L.A. singer/songwriter Willa Amai: At just 17 years old, Los Angeles singer and songwriter Willa Amai is making great strides towards bonafide stardom. Both musically and in conversation, she displays a maturity that utterly belies her tender years – raw and open qualities that are at once relatable and impressive. Credit is due to herself, her family, and mentor Linda Perry.
“I met Linda through a mutual friend,” Amai says. “She set up this meeting with Linda, and all it was supposed to be was that Linda would give me a pat on the back and say, ‘It’s a hard business but you’ll be fine.’ Then we would go our separate ways. But I played a song for her, and after sitting very silently for a while she finally told me to come back in two months with five songs. I came back in two months with six songs, and I played them for her at her studio. She came out of the booth and she was crying.”
Perry was impressed, and wanted to record the tunes. So two weeks later, when Amai hit spring break, she returned with seven more songs and they recorded the 13 song album.
“She let me be me,” Amai says. “If I wanted any other instruments on it I had to learn the parts. She sent me home with a bass once so I could teach myself a bass part for one of the songs. That’s where it all began.”
It’s just reward for a young musician who has been singing for as long as she can remember. Describing herself as a “late walker but an early talker,” Amai says that she was penning rudimentary songs in preschool.
“During recess, I would walk around the perimeter of the playground and sing made up songs,” she says. “But I started playing piano when I was four. My teacher, even though I was taught classically, was also so encouraging of creativity. She simultaneously taught me how to read music and play classical music, and also how to figure out the chords to the songs I would write. So then the songs I was writing became real songs in third grade-ish, when I would learn about poetry in school. That’s when they became recognizable as songs.”
The desire to create continued through elementary school, but it was that meeting with Perry when she was just 12 that changed everything. That’s when music started to feel like a real career. Now, the world’s her oyster and her current and future successes all stem from painfully honest lyrics.
“I love so many different genres and I really like to open myself up to them,” she says. “But I think the common thread is that I want to be as honest emotionally as possible. I think that the best music is the most relatable, not because we’ve all been in the same situations because we haven’t, it’s because we all have the same emotions effectively. When you strip away the facts, the evidence and the specifics of the situation, it’s sadness, grief, jealousy or spite. So I think the more honest I can be with myself when I write, even if it’s difficult, and oftentimes it is, I think that’s what makes the best music.”
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