Rock ‘n’ roll is built on a foundation of great vocalists,
and Beverly McClellan is quickly becoming its newest
cornerstone. NBC-TV’s The Voice introduced her to the world as a singer of
stunning power and range with the presence and ability to draw comparisons
to Etta James, Janis Joplin, Bonnie Raitt and Melissa Etheridge, to name
just a few of the great torchbearers whose legacies she evokes. Now
McClellan’s debut international release Fear Nothing presents her as a true
and original artist — a songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and dynamic
presence with the ability, authority and desire to carve her own place in
music history.
“I believe that I have a message,” says McClellan. “It’s simple: be
yourself, love yourself, always be honest, and let the rest come naturally.
That’s the way I live my life and make my music.” And that’s the easygoing
Zen she applied to the recording of Fear Nothing at Los Angeles’ House of
Blues studios with producer David Z. (Prince, Fine Young Cannibals, Billy
Idol, Buddy Guy) and the superb rock and roots session players he assembled:
guitarist Josh Sklair, keyboardist Jimmy Pugh, bassist Hutch Hutchinson and
drummer Tony Braunagal — all noted producers in their own right. McClellan
also brought along her own longtime guitar foil Billy Vazquez, and a stack
of mostly upbeat and entirely heartfelt new songs.
“Making Fear Nothing was as smooth as melting butter on a oven-hot slice of
bread,” the veteran of the south Florida club scene recounts. “I showed the
songs to the guys and then we played them together in the studio and that
was it. We played some of them two or three times, but a lot of performances
on the album are first takes, so they have that edgy, live feeling just like
on stage.”
McClellan’s anthemically rocking “I Can't Hide Me” is a bold declaration of
purpose. Its rollicking roadhouse feel buoys a sweetly snarling vocal
performance — dappled with her rich vibrato and skyrocketing notes that fly
to the heights of her astonishing register — that celebrates her “what you
see is what you get” attitude. And with McClellan, there’s plenty to see.
For the past 15 years, from the day she left her job as a dentist’s
assistant for a lunch break and never returned, she’s kept her head shaven
and added a series of tattoos that help tell her life story. Her orca and
bear body art speak of her part-Native American heritage. McClellan’s
colorful peacock-and microphone sleeve was acquired during her time on The
Voice, where she was a wildly popular “Final 4” contestant earlier this
year.
Fear Nothing is McClellan’s fifth CD and the first she didn’t have to make
in fits and starts as she’d save enough money from performing five nights a
week in clubs around her Fort Lauderdale base to pay for more studio time.
“It was so much fun to just go in and record all the songs at once, and I
think that joy got caught on tape, too,” she relates. It’s palpable in the
romantic ballad “Come To Me,” where McClellan’s flowing piano melody carries
verses that brim with promises of devotion until the choruses provide their
soaring crescendos. “It Ain’t Me” is equally ardent, albeit in spinning a
tale of lies and their consequences over a funky, blues powered arrangement
that taps McClellan’s strong background in roots music. The latter runs even
deeper in “Nobody’s Fault But Mine,” a tune by early Delta bluesman Blind
Willie Johnson that McClellan discovered on an album by one of her
inspirations, the late jazz and blues giant Nina Simone. “Tender of the
Most” is another song that captures her ongoing celebration of life,
blending her piano with a catchy, percolating drum beat. And “I See Love” is
a pure shot of joy, celebrating the power of the sweetest of emotions. “When
I played the Atlanta Pride Festival in October, nobody out of those 50,000
people had heard this song before, and they all started singing along,”
McClellan says. “It was beautiful.”
Fear Nothing also marks the first time McClellan has written songs with
other artists. Most notably there’s “Love Will Find A Way Out,” co-written,
produced by and recorded by Keb’ Mo,’ who also plays scalding blues guitar
on the track, in his Nashville home studio. “He was the one person in the
world I most wanted to write with, and as luck had it he’s a friend of my
manager,” McClellan explains. “Keb made everything so easy because he is
such a pro. Some people are just born with it and he definitely was. I am
honored to have worked with him. Keb and his family are a sweet clan, and I
felt warm to he welcomed into their home. I went in with no expectations and
came out with a song that drives itself with just a little help from Keb and
me....”
In that sense, the song returns McClellan to her beginnings in music. She
was born in East Tennessee and raised in Virginia’s hilly south. Today,
McClellan plays more than 10 instruments, including guitar, trumpet, French
horn and a host of other fretted and percussive devices. She shares, "It was
kind of inevitable that I’d be a musician. I started writing my own songs
when I was 13, but it just took me a while to make up my mind and really go
for it."
After recording four solo albums on her own, McClellan received an email
from a friend goading her to submit a video performance for a show that NBC
was adding to its roster. “He wrote me that he knew I was not into the
corporate scene at all, but he dared me so I had to send them a YouTube
link,” she recounts, “and in an hour they got back to me and asked me to
audition.” Within weeks she was making her national television debut, and
both Christina Aguilera and Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine wanted McClellan for
their teams. McClellan chose Aguilera, and the rest — including a duet with
Aguilera on the superstar’s hit “Beautiful” and five other singles — is
history.
Now McClellan is ready to write a new chapter all on her own with Fear
Nothing. “I’m just flying by the seat of my soul like I always do,”
McClellan says. “I’m so ready to go out on the road and bring these songs to
the world in a way I’ve never been able to before. It’s like the title says
— I want the people who hear my music to fear nothing, and to feel the love,
get inspired, and spread it around.”