Paper Doll, the second album by vocalist, songwriter and CBS recording artist
Sharon Little, is the artist’s response to a pop culture mindset that seems to
require female entertainers to adopt a particular look or behave outrageously in
order to gain attention. Blazing her way on an accelerated career path – she
went from waiting tables in a Philadelphia coffee shop straight to a debut album
and a national tour with Robert Plant, Alison Krauss and T Bone Burnett – Sharon
was exposed to many forces pulling at her, offering advice, direction, and
often, confusion.
Paper Doll is Sharon’s manifesto that she be judged on what she offers through
her music, and not by the outfits she wears or who she’s been dating. She
delivers this message through songs that effortlessly fuse pop, rock, R&B, and
even a taste of electronic music in a direct, emotionally potent style,
As Sharon explains, “It often seems that female artists have to look and act in
a certain way in order to be successful – like they’re paper dolls and society
or ‘the business’ just slaps these images on them. We have these young girls
acting and dressing in a very overly-sexual way; like they’re grown women – is
that their idea, or have they been told to look and act that way in order to
sell themselves? Either way, it’s just sad. I thought we women were supposed to
have made great strides in the past several decades. Spending ten minutes on a
few popular websites makes me feel like we’ve only gone backward.”
Produced by Grammy winner Don Was – noted for his work on chart-topping albums
by the Rolling Stones and Bonnie Raitt, among many others – the
Philadelphia-bred artist’s sophomore release follows her critically-acclaimed
2008 CBS Records debut Perfect Time For A Breakdown.
“Perfect Time… was the first record I’d ever really done,” she said, “and I
didn’t really know quite how to express myself back then. A person’s art is a
life of it's own, I am learning every day how to better channel the growth of my
music...and, as a result, this album is all me, speaking in my own voice, about
my own feelings. I’ve gained confidence about who I am and how to express that
with my music.”
The release of Paper Doll succeeds Little’s triumphant run of shows as the
opening act on Robert Plant and Alison Krauss’ 2008 U.S. Raising Sand concert
tour. She was selected from dozens of acts clamoring for the slot, and Sharon
received standing ovations in front of sold-out houses in arenas and
amphitheaters across the country.
“It would be an understatement to say it was the most amazing experience ever,”
Little says. “I’m speechless from it still! Robert Plant is the nicest guy. T
Bone is awesome. Alison Krauss is an angel – she would roller skate around the
stadiums with her son while I was doing sound checks and sing along to my
songs.”
Following that tour and countless other gigs throughout the U.S., Sharon spent
months honing the many song ideas she had been developing with her collaborator
Scot Sax into a song cycle that became Paper Doll. She explains that along with
the album’s examination of an artist finding her place in popular culture,
several of its striking compositions – highlighted by “Shake and Shiver,” “If
You Want To See Me Cry” and “Good Goodbye” – are rooted in the turmoil one often
finds in personal relationships. Little chronicles the process of healing the
emotional wounds they inflict, observed from a perspective of inner strength and
self-awareness. Acknowledging the albums’ roots in her own romantic life, she
says with a laugh, “I guess the ups and downs of my personal relationships gave
me plenty of musical inspiration when I started thinking about making this
record.”
Was, who also appears on keyboards and bass, brought focus to the set’s punchy
sound. Little says of the producer, “He truly takes a vision and materializes
it. It was the first time I ever worked with somebody who said, ‘I want to take
what you want and make it happen.’ Don was my professional voice. He’s an
amazing guy, and he’s such a great musician.”
Paper Doll arrives after a busy two years for Little. Her music has been
ubiquitous on television: the opening track from Perfect Time…, “Follow That
Sound,” became the theme for The Cleaner on A&E, and she sang that song
on-camera in one memorable episode. She performed another track from that album,
“Spaceship,” in a sequence shot in New York’s 34th Street subway station for an
episode of CSI: NY, and her songs have also been featured on
NCIS, The Good
Wife, Ghost Whisperer, and
NUMB3RS,.
Little’s deep and soulful sound is the product of experience. She says she
wasn’t exposed to much pop music growing up in a large blue-collar family: She
seldom listened to the radio, and didn’t see a TV until she was 11. She received
her first guitar at 16: When her closest childhood friend was killed in a tragic
car accident, the girl’s mother gave Little the instrument as a gift. “I found
myself channeling the pain and grief I was going through, with my voice and my
guitar,” she says. “That’s where my soul was born.”
Thousands of miles and hundreds of gigs later, Sharon Little is making music
with a newfound poise that rings clearly in every note of Paper Doll. She says
of her journey, “Three years ago, I had never been in any states besides
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Texas, and now, I’ve been to every state in this
country except three. I’ve met countless artists who’ve inspired me greatly, and
my music has been heard all over TV. I’ve got a lot of people behind me, helping
me to achieve my dream to be a true artist, and I hope to show aspiring young
artists that they, too, can achieve their dreams without compromising who they
really are.”
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