently? Donna: Looking at my career in the bigger picture I made my decisions as best as I could. I don't think I can say I'd do it much differently. Q: What did you learn from the worst and the best experience of your career? Donna: Trust your instincts, always. Q: Do you think that wardrobe brings a positive role for stage performers? Donna: Yes. Q: Do you follow fashion? Donna: I follow fashion only in a general way. I am not fond of shopping because I have so many other things I would rather do. I prefer natural fabrics, blue jeans, bracelets and sexy shoes. Q: How do you feel when you see performers whom you think are less talented than you, yet, they made it big time? Donna: Good for them.
______________________________ FUN PAGE CONTINUES ON THE NEXT PAGE (HUMOR CARTOONS)
|
.
Photo: CD cover of Donatella's "Under The Moon". Oceanic Records. Read the Review ________________________________________________________________________________ "Strangers attract me more than those I know..." Q: Is this your first CD? Donna: No, but it is my first SOLO CD. I have recorded two CDs with Imaginary Friends, worked on Drawing Down The Moon and just released a new CD with my band Rosemont Crossing along with a few others and records from rock bands in my past; Trial By Fire and the Donna Rawlins Band. Q: Do you write your own songs? Donna: Yes. I work best when I co-write with another musician though. I feel my strongest areas are lyric writing, finding catchy choruses and of course, singing. My favorite way to work is to have a musician give me an instrumental and then I listen to it over and over until the words and melodies from the music. Q: What's next on your agenda? Donna: I am currently working on my new Donatella CD primarily with producer Seth Hartman here in LA. I have a few songs I've written alone which I plan to include as well as two songs I am working on with husband/producer Robert Feist of RavensWork Studios. I am also working with Stacy Robin on a new Imaginary Friends release as well as the second CD with Rosemont Crossing. Q: Best two lines from a song you wrote: Donna: Daeya from Donatella UNDER THE MOON Don' t think anyone will understand Your need to run away from what you have Q: Who does your musical arrangements? Donna: In most cases for Donatella, the producer I'm working with. In Imaginary Friends it is usually Tom McCauley. In Rosemont Crossing it's the entire band. Q: What is your favorite musical instrument? Donna: I don't have a favorite, but I LOVE Mandolin and Fiddle. Q: What instrument dominates your melody? Donna: Acoustic Guitar. "With Donatella, I have people who like grooves and sex but are also deep thinkers..." Q: Usually, what is the first thing you do when you face the audience or appear on stage? Donna: Smile and find someone to connect with audience for the first time? Q: What attracts you most? Donna: Strangers attract me more than those I know. I think because it's someone new to bond with. Q: Tell me about your audience, those who come to see you perform. What kind of audience / following do you have? Donna: It depends on the band. With Donatella I have people who like grooves and sex but are also deep thinkers. With Imaginary Friends, it's a general mix. I think Imaginary Friends appeals to a broad audience and Rosemont Crossing appeals especially to baby boomers because of the three part harmony reminiscent of early Eagles. Q: Who is Donna? Donna: I am m still finding out but one thing I can confidently say is that I am interested in generating messages of love, kindness and tolerance because the world is in desperate need of that. Q: Is there anything you could not get in real life but you found it in your music? Donna: No, but there is something transcendental about music that's healing more than entertaining to me.
___________________________________________________________
|
CHERCHEZ LA FEMME! Richard Sand
Peggy
Judy on the cover of a new book on entertainment and showbiz. She is making
waves!! Photo credit: Peter Zakhary.
