Lucy Woodward


Lucy Woodward is an English-American singer-songwriter. She has released four studio albums on Atlantic Records, GroundUP Music, and Verve Records. Her fourth album Til They Bang On The Door was released on Snarky Puppy bandleader Michael League's label, GroundUP Music/Verve/Universal. She has also contributed to a number of movie soundtracks and has performed backing vocals for Rod Stewart, Barbara Streisand, Snarky Puppy, Celine Dion, Pink Martini, Gavin DeGraw, Joe Cocker, Chaka Khan, Nikka Costa, and Randy Jackson. She co-wrote Stacie Orrico's Top 40 worldwide hit " More to Life," the same year her own Top 40 single "Dumb Girls" charted in 2003. Woodward also currently has a duo project with guitarist Charlie Hunter.

Early life

Woodward was born in London, and she is the daughter of British conductor and composer Kerry Woodward and his American wife Julie Woodward, who studied opera and was a former staff editor of The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Her parents helped edit a production of Viktor Ullmann's opera Der Kaiser von Atlantis and mount its first performances in many countries. Her father was also a conductor for the BBC Singers, and when her father was appointed musical director of the Netherlands Chamber Choir, the family moved to Amsterdam. Two years later her parents separated, and Woodward, her brother, and her mother moved to New York near her maternal grandparents—James Halitsky, a meteorologist, and Sylvia, an educational psychologist at a residential treatment centre for court-referred children. Woodward's mother worked on the Grove Dictionaries, bellydanced professionally, and became a music teacher in the public schools of New York City.
Raised on classical and Middle Eastern music, Woodward studied piano and flute before asking for singing lessons at age 12. She attended a Bronx high school renowned for its music department. She made her first recordings singing house music in her friends' basements. Every summer she went to music camp and to the Netherlands, where she frequently locked herself in her father's studio and listened to jazz and old R&B records. At the age of 16, Woodward was accepted into the Manhattan School of Music to study jazz, but after a year she decided to learn songwriting and performing on her own. She spent the next few years performing in swing organ trios including The Sugarman 3, working as a session singer, waiting tables, and singing jazz standards in restaurants in Greenwich Village.

2003: ''While You Can''

In 2003 Woodward signed with Atlantic Records and recorded her debut album While You Can, which entered the Top 150 on the Billboard 200. The album included Woodward's Top 40 hit "Dumb Girls", which she had written with producer Kevin Kadish prior to signing with Atlantic Records. Other songs on While You Can were produced by John Shanks at Jim Henson Studios, who previously worked with singers Michelle Branch and Sheryl Crow. In support of the album, Woodward toured internationally and appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
The following year, Woodward was asked by producer Jaime Houston to record the big-band tune "It's Oh So Quiet" for the Disney film Ice Princess. The song was first recorded by Betty Hutton in 1948, and later covered by Björk on her 1995 album Post. Woodward considers it a turning point in her career and the inspiration for much of her second album, Lucy Woodward Is...Hot and Bothered, as she began to move past pop music.

2008: ''Lucy Woodward Is...Hot and Bothered''

Woodward began her musical reinvention on her second album, Lucy Woodward Is...Hot and Bothered, which was independently released in 2008. The album incorporated R&B grooves and electronic beats, while mining deep-rooted jazz influences. Hot and Bothered was produced by longtime collaborator Itaal Shur and Tim K. Barnes & Noble named Woodward Artist of the Month for August 2008, and Hot and Bothered was distributed exclusively by B&N as part of its Discover Great New Music program. The song "Hot and Bothered" takes its melody from a Yiddish lullaby that Woodward's grandmother sang to her as a baby.

2010: ''Hooked!''

Woodward's third album, Hooked!, was released in 2010 by Verve. The album was recorded at Stratosphere Sound in New York City and Jim Henson Studios in Hollywood. It was produced by Tony Visconti and included contributions by Tim K, Justin Stanley, and Itaal Shur. Woodward wrote much of the album with Dan Petty and Michelle Lewis, saying that she had been inspired by the music of Peggy Lee and Django Reinhardt. The album also received comparisons to Dusty Springfield and Brill Building. The song "Another Woman" was written for her by longtime inspiration Nellie McKay, who sang background vocals.
Woodward toured throughout the US, including with jazz fusion band Snarky Puppy, who played on her cover version of "Be My Husband" by Nina Simone. In late 2011, she was also asked by Armed Forces Entertainment to perform at American military bases in Italy, Turkey, and Spain.

2011: Snarky Puppy & Pink Martini

In 2011, Woodward started working with Snarky Puppy bandleader Michael League. League performed in Woodward's touring band, and later Woodward opened for Snarky Puppy with them as her backing band. Woodward sang "Too Hot To Last" on Snarky Puppy's album Family Dinner - Volume 1, which was their first album to earn a Grammy Award. Woodward would later sign to League's record label GroundUP Music for her fourth album, Til They Bang On The Door, in 2016, which was co-produced by League and Henry Hey. Woodward continued to open for Snarky Puppy on occasion, including with her latest duo project with guitarist Charlie Hunter.
Woodward was also asked to tour with Pink Martini in 2011 after the band's singer, China Forbes, had surgery. Her quick study of Pink Martini's repertoire of Croatian, Japanese, French, English, and Turkish songs received critical acclaim. She toured with Pink Martini throughout North America, with performances at the Toronto Jazz Festival and Montreal International Jazz Festival and with the San Francisco Symphony, conducted by Donato Cabrera.

