Atlantic Records
WILLA WAS HERE, the dynamic
Lava/Atlantic debut from 20-year-old Willa Ford,
is as smart and sexy as the talented young singer
whose name it bears. Urban-influenced dancepop tracks
such as Ooh Ooh or Prince Charming
reveal an artist with extraordinary confidence,
not to mention an enormously soulful and strong
singing voice. I'm about to break all the
rules, she sings on the brash first single,
I Wanna Be Bad, and with her self-assured
lyrics and irresistibly up-front persona, it's abundantly
clear that Willa Ford is going to live up to her
promise. I'm not a cheerleader, she
announces with pride. I'm not trying to pretend
to be sweet and then come out and be bad. This is
who I am.
A native Floridian, Willa was the youngest child
of four in her family, and with her big voice and
even-bigger personality, she was quite naturally
the center of attention. Ever since I could
talk, I wanted to be a performer, she recalls.
I'd be in the middle of the living room, singing,
and dancing, and doing somersaults.
At 8, Willa began singing with
the Tampa Bay Children's Choir and by the time
she was 11, she had started her professional career,
enlisting with the Tampa-based children's performing
arts troupe, Entertainment Revue. The group, comprised
of 20 girls, aged five to 16, would put on variety
shows throughout the region, performing at fairs
and conventions, as well as at Walt Disney World
and Busch Gardens.
It was an amazing alternative
to voice lessons and dancing lessons, Willa
says. I was able to learn my craft on stage,
and now being on stage is just like being at home.
Remarkably, Willa maintained honor
student status as she continued to work with Entertainment
Revue, where she eventually moved from the chorus
into the role of featured soloist. At 15, she
parted ways with the group to become one quarter
of the short-lived vocal foursome called FLA.
However, that outfit didn't last long and Willa
was soon striking out on her own as a solo act.
I wanted it more than any
of the other girls, I think, she says. It
was obvious that only the ones who were willing
to sacrifice everything were going to make it.
Ford made her way to Los Angeles,
where she began her career in earnest. In 1999
she first garnered public attention via a tour
with the Backstreet Boys, as well as with a track
on Atlantic's double-platinum POKÉMON
THE FIRST MOVIE - MUSIC FROM AND INSPIRED BY THE
MOTION PICTURE.
For her Lava/Atlantic debut, Willa
teamed up with a diverse assortment of writers
and producers, including labelmate DJ Skribble
and his partner Anthony Acid, Travon Potts (Christina
Aguilera, Public Announcement), KNS (Big Pun,
Lord Tariq & Peter Gunz), Tim Kelley and Bob
Robinson (Destiny's Child, Sisqo), Andy Marvel
(Vitamin C, Celine Dion), Johnny Jam and Delgado
(Ace of Base, Aqua), and renowned tunesmith Desmond
Child (Aerosmith, Cher, Ricky Martin, Hanson).
It was great collaborating with these amazing
people, Willa enthuses. Like Desmond,
who's just incredible! He sits there at the piano
and you go back and forth, writing and exchanging
ideas. The things I picked up from him!
With some of the other people,
we would start with tracks, she continues.
They'd just give me a beat and I'd start
singing melodies. Then I'd think of something
that the music reminded me of or something I've
gone through, and I'd start writing lyrics.
Unlike many of her contemporaries,
Willa is determined to pen most of her own lyrics,
many of which exemplify her outspoken attitude.
I mostly come up with stories from my own
life, she says, but I also think about
stuff my friends are going through. And sometimes
I just make up a character that I want to be,
like 'I Wanna Be Bad.'
That song - co-written with KNS,
and produced by Brian & Josh - perfectly sums
up Ford's tell-it-like-it-is worldview, though
the songwriter is determined to insure that her
words are not misunderstood. People ask
'What kind of message are you sending?,'
Willa says, and I'm only saying 'Be who
you are.' It's not 'Go out and break things!'
It's just screw what everybody else thinks. You
can do your own thing, and tell people to shut
up when they tell you you can't! It's really hard
nowadays to be strong as a teenager, there's a
lot going on, so I hope my song is an outlet for
them.
Willa's musical influences are
as adventurous as she is, ranging from pop icons
like Madonna and R&B favorites such as Boyz
II Men, Jodeci, and Mary J. Blige, to jazz vocalists
such as Basia. In addition, Willa credits a most-unlikely
source as an important inspiration for her own
eclectic music. I love Radiohead,
she enthuses. They've influenced me in the
weirdest way. The craziness of their music, and
being able to be so left-field and yet find an
audience, that's so amazing.
Willa - who recently served as
the spokesperson for Pantene Pro-V's Pro-Voice
campaign, as well as appeared on the nationally-syndicated
in-concert cable special, Teensation! alongside
Atlantic labelmates Debelah Morgan, Plus One,
M2M, and Ashley Ballard - is now poised to step
up to the plate and fulfill her musical destiny.
With WILLA WAS HERE, this exciting
new star stakes her claim in a big, big way.
Amazon.com Editorial Reviews
About the Artist - Willa Ford
Remember Jessica Rabbit's immortal catchphrase,
I'm not bad, I'm just drawn that way? Those eight
words are the antithesis of what makes Willa Ford
unique in the pop music universe. Because not
only does the 22-year old Floridian refuse to
pretend she's a goody two-shoes but, more importantly,
she's no cartoon character. Willa Ford is a deceptively
complex individual, firmly at the helm of her
own career.
On her sophomore, yet-to-be-titled Lava full-length
album, the singer reveals facets of her talent
only hinted at on her 2001 debut Willa Was Here
(featuring her smash hit "I Wanna Be Bad").
From the blazing lead single, the dancehall romp
"A Toast To Men," and the sensual electronic
throb of "Sexysexobsessive," to the
Smashing Pumpkins-esque orchestral grandeur of
"I See You" and the poetic "Pieces,"
Willa breaks plenty of new ground. Willa began
writing these songs while touring in support of
Willa Was Here, working in a small mobile studio
in the back of the bus. She took inspiration from
a variety of sources; the salacious first single,
"A Toast To Men" featuring the
rapid-fire patter of special guest May
borrows its infectious hook from a classic sorority
chant. "It's an old toast in sororities,"
she explains. "Almost all sorority girls,
from some day and age know it." It dawned
on Willa that its four simple, spirited lines
represented an enduring artifact of female empowerment
that hadn't been grossly overexposed or grown
dated. "It was something that was still real
and contemporary, but women who were 40-years
old could remember it, too." A lot more people
can expect to change their mind about Willa after
they hear this album. Because this is the work
of a seasoned performer coming into her own as
a writer, as an artist. "There are a lot
of people out there who love to just take direction
from somebody else," she concludes. For Willa
Ford, that would never suffice. "It took
me a long time to create my sound, but this record
was about proving that, musically, I stand alone."
Well then, that calls for another toast: To a
job well done.
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