
Debo Ray’s debut album, out now. 
Debo Ray will play The Burren in Somerville on Feb. 22. “I’m a lover of sound no matter the genre,” says Ray.
While she has been winning wide acclaim for some time as a collaborator, Debo Ray felt it was time to cut her teeth by cutting her own tracks.
On her self-titled debut album released on Feb. 14, Ray shows off her wide-ranging influences and talents with songs like the hiphop-inspired “Time With You,” the dance song “Feelin’ Lucky” that turns the idea of being lucky in life on its head, the Afrobeatwashed “Money” and the closing cuts “Take That” and “Now You’re Here” (which has already garnered over 150,000 Spotify streams), which end the album by bringing Ray back to her gospel roots.
“It all started when I realized that I have stories to tell that I haven’t had the opportunity to share in the many projects I collaborate in,” Ray explained when asked what prompted her to write and record her own songs. “I went through a dark period during the pandemic where I wasn’t able to perform and I had a lot of loss that I was dealing with in relationships, as well as internal struggles with trying to find out what to do with my life. It really put in perspective how important it is to share the stories that are on your heart.”
When asked what her original music is all about, Ray riffs through a wide range of emotions, including triumph, love and empowerment.
“These songs are filled with messages that I wish I could tell my younger self,” she said, “and stories that I think audiences will be able to relate to.”
As is true of so many musicians, Debo Ray felt an attraction to musical expression at a very young age.
“I felt pulled towards
music since as long as I can remember,” Ray said, recalling piano and
vocal performances at age four and crediting her performer parents and
the Haitian church for getting her involved and inspired.
Unlike
many musicians who focus on one genre or style, Ray has trained with
the Handel and Haydn Society Vocal Apprenticeship Program, the New
England Conservatory Prep School and the Berklee College of Music. She
has performed and won wide acclaim in styles as diverse as jazz, R&B
and opera while
performing alongside legendary artists such as Bobby McFerrin, Esperanza
Spalding, Antonio Sanchez, Terri Lyne Carrington, Screaming Headless
Torsos, Women of The World and more.
“Debo
… is a musician’s musician,” said Carrington, who invited Ray to
perform as part of her award-winning Social Sciences ensemble. “Her
instrument is unparalleled and she effortlessly weaves through styles
and genres to deliver exactly what the music needs.”
Ray
has often found that the music itself is just what she and her audience
need and often uses it to help change people’s moods and perceptions,
especially when it comes to her native Haiti.
“I
think that a lot of people misinterpret Haitian culture as filled with
sadness or struggle,” observed Ray, who will bring her diversely
composed debut album to The Burren in Somerville on Feb. 22. “But I see a
lot of joy in it, and I want to carry that joy forward.”
While
her musical roots germinated in her island home, Ray lists such
international stars as Stevie Wonder, Whitney Houston, Bob Marley and
Chopin as early influences.
“I’m
a lover of sound no matter the genre,” she explained. “I have all of my
experiences with those groups to thank for helping me shape my sound.”
Being
at Berklee not only allowed Ray opportunities to match musical muscles
with artists such as Carrington (who is a professor at the college and
heads the Berklee Institute of Jazz and Gender Justice), but to also
meet other influential fans like Prince Charles Alexander, who has
produced albums for Mary J. Blige, Usher and Biggie Smalls. Alexander
agreed to produce Ray’s debut album.
“I
am so grateful to him for believing in me and wanting to create
something wonderful together,” Ray said, citing her experience with
Alexander as, “one of the most formative in being able to take what I’m
trying to say and craft the sounds of my stories in a way that I think
audiences will connect with.”
Though
she gives a great deal of credit to her influences, collaborators,
friends and family, Ray says that her music is mostly for a very
particular type of fan.
“Somewhere
out there, there’s a little, dark-skinned Black girl who feels like she
doesn’t belong that would love to have her voice be heard,” Ray said.
“I was that little girl — in some ways I still am that little girl — and
now I’ve decided to shout out my voice.”
ON THE WEB
Learn more at IAmDeboRay.com
For tickets to Debo Ray’s show at The Burren, visit tickets.24hourmusic.com