
"I believe the blues should be sung by an older
person because it's about emotions and experience. I
couldn't do justice to it when I was younger because
my voice didn't have the edge it needed to convey the
emotion, nor did I have the first hand experience to
sing about blue themes convincingly."
But after 40 years in music and over 50 albums Dana
Gillespie is well qualified to sing the blues.
A career that combined
radio, theatre, film and sport (she was once British
junior water-skiing champion) with music, Dana has
been in the public eye since recording her first album
at the age of 15.
Her music has evolved from folk in the 60s
through 70s Bowie-esque glam-rock to the raunchy in-your-face blues she performs
today.
Dana Gillespie has been dedicated to the blues from an early age: "
I
discovered the blues when I went to the American Folk Blues Festival in 1962
and also to see the Yardbirds at the Marquee Club. I was in my early teens and
hadn't heard anything like it before - blues wasn't easily available in the UK
back then".
Bessie Smith especially inspired her because of her combination
of sly, funny and bawdy lyrics. "
Blues was my first musical love because
it's earthy, spiritual and honest."
In 1964 she recorded for
Pye, with
Donovan on guitar
and became a regular on the folk circuit.
She recalls: "[at that age]
I was doing folk
because I couldn't afford a band and I hadn't found
my musical niche". In those early years Dana
got to know many of the top bands and people in the
music business. Most shared her love of blues, and
played their own version of it.
Bob
Dylan who was an
old friend of Dana from the 60s showed interest in
her music in 1997, when he invited her to support him
on his UK tour, which included a
sell-out
show at Wembley.
After a swathe of singles on
Pye and two LPs for
Decca,
she moved to RCA and made
Weren't
Born A Man in
1973,
some titles being produced by
David
Bowie, whose management, Mainman,
also took care of her career.
While
her career in music was simmering away, she became
better known for her appearances in London's West
End theatres, in shows such as the first run of
Jesus
Christ Superstar (playing Mary Magdalene),
The Who's "
Tommy" (playing
the Acid Queen) and the rock Othello, "
Catch
My Soul". She also appeared with Dudley
Moore in the film version of "
The
Hound Of The Baskervilles" and starred in Ken Russell's "
Mahler" among
other movies.
Her second RCA LP,
Ain't
Gonna Play No Second Fiddle was just beginning to take off when her management
company decided she should move to the USA, where she
played and toured extensively for two years. Dana hosted
a radio blues show in New York at the same time, which
gave her the opportunity to learn more about the roots
of the music. She has continued her interest in radio
in Austria where she recently completed a 11-year stint
hosting a weekly, international world music show on
Blue Danube Radio called "
Globe Trotting With Gillespie".
In the 80s, Dana toured Europe several times
with the "
Stars Of Boogie
Woogie" tour, singing
either with
the Mojo Blues Band or with
Axel
Zwingenberger.
Her time with the Mojo Blues Band, a purist outfit
that backed all the American blues musicians visiting Europe,
lasted three years. "
I lived,
slept and breathed blues, because that was all they
did. It was
a great experience." She also developed her
interest in Indian and Arabic music, recording
the single "
Move
Your Body Close To Me", an Indian-influenced
song with synthesiser backing. It shot to #1
in Europe.
Dana has already released five blues albums through
Ace.
Blue Job,
was recorded in
1982, a collection
of blues songs with a humorous risqué twist.
The second LP,
Below
The Belt drew on the same source,
and was produced by
Mike Vernon (who
also produced Dana's Pye album in the 60s,
Box
Of Surprises). The
third LP,
Sweet Meat concentrated
on "fat" and "thin" numbers
- another raunchy set of songs. The combined three
LPs are now available on two CDs
Blues
it Up and
Hot Stuff. Her most recent release
Staying
Power, displays
an empathy with the blues which can be traced back
to her first exposure to the art form in the early
1960s.
In
2002 Dana was invited to take her road band,
The
London Blues Band, on the first ever major tour by
a western band of India. She filled stadiums from Mumbai
to Calcutta and yet again demonstrated her infalible
ability to take her music to a seemingly unlikely audience.
Her songwriting is without doubt a major asset. Bob
Dylan has said how much he likes her songs... her self
penned catalogue is phenomenal and sets her apart as
a truly unique talent.
India has always played a major part in Dana's life
and she r
ecorded 3 albums in
Sanskrit, under the pseudonym
THIRD MAN before reverting to Dana Gillespie.
Her touring
schedule has been consistently packed, taking her to
all the European blues festivals. In recognition of
her talent, she was voted 'Top British Female Blues
Vocalist' by the
British Blues
Connection and
Blueprint
Magazine between 1992 and 1996 and has now been elevated
into their
Hall Of Fame.
In the last week of January, for over a decade, the Caribbean Island
of MUSTIQUE has been the destination for a charity blues festival, founded
and organised by Dana and Basil Charles. The festival started as a small event
but as Mustique has grown in popularity, as a tourist destination and as a
playground for the wealthy, so has the festival. The funds collected
are used to pay for scholarships for children's schooling in the neighbouring
island of St. Vincent. Dana maintains that the event will continue to be a
free festival, raising money through the sale of the
Mustique
Blues Festival LIVE CD produced every year. Blues musicians from all over the world,
such as
Big Jay McNeely and
Larry Garner, perform at the festival.