Baltimore Sun Sunday

Yola fuses country and soul

- By Kristin M. Hall

When singer-songwriter Yola was growing up in Bristol, England, her mother’s vinyl records were just about the only form of amusement the family could afford.

“We didn’t have like toys or anything, so everything that I focused on was musical,” said Yola, whose given name is Yolanda Quartey. “And I got into Aretha and Dolly in this way.”

Being a black British girl who loved Dolly Parton and classic American country and soul music did make her stand out a bit.

“I just think in the U.K. it’s a bit of a dirty word,” the 35-year-old artist said. “You have to come out of the closet as a country lover. So yeah, it did make me somewhat of an oddity to be a weird 4-year-old singing ‘9 To 5.’ ”

Yola’s new album, “Walk Through Fire,” is a return to her first musical inspiratio­ns and an exploratio­n of the intersecti­on of soul, country and pop combined with her background in songwritin­g. Since about 19, she’s been a songwriter and vocalist who has been mainly working in electronic and dance music genres and collaborat­ed with British pop singer Will Young, Bugz in the Attic and Massive Attack.

But she broke out in the Americana scene a couple of years ago as a solo artist with an incredibly versatile and powerful voice, and she started making trips to Nashville, Tenn., to play festivals and shows. A video of one of her performanc­es

“In the U.K. it’s a bit of a dirty word. You have to come out of the closet as a country lover.”

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March 10 birthdays: — Yola, 35, singer-songwriter

made its way to Black Keys singer and guitarist Dan Auerbach, who co-wrote and produced Yola’s album, released last month, through his Nashville-based record label Easy Eye Sound.

Auerbach brought Yola in for an intensive writing session alongside seasoned country and soul songwriter­s like Dan Penn, who co-wrote “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man,” and A-list studio musician Bobby Wood, who has recorded with Elvis, Wilson Pickett, Kris Kristoffer­son and George Strait.

“She’s incredibly inventive and she’s a freethinke­r and she’s open to new ideas,” Auerbach said.

The music of the album feels like a mixture of Dusty Springfiel­d vocals with elements of Laurel Canyon dreamy folk and some British Invasion pop and rock accents.

For an artist who has spent so many years behind the scenes as a songwriter or a member of a band, Auerbach said he wanted the record to feel like an introducti­on to her as a singular artist. A highlight is “It Ain’t Easier,” where Yola’s voice starts off soft and inviting over the Wurlitzer piano and fiddles but builds into a Janis Joplin-like wail.

The album’s title track is a powerful song about Yola’s real-life experience of surviving a house fire, which is backed by a bluegrass ensemble and Country Music Hall of Famer Charlie McCoy on harmonica. Yola’s story about walking through the fire that left scars on her body and coming out of it a stronger person became the keystone song of the record.

“I felt like that gave us really great context when we were kind of finishing it off,” Yola said.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/AP ??
MARK HUMPHREY/AP

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