In early April, just a few weeks into coronavirus quarantine, Ego Ella May released a re-recording of Nat King Coleâs âSmile.â âHereâs a classic song for you I just recorded, with a twist,â she wrote in a tweet announcing the song. âEncouraging you to let yourself cry. Do NOT feel bad for feeling. You donât have to be strong right now.â The âtwistâ was poignant: the British singer had replaced the lyric âsmileâ with âcryâ: âCry though your heart is aching,â she sang. A few days before, sheâd released the official video for, âHow Long Til Weâre Homeâ from her latest album Honey For Woundsâa song that now feels even more devastatingly prescient, following the murders of Black men and women in America by police, and the worldwide protests that came in their wake: âBreaking news at 6pm/ Disappointed by government/ Rich get richer as poor ones weep,â she sings.
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May has been singing since she was a teenager, and taught herself to play guitar at around the same time. In 2019 she released So Far, a dazzling collection of songs that served as a showcase for her luxurious, languid vocal style, which draws elegantly on jazz, hip-hop, and neo-soul. It also offered an introduction to a songwriter who was able to shift effortlessly from working though internal frustrations, like longing and desire, to confronting social, political and environmental injustices. Her latest release, Honey for Wounds, was a âhealing process,â for May, one that allowed her to purge negative thoughts, experiences, and frustrations. âI read a quote recently by Nai Palm [of Hiatus Kaiyote],â May shares. âShe said, âSongs about relationships will always stand the test of time and people relate to them.â But my role as an artist is to make people aware of things they would not pay as much attention to. They become like little missions to me.â On Honey, romantic disillusionment and longing, as in âTable for Oneâ and âSong for Bobby,â share space with songs about inequality and injustices like âHow Long till Weâre Home?â and âGive A Little.â Her ability to balance the personal and political is one of Mayâs greatest gifts as a songwriter.
âI will, of course, continue to write about love,â she says. âBut Iâm also conscious of other things that happen in life, and I like to address them in song form. There are so many different themes on the album that it felt like a diary, even. âGirls Donât Always Sing About Boysâ came about because I was sick of hearing songs about relationships on the radio. I wanted to talk about other things, and at the time I wasnât thinking about love. Grenfell [the 2017 West London Tower fire that killed 72 people and injured just as many] had just happened, and my mind was awake. I was reading about sustainability and pollution, and training to be a counsellorâI just had lots to think about. I wanted to challenge myself to put it all into song form.â
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While some tracks were guided by a clear sense of mission, the origins of others are a mystery even to May. âI wrote [âScienceâ] a few years ago, and I still canât fully grasp where my mind was when I made it,â she confesses. âI really love the melody, because itâs so different from anything I would usually do. It felt really free. The song is about losing yourself to someone, and how you can have an out-of-body experience because of itâlike, your thoughts are no longer your own! You become a completely different person. It was weird. Still is to me.â
Yet despite the albums wide-ranging themesâand the equally wide roster of talented producers who helped May bring her vision to lifeâthe overall sound is seamless and elegant. Fluttery neo-soul songs delivered in Mayâs jazzy cadence proceed at the kind of assured pace that draws you deeper in, note by note. âI write when it is oozing out of me,â May says. âI try not to force it. Iâm quite sporadic, and like to take my time. Iâll get inspired by passages in a book, or a bit of poetry.â
And while some artists are finding themselves creatively hibernating during this pandemic, May has found making music to be a healing balm, fostering new songs about the world, the self, and the invisible threads that irretrievably weave both together. âIâm feeling more creative than usual,â she says, âwhich Iâm surprised at because like I said, it [creativity] is often very sporadic. Some of it is expressing the pandemic, but also, Iâm writing like Iâm in a fantasy. That is helping me to cope.â