Bio:
We
all know there is no rule book for life.
Yet, if we slow down a little, take the
time to know ourselves well and use that
wisdom in a positive way, we can revel
in the opportunity to make our own rules
as we go. That can make for a journey worth
taking.
In the case of Deborah Ledon, a Cuban-born Canadian who revels in making her
own rules, the spiritual and musical journey began in Havana and has led, with
a few character-building detours along the way, to Vancouver, British Columbia.
Here, in the spectacular West Coast Canadian city where she now makes her home,
formalities are not important. She’s Deb to her many friends, musical and
otherwise.
Although the inspiration for her songs comes from years of real-life experiences,
Deborah describes making the album as a “purge”, a spontaneous outpouring
of musical ideas.
Feisty, funny, and staunchly anti-diva, Deborah Ledon is a thoughtful, passionate
teller of personal truths - a composer and performer of songs that try to dig
a little deeper, even when it’s not always comfortable. “I’m
not a formula writer,” she says, “I just follow my heart and how
I hear it.”
Her self-financed, independently released first album, Spilling Inside Out, is
filled with the kinds of observations that deliberately stray a little outside
the boundaries of the standard pop song. Taking her inspiration from the world
as she sees it, Deborah doesn’t shy away from subjects that she finds shocking
and upsetting.
I Love To Love You is a heart-wrenching ballad that dares to detail an abusive
relationship from a uniquely disturbing point of view.
Naughty Nina Sunshine, I Live A Lie, Mickey and Fat Cat are knife-edged portraits
of people who have done everything possible to offend the singer’s sense
of fairness and justice.
Song4TheSpineless is based on actual events as it deals with the tragic death
of a teenage boy at the hands of a friend.
But it’s not all dark stories and shady characters.
Sans Vous/Without You is a wistful, softly rhythmic ballad while Like A Latin
is an autobiographical embrace of Deborah’s Cuban roots. It also serves
as a fond remembrance of her late grandmother whom she credits as being the most
influential person in her life, the one who passed on many valuable lessons. “I
learned from her that difficult does not mean impossible,” she says.
Although her family was relatively privileged in Castro’s Cuba, life became
challenging once they moved to Canada. “I had to learn to be strong at
an early age.” Her parents divorced, and she, her mother and brother lived
a rootless existence, moving countless times all over Southern Ontario, the Maritime
Provinces, and the US before settling in Toronto. Years later, after she moved
to the Ottawa area, Deborah’s passion for music emerged. While working
a full-time job in tourism, she took the opportunity to do theatre and sing in
three bands. The metamorphosis from shy public speaker to confident performer
began.
Another job involved working as a nurse, doing all the things nurses do including
the task of wrapping bodies for the trip to the morgue. Deb acknowledges that
while working as an advocate for her patients and often watching the system fail
them, she began to hone her awareness of injustice. And that, she says, started
to find its way into her songs.
Since moving to Vancouver several years ago, Deborah has found plenty to write
about while living and working in this cosmopolitan rainforest city, especially
when it comes to the growing gap between the ultra-wealthy and the disenfranchised. “I’m
from Cuba where people have very little as far as material possessions go, ” she
says, “but here in North America we have so much deceit and so little authenticity.
We need to work on that while we still can.”
If you think Deborah has a lot to say for someone releasing her first album,
her answer is “absolutely!” For her, it’s all about moving
forward musically while doing everything she can to avoid being typecast as a
certain kind of singer. “I don’t think I have one particular style
because I’ve done everything as a singer and I think that’s how it
should be,” she says. “I want to do it all!”
Some artists simply take a little more time to develop their craft and carefully
build an audience. That’s all part of knowing who you are and that is one
category Deborah Ledon is happy to be a part of.
