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Sense of SelfDeserving singer finally comes into her ownMichael McCallPublished on April 01, 1999Kelly Willis What I Deserve(Rykodisc) Willis plays Apr. 9 at Exit/In After nearly a decade in the music business, Kelly Willis is finally hitting her stride. The Austin, Texas-based singer has always made good records, but it’s only recently that she has been able to determine her own musical identity. As she intones pointedly on the title track of her new album, What I Deserve, “I have done the best I can, but what I’ve done is not who I am.” Those lines pretty much sum up Willis’ experience on Music Row in the early ’90s, when over the course of three critically lauded albums for MCA Records, she failed to score a single country radio hit. Listening again to those albums, it’s evident that Willis was an unusually capable country vocalist, and that the work she created ranks among the most interesting Nashville records of the period. But in retrospect, it’s clear that she never settled into a style that was completely her own. At their best, Willis’ MCA releases displayed her knack for putting a souped-up twang into rockabilly tunes and for summoning complex emotions on certain ballads. But these albums ultimately came off as failed attempts at finding a middle ground between the songs she wanted to do and the songs that might get her airplay on country radio. Truth is, Willis isn’t the kind of singer modern country radio likes; she’s far too complicated for that. Unlike straight-ahead belters Trisha Yearwood and Martina McBride, she owns a vinegary, twangy voice that needs room to slur words and slide delicately through its range. Hers isn’t a voice meant for putting across clear-spoken emotions or fist-pumping anthems; Willis is better at expressing hidden things. That’s why What I Deserve ranks as the first true Kelly Willis album of her careeror at least the first record that capitalizes on her strengths rather than compromising them. The new collection completes a journey that Willis started in 1993, when MCA cut her from its roster, just as it had released her third album. “It was a real blow,” she says. “I was real hurt. I wasn’t prepared for the timing of it. I was so attached to everyone there, and suddenly it was like we weren’t family anymore.” Eventually, she saw her severance as a blessing. “I was feeling lost musically, says the soft-spoken Willis, whose youthful shyness of a decade ago has evolved into a kind of quiet, reserved strength. “So I thought the best thing to do was just start over, as if I had never had a career, hadn’t put any records out, and had the freedom to be whoever I want to be.” She spent a couple of years writing songs, letting her feelings lead her to new musical ground. Signed by A&M Records, she spent time in the studio with several leaders of the mid-’90s alternative country movement, recording songs backed by Son Volt, Sixteen Horsepower, and members of the Jayhawks. “For the first time, I didn’t feel any pressure in the studio,” Willis says. “I experimented with different elements and got to figure out how I wanted to sound.” Those sessions led to the release of a striking four-song sampler, Fading Fast. Before she got to release a complete album, however, A&M underwent the first of many corporate shakeups. Teresa Ensenat, the executive guiding Willis’ career, left the company. The singer was cut soon afterward. “I didn’t feel as scared as you might think,” she says of losing her second record contract. “I had kind of dealt with it before, and I wasn’t as freaked out about it. Besides, I figured I would land on my feet.” She did. Quickly snatched up by Rykodisc, a leading independent record company, Willis revisited the tapes she’d created for A&M. She retooled a few songs and recorded several more with a hand-picked group of musicians, including guitarists Mark Spencer, Chuck Prophet, John Dee Graham, and Lloyd Maines. The result is What I Deserve. “I found out that I can be myself and still make a record,” she says. “For the first time, I’m not pretending to be anything I’m not. I found out that I can be completely in control of my own recording, and I never had to do that before. Now that I know I can do that, I feel really comfortable with it.” At this point, Willis has left her early rockabilly influences behind. In search of a more mature sound, she has chosen to record songs about searching for love, for identity, for a reason for being. “I’m 30 years old now, and I feel real good about presenting these songs at this time in my life. I feel like they’re songs you can grow old with.”
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