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FL Studio
 
Happy Rhodes  (Acoustic)
Female singer/songwriter/musician with an extraordinary voice

Winter (Electronica)

Artist Comments
From Many Worlds Are Born Tonight.
(3 Downloads) (16297 Views)
5 ratings 5 Comments
Other tracks by this artist


Find Me (Acoustic)  Play Find Me
One And Many (Rock)  Play One And Many
(Video)  When The Rain Came Down  
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Happy Rhodes NOTE: ALL of Happy's music can now be heard via streaming audio at http://rhodesongs.com/music. ===== Happy Rhodes (her real name) lives on a farm in upstate New York, and makes music for the sheer love of music. She began making music at as a pre-teen, and to date she has released 11 albums. Her 11th album, called Find Me, (her first since 1998's Many Worlds Are Born Tonight), is now available at CD Baby and iTunes.  (See bottom for disclaimer)   --- More song samples can be found at http://wretchawry.com/happy/samples --- Lyrics can be found at http://ecto.org/lyrics  --- Happy on MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/happyrhodes Bio from http://auntiesocialmusic.com Happy Rhodes is an enigma. This is according to the Music Industry, which has never been able to pigeon-hole her into any category. Her music is otherworldly yet substantial and her 4-octave voice has a haunting familiarity to it. Most listeners find her work difficult to describe and yet she incites an almost unheard of devotion among her fans. She goes from Kate Bush highs to David Bowie lows and you find yourself being beckoned to follow her into her multilayered worlds. She was born on August 9th, 1965 and named Kimberley Tyler Rhodes. Three days after her birth, while still in the hospital, her brother Mark called her "Happy-baby" because she was so smiley and he couldn't pronounce Kimberley. It seemed so fitting that it stuck. The family never knew her as Kimberley and so when she was 16, she made it her legal name. Happy's youth wasn't easy. She lived in poor neighborhoods, in a poor family and experienced a never-ending onslaught of peer rejection and abandonment. Despite the truly bad odds, she was driven. Music was an early inclination, as were dance and art. Her father, Vernon H. Rhodes Jr., exposed Happy to his very eclectic musical tastes early on. She would sit on the floor in front of his console stereo and listen to Switched-On-Bach until she could sing along with every note. "I remember some Saturday mornings I'd wake up to Bagpipe music BLARING through the house and that meant that he'd be listening to his whole collection all day...... I loved walking around the house, singing along with every record or reel-to-reel tape." When Happy was 11, she got her first guitar. She had no desire to learn the instrument the way everyone else was doing it. She simply wanted to begin writing immediately. Creating was always the main objective for her, not excelling at any one particular instrument. It became instantly clear that Happy's path would not be one of virtuosity. But by the time she was 14, she was already performing her original songs in school shows. As time went on though, she became increasingly removed from the outer world. High School became a place of alienation for her because she was already driven for a musical future and depression was slowly becoming part of her everyday existence. She knew she needed to do something or she would explode. At age 16, Happy left school and got her G.E.D. For the next two years, she wrote and made some Open Mic Night appearances at a legendary cafe called Cafe Lena in Saratoga, NY. During this time, she met up with Pat Tessitore, a co-owner of Cathedral Sound Studios in Rensselaer, NY. She approached him with the idea of becoming an intern of sorts, just so she could learn the basics of audio recording. "I knew I wanted to be a professional musician, but didn't really know where to start. So I decided I'd learn how to MAKE records first, get my foot in the door and then figure the rest out later." Happy never really got the full recording education she was looking for because as soon as Tessitore heard her sing, he insisted on recording everything she'd written up to that point. "She played and it absolutely blew me away. And I had heard a lot of voices in my day", recalls Tessitore. "She brought tears to my eyes." Soon, Happy met up with another musician and mutual friend of Tessitore's, Kevin Bartlett. Bartlett had been writing his own instrumental music for years and had a small, cassette-only label, called Aural Gratification. He heard Happy's work and asked if she'd like to release her music to the public on his label. She accepted. One of these cassettes made its way to a woman named Vickie Mapes, who at that time, was doing an all-female-artist radio show in Kansas City. She began to play Happy's tapes and circulating samplers to unsuspecting music-lovers. From her efforts, a small fan-base was forming. They organized themselves into what is now known as ECTO, a Happy Rhodes Mailing List. This is a forum through which, music lovers can discuss Happy's work, as well as other "Ectophilic" artists. Happy released approximately 9 CD's on the Aural Gratification label. In 1997 however, Happy decided that it was time to seek out a different kind of record label. A good friend recommended her to a newly forming label called, Samson Music. Founded by Norm Waitt Jr.(co-founder of the Gateway Computer company), this was a label that Happy felt would take her music to the next level. She signed with them and released "Many Worlds Are Born Tonight" in August of 1998. "I went through a lot of darkness to make that album. It was also the most fun I've ever had making a record." Happy and Samson Music parted ways in early 2000. Happy self-released her 11th album, Find Me, in September 2007.
Happy herself does not maintain this page. My name is Vickie and I'm a long-time fan and friend (21 years!). I don't work for her. She's given me permission to place her music anywhere I see fit. I wanted Happy's music to be heard by more people. Anyone who wants to get in contact with Happy herself can leave a message/e-mail and I'll pass it on to her. Thank you for understanding, and for listening.
Happy Rhodes Recommends
Blood Ruby   Claire Kehoe   Lunatic Fluid   Maria Daines   Onager   Pruneau   Woodstock Taylor  
As Recommended By
Ace   Dave Rave   Henry Homesweet!   hi-fire   James Oakwood   Kevin East   LODATO   Lowbottomizer   Lunatic Fluid   Mark Ellis   Noctuary   Onager   Pete Vines   Pruneau   Redshirt Theory   The Transporters  
Happy Rhodes Lists the following Influences
  Kate Bush, Peter Gabriel, Yes, Queen, David Bowie, Wendy Carlos