Aimee
Allen Sends Out a Little Happiness |
Aimee Allen is one of the most gifted singer / songwriters to come our
way in a very long time, and in 2009 Riveting Riffs Magazine had the
pleasure of reviewing her current album
A Little Happiness, which
demonstrates in fine fashion, just how versatile she is, as she
incorporates reggae, pop, rock, gospel, calls and responses, as well as
numerous other elements into her collection of songs. Allen is equally
adept at performing original, hard edged and in your face Rock songs
(“I’d Start A Revolution”), as she is comfortable in recording and
performing fun songs, such as “On Vacation,” from her new album
A Little Happiness. She also
wrote the song “Cooties,” for the 2007 movie
Hairspray.
Aimee Allen is also a survivor, someone who she says was treated cruelly
by her step-father, she rebelled against institutionalized religion and
she was the victim of a vicious assault and beating, the result of a
random gang attack in Los Angeles during 2008, an ordeal that left her
almost dead. If all that was not enough, Allen believes under the former
administration for the American government there were efforts to
suppress her music (including a visit she received), because they
objected to the tile and the content of one of her albums “I’d Start A
Revolution.,” claiming that she posed security risk. Instead of turning
inward and reclusive, Aimee Allen is using her music as a channel to
reach out to others.
A Little Happiness marks the first time that Allen also wore the producer’s hat and her fingerprints are virtually on all aspects of this recording. She says that in the past, “I found that producers would put their agendas before the song and sometimes they would use my name or whatever, to make sure that their production was over the top and was amazing, so that other producers could hear it or other people would give them more work. I just really wanted the songs to be the songs, without any sort of producer magic on it, because the song can get lost in all of that I think.” Continuing to discuss A Little Happiness, Aimee Allen says, “I figure if it is me writing all of the songs, producing them, orchestrating the musicians and doing everything, then it will be fully my expression and I won’t have regrets. I will just think that was a portrait or a picture of that time in my life. There are no regrets, because that is my art, whereas I think on some of my other projects I have let producers do what they thought their vision was and ultimately it killed me. In the past, artistically, I have had a lot of regrets, as I have allowed other people to collaborate their visions with my vision. I just couldn’t leave the planet without doing it one time with my vision, without any collaboration.
Assuring this journalist, that she was not planning
on leaving the planet anytime soon, Allen says, “I think after my assault, I had
a wakeup call with how short and how fragile life is. I thought what a tragedy
if I died and I never got to do an album that I fully participated in, and
instead I just let other people do what they thought was a good idea. When I had
that wakeup call, it immediately inspired me to get to work right away on this
project.” Songs such as “God Talks,”
“Change In Weather,”
“On Vacation,” the title track “A Little Happiness,” and
“Crazy,” provide snapshots of various aspects of Aimee Allen’s life. She says,
“It is pretty autobiographical; almost every single song is a picture of a time
in my life, without any exaggeration or artistic license. It is pretty much my
story, the story of my life. I guess it is therapy in a way to get it out and to
share my story, in the hope that I can connect with other people, so they can
find some hope and some peace in it. I hope they can find something in it to
help them and that is why I believe that I was given the gift and why I make
music. I hope that it connects with others.” When the song “On Vacation,”
was penned, Allen says, “That was a very sad moment. I was very sarcastic. I was
joking with my friend Lucian Piane who wrote the song with me. He came to my
apartment and I had just got off the phone with my ex-boyfriend, who had called
me, and had said, to me, ‘I heard that you aren’t doing very well. I just wanted
to see if you are okay.’ My friend Lucian was in the room and I was like, ‘I am
fine. I am doing really well. We are going out tonight. When I got off the phone, I started joking
around about feeling good (she breaks into singing the lines, “Feelin’ good,”
from the song) and just joking about it. We wrote the song in a few
minutes, just to cheer me up and it did cheer me up. It was the opposite of what
I was feeling when we began to write the song.” The companion video for “On Vacation,” leaves no room for doubt that Allen is delivering a message “Everything is good / Now that you are gone,” as the singer indicates that she has moved on with her life, she uses words like “Nothing you can say / Could ever change my mind,” and “Everything is good / Now that you are gone,” in an upbeat, lighthearted fashion to get her point across, but without ever becoming bogged down in bitterness or issues. For the ladies who are into this sort of thing, there is also some nice male eye candy, but in a tasteful, not sleazy fashion. “On
Vacation,” possesses a reggae pop beat, over which we hear Allen’s airy and
cheery soprano voice, which stand in contrast to the edgier vocals that were
prominent in the early part of her career. “That
particular song came all at once. We used a lot of calls and responses. It is very
organic. I really related to the feel and the soul of what Louis Prima had done
on on an album of his that I had. In that particular moment I was like let’s do Louis
Prima “Feelin’ good, feelin’ good,” that was the origin for the inspiration for
that particular part. The lyrics and the music came at once. That’s very rare
for that to happen, but I am very grateful that it did. I like that song,”
explains Allen.
Even though,
A Little Happiness
should once again firmly establish Aimee Allen as a premier singer / songwriter,
there were still moments of uncertainty in the studio. “One of my biggest
challenges (as a producer), was about halfway through, I didn’t know if I could
do it, because it was my first time (as a producer). About halfway through I started to second guess myself. How do I know that my
views are good?
I really wanted to simplify everything and
make it more organic. I had never worked with anyone who wanted to do just
raw, simplified, unproduced sound. I didn’t know how to do it and still sound
professional. I had an engineer Ryan Atkins work with me on the technical
aspects of everything and he was a lot of help. When I wanted him to be a bigger
part of it, because I was second guessing myself he didn’t and he wouldn’t, because he said, ‘This
is what you originally wanted. You want to do this and you have to do this.’
For a couple of weeks, I was really frustrated
to the point of tears, but I am so happy that he made me keep going on my own.
He helped me with a lot of the technical things, but with the creative ideas, he
was like, this is yours, you do it. For a bit it was frustrating, but it turned
out to be a great gift that he gave me, allowing me to be independent,” she
says.
Someone, not Allen, posted a video on youtube of the singer performing the song
“God Talks,” the last track from
A Little Happiness,
and the gig was in Aimee Allen may have simplified her music, but she is a
very complex individual and the beautiful thing is she understands that about
herself. She is aware of how the painful moments in her life have impacted and
shaped who she is today, but she is also intent on using those experiences as an
opportunity to reach out to others, through her music, so they will know that
they are not alone, and even if they never meet her just like that little girl
who so many years ago, sat in a lonely room and made friends with the voices
that she heard singing to her, those who are hurting today can bond with Aimee
Allen through her songs. On the inside of each of Aimee Allen’s arms are tattoos.
The one on the inside of her right arm simply says revolution and there are
three swords that represent the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit. Of the tattoo
on her left arm she says, “It is a lotus flower and I got that to inspire me and
to remind me that although I come from a difficult upbringing, pain or suffering
in my youth, I can grow into a beautiful flower, just like the lotus flower
grows from mud and dirt and it grows into a beautiful flower. That is really my
hope, that I can come from pain and that I can still make something beautiful
out of it.”
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