Heather Small

The first song I fell in love with

Dorothy Moore ā€“ ā€˜Misty Blueā€™

“I found out it was a cover, but I think her version is absolutely faultless. It was like an encyclopaedia of how to relay emotion, integrity and feeling in three minutes. It made me think to myself, ā€˜I want to be able to do that.ā€™”

The first album I bought

Bob Marley and the Wailers ā€“ ā€˜Exodusā€™

“It was love songs and political songs. Heā€™s such an artist, he was able to bring a genre of music I grew up with to the masses without having to dilute his style. The songs spoke to me as a young Black person living in the West in a time of real racism, trying to find out who you were and what you wanted to say.”

The first gig I went to

Frankie Beverly and Maze

“They had a soulfulness. It was such an electrifying feeling because he had such an amazing voice. They didnā€™t just replicate what they did on record, they brought something else. There was performance and that taught me a lesson. People will stay at home and listen to records but the difference is that when youā€™re moved to pay your money and see the band live, that live experience should transcend anything youā€™ve listened to. Maze was so rich and there was an air of excitement every time they came to town. Thereā€™s an integrity, a commonality, thereā€™s community.”

The song I wish Iā€™d written

Sade ā€“ ā€˜Your Love Is Kingā€™

“Itā€™s hard to write love songs that are independent of any other love song or performance. That line, ā€œyour love is kingā€, encompasses so much of love in that one sentence ā€“ itā€™s genius. The delivery of the song is beautiful and thereā€™s a vulnerability to it. She shows you some of her soul and thatā€™s the most you can ask of any artist.”

The song that reminds me of home

Ken Boothe ā€“ ā€˜Everything I Ownā€™

“It was very, very Caribbean. We heard it in London and it encapsulates quite a few sides of me. The music you listen to is part of that immigrant experience. Home, even though I grew up in London and Iā€™m a Londoner and Iā€™m British, itā€™s always navigating all those sides of yourself. When I hear that song, it reminds me of home in the UK within a Caribbean household, especially as a child who faced a lot of racism.”

The song I canā€™t get out of my head

Jazmine Sullivan ā€“ ā€˜Pick Up Your Feelingsā€™

“Sheā€™s got such an amazing voice, and you can see the legacy from Mary J. Blige to Jazmine Sullivan. She can do heartbreak in a really empowering way. Iā€™ve had heartbreak but Iā€™m dealing with it and Iā€™m going to move on and get to a better place. Within the tragedy thereā€™s positivity. But her voice is just incredible ā€“ she does a little murmur and you melt.”

The song that makes me want to dance

Jojo Abot ā€“ ā€˜To Liā€™

“It makes me want to sing and dance but itā€™s a little bit like a call to action. Itā€™s calling somebody out [over] domestic violence. For me itā€™s not about dancing, itā€™s about doing. Thereā€™s dancing and thereā€™s dancing. You want to plant your feet into the ground and take action. Itā€™s empowering, itā€™s about owning.”

The song I want played at my funeral

Leonard Cohen ā€“ ā€˜Suzanneā€™

“Itā€™s an ode to a woman and itā€™s just haunting. She does things her own way, thatā€™s what I get from it. It would be a good song to go out to because I do things my own way too! Society says the best kind of woman is a woman who performs, but I know the best kind of woman travels her own path.”

The song that made me want to be a musician

Gladys Knight & the Pips ā€“ ā€˜Midnight Train to Georgiaā€™

“I wanted to sing before, but this song made me think, ā€˜You know what, Iā€™m going to give it a good try. I will be a singer.ā€™ Sheā€™s got this rich tone, and she weaves in and out of a vocal and even at the end sheā€™s giving it her all because sheā€™ll take the end and turn around and throw in a different melody that wasnā€™t in the track. Thatā€™s a woman who knows her craft and was in it 100 per cent.”

Heather Small begins a UK tour on March 17

The post Soundtrack Of My Life: Heather Small appeared first on NME.

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