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On Entertainment Lois Mahalia Chases the EP
by Steven Libowitz
The sensationally versatile and vivacious vocalist Lois Mahalia has been performing in and around Santa Barbara and across the world in a variety of settings for decades. The Guyana-born singer-songwriter has done everything from fronting the R&B-soul-jazz family band Georgetown with her three brothers, to singing backup on many tours with Joe Walsh, to appearing in benefits alongside Kenny Loggins, Michael McDonald, and their colleagues, to collaborating with longtime Santa Barbara-based Costa Rican percussionist-composer Luis Muñoz on several recent albums, to name just a few accomplishments.
What she hasn’t done is make a full album under her own name. Until now.
Mahalia’s Chasing the Sun is the end result of several years of songwriting, producing, refining, and recording that was catalyzed by the pandemic shutdown, if also made a bit more unwieldy by the lockdowns. The album gets its official release on CD and streaming on Saturday, August 18, which Mahalia will celebrate with a concert at SOhO, one of the myriad stages she’s played all over town. The excitement was palpable over the phone last weekend.
“It’s been a long time coming, and, really, it’s a freaking big deal,” Mahalia said. “It feels amazing but also humbling. I feel so open with everything about the album, but also a bit more vulnerable because it’s like I’m sharing my heart.”
Indeed, Chasing the Sun evinces a fresh take for the singer-songwriter, a left turn from funkier R&B flavors to a more nuanced, pop, and jazz-oriented approach befitting the personal, emotional-laden lyrical content. The title track was the impetus, Mahalia said.
“It feels like we’re all chasing the sun, like we’re trying to get somewhere as artists, as people. Trying to reach the top. But the truth is we’re actually there right now. The sun is here, all we need to do is be with it and feel it, not run after it. We don’t have to chase anything… I sing about living each day on sacred ground, treating each other with kindness, and understanding that all the love and everything that we have to give begins with us.”
That goes for the environment, as well, which is another theme on the record. “If we treat each other with love, we automatically want to help each other, lift each other up,” she said. “We automatically want to heal the Earth, too.”
Mahalia collaborated with Ventura independent songwriter-producer David Petry on the album’s 10 tracks, with additional input from Dean Dinning (of Toad the Wet Sprocket fame), Zach Madden , and Thom Flowers (who also produced). The latter three also play on nearly every track, with Tariqh Akoni , Kevin Winard , and drummers Steve Ferrone and Jake Hayden also contributing, a sort of role reversal from Mahalia’s past as the session artist. Also singing harmonies and more on four of the tracks is Steve Perry , of Journey fame, who stumbled on Mahalia’s music when he showed up to record with Flowers in the Santa Barbara studio.
“Thom was working on one of my songs we’d just recorded, ‘Gravity and Love,’ and he asked who was singing it because he wanted to sing backup,” Mahalia said. “Thom just recorded him and then played it for me the next time I was there. I loved what he did, and eventually Steve sang on three more songs, too.”
Mahalia will have a different locally-based band for the SOhO gig, but it’s the songs that are the stars for the celebration of the first original release by a singer best-known for her cover music.
“I love to sing cover songs and make them my own, but I feel so excited to be singing my original songs,” she said. “I can’t wait to share my heart.”
Sounds Around Town
Irvine’s indie-rock sensation Young the Giant plays the Santa Barbara Bowl, with Milky Chance and Rosa Linn as opening acts for the 6 pm concert on August 18, the last before a threeweek hiatus at the amphitheater. That same night also brings a SOhO date with the Long Beach Dub Allstars, who formed from the remnants of Sublime after the death of frontman Brad Nowell in 1996 as a one-off to support the late singer-songwriter’s family, but are still around after 25 years, albeit with a decade-long hiatus. The Allstars put out a new album, Echo Mountain High , in April…. Ventura’s Rubicon Theatre closes out its youth education summer season with a Kids for Kids Benefit Concert called “What the World Needs Now” on August 19 focusing on compositions by Burt Bacharach (“That’s What Friends are For,” “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head,” “Close to You,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” “The Look of Love,” “Walk on By”) performed, directed, and choreographed by current RTC students, joined by Rubicon alumni and special guests… If you got shut out of tickets to see the David Crosby tribute show “Stand and Be Counted” at the Lobero on August 20, you can hear music spanning the same era in Ojai instead as the great ‘60s-’70s folk singer Judy Collins , who at age 84 is still going strong in both social activism and delivering clear-voiced interpretations, plays the Libbey Bowl with Sophie B. Hawkins , a fellow musician/activist who scored several hits in the 1990s, opening.