“Imagine a night spent alone in the desert. There’s nobody around for miles – nothing to shield you from your fears and wildest imaginings. Out of the black comes a speeding horse. It’s wild, frightening, and seemingly untamable. But if you can calm it, befriend it, and mount it, it might provide an escape from solitude.”
New York pop-soul singer-songwriter Sunny Ozell has won our hearts with her catchy song “All That I Am,” and without any doubt that Sunny Ozell will be one of your favorite artists. Her pure and charming voice along with catchy and unique melodies are creating wonderful atmospheres in this record. The lyrics are so beautiful and her voice is definitely a piece of heaven, we don’t mind replaying this song million times just to enjoy her angelic and pure voice.
ABOUT THE ARTIST:
What if there could be an album that called to mind the artistry of Americana originals from Bobbie Gentry to Dr. John, but had a unique, sophisticated and contemporary sheen all of its own? Now there is, courtesy of the beguiling songcraft of vocalist, composer and performer Sunny Ozell, and its name is Overnight Lows. The native of Reno, Nevada calls New York home, but Ozell and her husband Sir Patrick Stewart now divide their time between Brooklyn and Los Angeles. It was on the West Coast that her new album came into being, sculpted from lyrical and musical sketches that she carried in her pocket during the record’s careful incubation. Made with a collection of studio A-listers, Overnight Lows gleams with engaging melodies and intelligent wordplays, performed with a sophisticated fluency in pop, jazz, soul and Americana dialects that makes it a delight to be with. As Sunny says herself, it’s communicated with soul and simplicity, and it’s always groovy. It could hardly be anything else, informed as it is by her passion for such inspirations as Bonnie Raitt, David Byrne, Cassandra Wilson and Aretha Franklin. Sunny vividly remembers how, in her late teens, she splashed out on the Queen of Soul’s box set of Atlantic finery, and practically wore it out.