PARIS- "The cover is SEXY! We look like Maxi’s Angels. Great placement. " said Soul Diva, Antoinette Montague, commenting on the layout of the cover of the recently published enormous book SHOWBIZ, PIONEERS, BEST SINGERS, MUSICIANS AND ENTERTAINERS FROM 1606 TO THE PRESENT; Volume IV of the very impressive series World Who's Who in Jazz, Cabaret, Music and Entertainment, published by Times Square Press and the Federation of American Musicians, singers and performing artists (FAMSPA). But who is Maxi? Not a hard task to find out. Maxi is the legendary Maximillien de Lafayette, the walking encyclopedia, prolific author of more than 100 books, dictionaries, encyclopedias and a dozen of plays and musicals. So Maxi is doing fine. Almost every book he writes become a bestseller. But Maxi is in a different ball game now. He writes big books and asks his associates and publicists (tons of them) to find the best looking and most talented artists and femmes fatales in showbiz to grace the covers of his books. And here is exactly where Antoinette Montague's comment falls in the right place. Montague was referring to seven jazz singers who appear on the cover of his latest book, the Showbiz, Pioneers, etc.... (Lord! is this a title or a doctoral dissertation?) That's right! Seven gorgeous and talented singers from Iceland, Australia, the United States and South Africa. Montague called them "angels". She is sweet. So Maxi needs an angel? I do. But why seven angels? Boy, I love to have angels like these divas, I don't need to go to heaven. They bring heaven to me. Maxi's heavenly angels are not Gabriel et al. They are DIVAS! They don't come from heaven...they come from a more complex heaven: SHOWBIZ! And there is no business like show business and no heaven like a heaven made out of divas.


ANGELS OR DIVAS?
From left to right: Back cover of the book: The earthy heaven of fabulous divas. The flamboyant Peggy Judy, one of a kind!
Here they are in no particular order: Nichaud Fitzgibbon, a stunning singer from Australia, the very elegant and striking Stephanie Jordan, Zola an American songwriter and singer who immigrated from South Africa and established herself as one of the premier singers in the United States, Katie Bull a New Yorker who released a bunch of albums of a rare beauty, Irene Soderberg, a fabulous singer comedienne made in heaven, Maria Gentile, an acclaimed songwriter and singer who amassed awards and accolades, and our Antoinette Montague who is making big buzz in the steamy world of American Jazz and Blues.
Soul
diva Antoinette Montague in concert.
Did I forget something or somebody? Sure I did!! Peggy Judy, the flamboyant storyteller, the extravagant comic nymph, the published author and showbiz star. She is on the front cover and she sparkles like the Eiffel Tour! She reflects all the glitters of Paris Cabarets mixed with a panache, American style, that is. Many Jazz and cabaret singers in the United States are furious. In particular male singers. What are they complaining about? George Evans, a Canadian jazz singer explained the dilemma when he asked Carol Lexter "My goodness, are there no male vocalists in the cabaret and jazz industries worthy of a cover?" You got it!
THE 8 MAJESTIC DIVAS






From
left to right. 1-Australia's Jazz mega star Nichaud Fitzgibbon: “I
don’t remember much about meeting Louis, I do remember I got pretty scared
because he had a big horn on his lip, I was very little." Nichaud says. "Dad
went out to the airport with a few other musicians and the planes would arrive
and all the passengers would walk across the tarmac. Dad had a jazz band there
playing for Louis Armstrong as he arrived.” With four generations of jazz
mastery in the family, Nichaud was always surrounded by music and the industry
throughout her childhood. But in terms of her adopting the Fitzgibbon trade,
Nichaud took a little longer to come to the table. Source: ABC Victoria. 2-Stephanie
Jordan, one of the most authentic Jazz singers in the business.
Stephanie made her debut at Takoma Station Jazz Club. She joined the
Doug Carne Band in an unrehearsed rendition of “I Remember April.”
Within a few months she developed a loyal following and became much sought
after. She has performed at many of the Washington, D.C. jazz haunts such as
The Twins Jazz Lounge, Blues Alley, and Carter Baron Amphitheater. Stephanie
has also appeared at the opening of the Schomburg Center of the New York
Public Library, Langston Hughes Auditorium in New York City, the
New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival,
the Marciac Jazz Festival in France, and
Jazz Aspen.
(Photo courtesy of the United States Embassy in Ukraine.) 3-Irene Soderberg,
the fabulous Irene! The Boston Mirror wrote: "Take a large pan of Ethel
Merman, add a generous cup of Mae West, stir in a spoonful of Sophie Tucker
and sprinkle a pinch of Betty Hutton; heat it up for about an hour and a half.
