One could easily make the case that singer-songwriter Cat Levan has
much more than just a double life. The former professional fighter, restaurant
owner, clothing designer, marketing director, illustrator and mother will
finally realize her long-held musical dream with her debut album, “Double
Life” on the Wide Sky Records label. The Vancouver-based artist
teamed with Billboard Top 10 hitmaker Steve Oliver to write seven original
songs for the 11-song set produced by Oliver in the guitarist’s Southern
California studio. Her Canadian countryman and brother-in-law, contemporary
jazz saxophonist Walle Larsson, guests throughout the collection that finished
tracking just prior to the closure of the border due to the coronavirus
pandemic.
“I’ve done a
lot of different things throughout my life and experienced success in a variety
of areas, but music has been a constant presence dating back to my family
household while growing up. ‘Double Life’ speaks to the dreams we hold tight to
our chest and never let anyone know about. The artist who has a rich inner
musical world but lives a life of logic and order that never reveals the depth
of her inner world. It's a double life, but in a good way,” said Levan whose
sister is Juno Awards-nominated singer-songwriter Melanie Chartrand.
As a lyricist,
Levan is a storyteller who writes about love, loneliness, connection and
uncertainty, which suits the inherently vulnerable qualities of her ethereal
voice. After opening the disc with the upbeat dance-pop title track that is
bolstered by tribal percussion beats, “What’s Been Going Down” pours a smooth
cosmopolitan cocktail of jazz and pop. The downtempo “Keep Moving” was the
first song penned for the album.
“It's about a
time in my life when I was stuck in an awful place. My mother had died, and I
had just left a relationship and moved back to Vancouver. I was really down,
feeling very alone, not seeing a future that I liked. Every day, I would get up
and try to push myself to do something that would move me forward. I was
sleepwalking through life with a constant ache in my chest,” admitted Levan who
plans to film a couple of videos to accompany the album release.
Levan found
singing “December Road” helped her let go of the heartache. It is a stark and
poignant piano ballad about accepting love and loss. She loves how the soulful
and sensual “Something’s Gotta Give” exposes the seedy side of life.
“It makes me
feel like I'm walking down the street late at night, peeking into steamy bars
and witnessing shady deals. It’s fascinating seeing the colorful underside of
the streets.”
The haunting
“The Way I Feel” was written and recorded by Gordon Lightfoot and Levan’s
version exquisitely captures the pain and reality of love. A joyous slice of
sunshine, “Baba Doo” is a wordless contemporary jazz dance set to the rhythm of
life.
“Waiting for
the Right Time” moves at the deliberate, tension-filled pace of a prowl. “This
is a song with two stories. One is a story of an assassin stalking her prey,
waiting for the moment to strike. The other story talks about how we hide our
darker side in a relationship. We’re always looking to see if it’s safe to
reveal our weaknesses. If we show who we are, will it push them away? It’s all
a test to see how much we are accepted exactly as we are.”
Layers of
percussion drive the snappy groove of “Diving Deep,” Levan’s first track ever
sung in vocalese, one of Oliver’s hallmarks. “When we wrote this song, I had no
idea what vocalese was. Steve introduced me to it and asked me to be open to
this new style of singing. We wrote and recorded the song the same day, so I
was trying to adjust, but my voice was tired and a little unhappy with me.
There were a few notes that I was struggling with and Steve recorded me
grumbling about them. When we were playing back the rough track, he left my
comments in and it made me laugh so we kept them as an inside joke.”
Levan calls
“Coming Home” a companion piece to “Double Life.” It is about the achingly deep
connection between romantic soulmates. The album closes with a bonus track, the
jazz standard “Autumn Leaves,” that leaves lovelorn listeners remembering the
sweet and seductive memories of summer love.
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