This article contains promotional content. (January 2017) |
Chrissy Steele is the stage name of Christina Southern,[1] a Canadian vocalist currently living on Vancouver Island.[2] She is most noted for garnering a Juno Award nomination for Most Promising Female Vocalist and Hard Rock Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 1992.[3]
Chrissy Steele | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Christina Southern |
Genres | Rock |
Occupation | Singer |
Instrument | Vocals |
Years active | 1980s-1990s, 2021–present |
Labels | Chrysalis Records |
History
editEarly life
editSteele's early years were spent singing classical and folk music. She participated in several choirs and performed in operas in her hometown of Comox and later in Victoria (both on Vancouver Island).[4] At the age of 19, she moved to Vancouver to become a professional singer, but found she was lacking the confidence to front a band. After returning to Victoria, she answered an ad in the local newspaper and joined her first band, Room Service, in 1984. She performed in various rock clubs and appeared on the nationally televised CBC competition Rock Wars. A year later, she accepted a gig playing with the hard rock band Reform School.[5] The band gave her a foundation as a front person playing clubs in B.C and Alberta with several bands including Blu, and the first incarnation of the Chrissy Steele Band with several members including Burk Ehmig, Rick Smook, Matteo Caratozzolo, Lance Abramyk and Brian McConkey, amongst others.[6]
Career
editIn 1989, Brian MacLeod, after hearing about her talents, invited her to join his band Headpins, which had been looking for a new singer since Darby Mills left the band in 1986. However, with the rest of the original Headpins having moved on to other projects, MacLeod instead decided to record a new album with Steele. The majority of songs were written by Brian MacLeod and Tim Feehan. MacLeod and Steele, with the help of their manager Sam Feldman and Bruce Allen, would be shopped to labels, finally hooking to Chrysalis Records, newly acquired by Thorn EMI. With an introduction to New York Chrysalis executives John Sykes (President) and Joe Keiner (CEO), and flying out to see the band live, Macleod and Steele were signed to a multi-million multi-album record deal. Sadly, during the production of the album and a warm-up tour, MacLeod became ill, and after the release of the album, he succumbed to cancer on April 25, 1992. During his illness and incapacitation, it was thought best by the label for Steele to continue on as a solo artist after signing with the American branch of the label Chrysalis.[7]
The album, Magnet to Steele, was released in 1991 and spawned the hit singles "Love You 'Til It Hurts" and "Love Don't Last Forever".[8]
With a touring band consisting of Joe Wowk (replacing Brian MacLeod) on guitars, Tim Webster on keyboards, Anton Vogt on bass, and Rick Fedyk on drums, Steele supported the album first playing with Bryan Adams in Revelstoke in 1991, then with a cross-Canada tour as an opening act for Bryan Adams, and in the United States as an opener for Jethro Tull's entire Catfish Rising American Tour. Steele also played as part of the lineup at Thunderbird Stadium in Vancouver for Molson's Great Canadian Party on July 1, 1992, featuring (in order of appearance) Eugene Ripper, The Grapes of Wrath, SkyDiggers, Rita Chiarelli, Crash Test Dummies, Chrissy Steele, Colin James, The Tragically Hip, and Spinal Tap. In addition to her Juno nomination for Most Promising Female Vocalist, Magnet to Steele was a nominee for Rock Album of the Year.[9][10]
The record company flew her to Los Angeles to record demos for her follow-up album after the album's commercial viability had passed. But Steele thought the material wasn't the right match. She wanted to adopt a more mature and reflective style because she was no longer at ease with the "sexpot biker-chick" persona she was being advertised as. With grunge dominating the airwaves, her label waning, and it being bought out by the Chrysalis Group, Steele took her cue and decided to put the music business on the back burner for a while. As an avid environmentalist, she worked a term for Greenpeace in Vancouver – eventually returning to University in Victoria. She performed a few isolated concert dates with a new all-female backing band in Quebec City and Montreal in 1994 and sang guest vocals on Feehan's 1996 album Pray for Rain. By 1997 onwards, she was working as a graphic designer and communications professional in Victoria, B.C.[3][1]
2000s
editAs of 2022, Steele is currently working on new songs with Harlequin's original writer and guitarist Glen Willows, and her brother Bryan Southern.[11]
Her first single "Insidious" was released on all the major streaming platforms on October 15, 2021.[12]
Discography
editStudio albums
edit- Magnet to Steele (1991)
Singles
editLove you 'Til it Hurts (1991)
Love Don't Last Forever (1991)
Insidious (2021)
Unrequited (Remember Me) (2023)
References
edit- ^ a b "Southern returns to normal state of mind". Victoria Times-Colonist, August 23, 1997.
- ^ "Woman of Steele". Calgary Herald, August 30, 1991.
- ^ a b "Adams leads Juno pack with seven nominations". Montreal Gazette, February 13, 1992.
- ^ "Chrissy Steele". Famousinterview.ca. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
- ^ "Canadian Bands.com – Chrissy Steele". Canadianbands.com. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
- ^ "Despite sexy album cover, B.C. sunger Chrissy Steele rejects sex-symbol image". Ottawa Citizen, January 16, 1992.
- ^ "Brian 'Too Loud' MacLeod refuses to let cancer come between him and his passion...rock'n'roll". The Province, October 6, 1991.
- ^ "Hard rock belter prefers coffee to sex". Edmonton Journal, August 3, 1991.
- ^ "Adams wakes up the Metro Centre". Halifax Daily News, January 15, 1992.
- ^ "Molson Canadian Presents The Great Canadian Party : Spinal Tap – Molson Park, Barrie – July 1, 1992". My Concert Archive. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
- ^ "Rock 'n' Roll Re-dux". YAM MAGAZINE. January 10, 2022. Retrieved April 6, 2022.
- ^ "This is Chrissy Steele". Spotify. Retrieved April 6, 2022.