The results are an outrageous, roly-poly bundle of dynamite named Irene. She
shimmies, she shakes, she wiggles like a snake, as she purrs and croons and
belts out a great variety of saloon songs and Broadway classics."4-Zola,
a Billboard award winning songwriter
whose songs are recognized in many categories including, jazz, blues, pop,
country, contemporary-folk and cabaret. This versatile singer-pianist has
recorded six solo albums of original material, varying in style and genre,
that also include baby lullabies and children’s music. 5-Maria
Gentile (AEA SAG ASCAP
AFTRA) is a singer, songwriter, actress, and comedienne who spent 6 years in
the hit Off-Broadway show Tony & Tina's Wedding as Bridesmaid Marina Gallino.
In January of
2000, she released her debut CD, So Many Pieces of Me, which features twelve
original compositions. Three of the songs from that CD can be heard in the
independent feature film In Passing, written and directed by Kate Fitzgerald.
From 1992 through 1997, Maria also worked for the Center for Family Life in
Brooklyn, where she taught improvisational acting, vocals, and creative
writing for in-school and after-school programs. She also wrote over 30 songs
for their original productions. Maria has completed her second CD of original
songs, entitled That... Which is Real. One of the tracks off the album, "I'd
Rather Never Know" was nominated for 2005 MAC Song of the Year, and anoher,
"Kindness Makes Me Cry", was named 2004 MAC song of the year! Another
composition, "If I Was a Boy" (co-written with Caren Cole), was nominated for
2003 MAC song of the year.6-Katie Bull
is a jazz vocalist and
multi-media writer/performer living in New York City since birth. LOVE SPOOK
is Bull’s second CD to date. Her premiere CD Conversations with the Jokers
(with Michael Jefry Stevens, Lou Grassi, Joe Fonda) was released in March 2003
and received excellent critical notices. Conversations was on 12 Top Ten CMJ
Radio charts culminating in an invitation to sing at Jazzweek’s kick-off to
the Rochester International Jazz Festival, at the Montage. According to De
Lafayette, Katie Bull is one of the most intelligent and prolific stars in the
business.7-Antoinette
Montague, the fabulous Blues singer was in the Great Women in Music
Festival at Birdland with the Duke Ellington Band (filmed by BET on Jazz),
Mike Longo's NY State of the Art Band for the 88th Birthday Celebration of
Dizzy Gillespie, and selected by a special panel of Judy Pitts, Sheila Jordan
and Martin Mueller to perform at the 40th Anniversary of St. Peter's Church
and the 10th Anniversary of International Women in Jazz.
Photo:
THE GENESIS OF THE PEGGY JUDY SHOW:
Miss Peggy with her original band, Randy Ruff and The Impossibles (later named
"The Balls"). Clockwise, from upper left, Keyboard dude/Surfer God/former star
of "Hawaii-50" (no kidding!) Randy Ruff, Bass piano Goddess Jackie Curry, Bass
guitar/tech genius/nicest guy on the planet Nick Massie, Percussion/suspected
Indian royal prince Mohi Chand. Four great friends who gave their incredible
talents to give Miss Peggy her start back at the Company of Angels Theater.
Those were the days!.
8-Peggy Judy (On the front cover). The original creation of writer/singer/actress Molly Brandenburg, Peggy Judy first appeared as a monologue in a late night Hollywood comedy hit called Midnite Madness. The character later reappeared in an acclaimed stage musical, The Peggy Judy Comeback Tour, co-created with screenwriter (Liar, Liar) Steve Mazur, which was followed by The Peggy Judy Christmas Special, and The Peggy Judy Summer Replacement Show. From there, Peggy evolved into a solo performance piece--one woman and a piano--with Peggy’s sly wit and powerful vocals bringing her bookings at top Los Angeles venues, including The Comedy Store, the Improv, The Cinegrill, Café Largo, The Gardenia, Masquer's Cabaret, The Hudson Backstage and more.
I did not read the book yet. But I am going to. How can I miss a free passage to divas' heaven?