The last few
years have been a roller-coaster for Laila Biali.
For nearly
every major triumph-a highly acclaimed return to jazz, winning the JUNO Award
for Vocal Jazz Album of the Year, touring the world-the singer-songwriter has
faced private debilitating crises. In just a few short years, Biali lost a
close friend to cancer, mourned a family member's suicide, and was diagnosed
with two auto-immune disorders that threatened to upend her career. It was a
period of change and heartache-but it was also a season of great inspiration
and hope. The result is Biali's deeply personal new album, Out of Dust.
"These
new songs took shape as I processed my own feelings of doubt and loss,"
Biali reveals. "I believe that nothing is wasted, that even life's
greatest challenges can produce something meaningful, even if only to make us
more aware of and empathetic to the struggles of those around us."
This
hard-won optimism is apparent in the music. Instead of giving into the
darkness, Out of Dustfinds Biali luxuriating in the light she found at the end
of the tunnel. Co-produced by Biali and her husband, Ben Wittman, the album is
a celebration of life; warm and uplifting even as it confronts her recent challenges
(and the current political climate!) head-on.
The
political is personal on the brassy album opener, "Revival."
Transforming global tumult into an inspiring call-to-arms, she sings with the
clear-eyed confidence of a warrior, "There's a fire underground / C'mon on
down." This fervor animates the entire album, even its quieter, more
personal moments: "Wendy's Song," a piano ballad dedicated to the
friend she lost to cancer, turns the details of a single life into a powerful
epic; "Glass House," which she wrote with her husband, frankly
addresses the after-effects of a family member's suicide; "Take the Day
Off," a lullaby written with her nine-year-old son, bluntly acknowledges
the reality of healing with Biali singing that it's OK to "pull the sheets
over your head" and "unwind" when you need to.
In addition
to contributions from Biali's husband and son, Out of Dustfeatures multiple
GRAMMY nominees and winners including Lisa Fisher, Alan Ferber, John Ellis, and
Larnell Lewis.
"There's
a line from a song by the indie gospel group, Gungor, that has become like an
anthem to me," Biali says. "‘He makes beautiful things out of dust.'
That's where the title for the album comes from, and as a songwriter and
musician, my ultimate intention and hope is to spread a little more love."
Laila
Biali's album Out of Dust will be released Friday, March 27, 2020.
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