2012-2016: Rod Stewart

Woodward was a background vocalist for British singer Rod Stewart from 2012–2016. She sang on 4 of his studio albums. She also toured with him internationally during that time, which included a performance at the 2015 BBC Music Awards.

2016: ''Til They Bang On The Door''

In 2016, Woodward released her fourth album Til They Bang On The Door on Snarky Puppy bandleader Michael League's record label GroundUP Music. The album was co-produced by Michael League and keyboardist/arranger Henry Hey and mixed by Nic Hard. It features organist Cory Henry and core musicians from Snarky Puppy along with many New York City friends and longtime collaborators such as Everett Bradley, who is featured on the Nina Simone duet "Be My Husband". Other musicians on the album include Grammy-nominated cellist and trombonist, Dave Eggar and Alan Ferber, respectively, and New York City busker Natalia 'Saw Lady' Paruz on musical saw. Lucy says she "wanted to make a dark record of crazy, low brass instrumentation with feminine vocals. I wanted to surf on a wave of horns."

2018-Present: Charlie Hunter & Lucy Woodward

Woodward first met guitar virtuoso Charlie Hunter when the two were performing separately at the 2018 GroundUP Music Festival organized by their mutual friends in Snarky Puppy. Soon after, Hunter asked Woodward to fill-in as the singer on his upcoming tour after his original singer and collaborator, Silvana Estrada, had been denied an artist visa. Woodward and Hunter constructed a set of blues songs for the planned one-off tour. As the tour progressed, the two decided to create an album of pop covers based on their shared love of blues music. The resulting album Music!Music!Music! was released in April 2019 and was met with some acclaim. The covers on the album included songs by artists such as Blind Willie Johnson, Bessie Smith, Nina Simone, and Terence Trent D'Arby.
Following the album's release, Woodward and Hunter have continued to tour the US and Europe extensively, including a performance on NPR Music's Mountain Stage.

Big Band Collaborations

Woodward has frequently performed with big bands in the US and Europe. In 2017, she performed with the Danish group TipToe Big Band at the Aarhus Jazz Festival. In 2018, Woodward collaborated with WDR Big Band from Cologne, Germany, and created a program with conductor/arranger Chris Walden called Love and Other Bad Habits. Woodward also collaborates with Dave Richards Big Band in Los Angeles, and was recently featured with the Henry Mancini Institute Orchestra with Arturo Sandoval and Jose Feliciano.
Woodward collaborated with fellow Brooklyn musician Josh Shneider, singing several songs on The Joshua Shneider Love Speaks Orchestra album released in 2013—three Josh-penned originals and a cover of the Tony Bennett standard "Lost in the Stars".

Other Work, Collaborations, and Awards

Woodward has contributed songs to several film soundtracks, including Last Vegas, The Blind Side, Ice Princess, Music and Lyrics, What a Girl Wants, First Daughter, and Accepted. Her rendition of Björk's hit cover of 'It's Oh So Quiet" was featured in the Birds of Prey trailer and the Disney film Ice Princess. She co-wrote the Stacie Orrico Top 40 worldwide hit "There's Gotta Be More to Life," which earned her a BMI Christian Music Award in 2003 and a BMI Songwriter's Pop Award in 2004. Originally called "More to Life," the song was written with Kevin Kadish and Sabelle Breer for Woodward's 2003 Atlantic debut, but was released instead on the Japanese import version of the album as a bonus track. In 2010, Woodward co-wrote and recorded "Daylight As Sunset" for Earthrise Soundsystem's debut The Yoga Sessions. Woodward also appeared in the 2011 Garry Marshall film New Year's Eve where she played the backing vocalist for Jon Bon Jovi and Lea Michele. Woodward was featured in the September 2011 issue of Italian Vogue as one of the year's top up-and-coming female recording artists.
A frequent visitor to Kenya and Rwanda, Woodward organizes an annual benefit concert for the Cura Orphanage at Jim Henson Studios. She has performed four times for the United Nations, most recently for the UN Mine Action Service and at the Millennium Development Goals Awards, which was attended by 3000 international dignitaries. Woodward also sang for Desmond Tutu at a benefit for the Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation.
Woodward and recording artist Holly Palmer and songwriter Michelle Lewis first came together to sing at a Christmas Party in 2010 and decided soon after to write swing and boogie songs under the name The Goods. They released the single "I'm So Happy That It's You" in May 2013, followed by a 5-song debut EP later that year and a holiday EP titled Get Your Holiday Goods! in 2018.
Woodward guested on American Idol judge and noted producer Randy Jackson's 2008 album Randy Jackson's Music Club, Vol. 1, singing the duet "Willing To Try" with Richie Sambora and Travis Tritt. Woodward has also sung background vocals for Celine Dion, Rod Stewart, Carole King, Joe Cocker, & Monkey House on the 2016 album Left.

Discography

Albums

As Guest
"Bunheads" "It's Oh So Quiet" - 2018