In
the daunting world of girl singers, San Francisco Bay Area-born,
tall, blonde and beautiful Lulee Fisher is
something special. From her earliest childhood days when she
put on "shows" to amuse her family and friends,
her fascination with the world of entertainment, and her love
of entertaining, was clear. As a young girl, she was trained
in the music of classical opera. She also performed as a soloist
with church and school choirs and in stage musicals, when
opportunities arose. Her passion for jazz began through the
influence of her aunt, Ramona Crowell, who was a friend of
the great Dizzy Gillespie, among others, and she gave Lulee,
at an early age, the opportunity to attend performances of
many of the jazz legends.
Later on, as a young woman with a yen for traveling, she
stopped in Honolulu on her way to join a friend in Afghanistan,
fell in love with Hawaii and remained to enroll at the University
of Honolulu, where she studied for a degree in architecture.
In time, however, she realized that her greatest interest
was in the field of entertainment, and she switched her major
to music and drama. Eventually, she moved to Los Angeles to
pursue a career in Hollywood, where she became involved in
the film business, first as an actress and singer and, finally,
in producing. Still, her devotion to jazz and her role in
it remained strong and dominated in her goal setting. Whether
on location in Europe, or Australia, or Canada, she would
seek out jazz clubs, sit in with the musicians and take available
gigs.
Today, she continues to be, as she says, "seriously
and totally committed to jazz music." Her
smooth and pleasing contralto voice has a good range (nearly
four octaves) and intonation, and has been honed under the
tutelage of singing great, Sue Raney. Her earlier days as
an actress have given her the background to effectively interpret
lyrics, dramatic and otherwise, and her good sense of rhythm
bodes her well in her handling of upbeat songs.
In regard to her singing, she states, "It
has something to do with what I want to share with my audience.
I want to share more intimate feelings. I want to take people
into my arms with my voice and hold them close. My singing
is about my personal relationship to life, music, philosophy
and people. I think the most important thing about jazz, besides
the music itself, is the feeling. It is out of feeling that
music comes. So, for me, jazz rings true when it is connected
to feeling, and my wanting to share what I feel, or another
person feels. There's such a deep, emotional impact to so
many jazz songs, and that's what I really want to go for."
Bob Agnew
L.A. Jazz Scene
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