MACY
GRAY

At
the start of 2009 and ten years into her career, Macy Gray
found herself a free agent and on the verge of "The Sellout.”
Sure, she sold 15 million albums, scored two Grammy Awards,
two MTV awards and with “I Try,” had one of the most successful
singles of all time, but after 2007’s Big, she found herself
alone, with no one to answer to but herself. Big was the slickest
album of her career and she considered going even further away
from the true, gritty, whiskey-voice Macy, following instead
of leading. In other words, selling out.
“I thought after Big flopped maybe I should do what everyone
else was doing,” she says. “Go out and hire the hottest producers,
the best writers, get real skinny. But none of those people
called me back.”
For Gray, it was an ego-bruising wallop that left her bewildered
and irritated at relationships that turned out to be more fair
weather than everlasting. “I was terrified, I didn’t know what
to do,” she says. “You have all these people telling you how
dope you are and then they just go away.”
Chastened, Gray went back to her comfort zone, toiling in the
studio with a select group of friends and musicians. A studio
owner in Tarzana gave her a dirt-cheap deal on space and for
months she went in and pushed herself to come up with new material.
As the new songs took shape, that feeling of rejection gave
way to a steely resolve to reestablish herself as one of music’s
dominant singers. “When I was on my own, I was making songs
that I liked,” she says. “It was my own money, I didn’t have
to go play it for someone. I wasn’t someone’s employee.”
The resulting effort – aptly titled The Sellout (Concord Records)
– is a return to form for Gray, perhaps her finest album to
date, but one that propels her sound forward rather than looking
longingly at the past. Sure, there are classic-Macy pop-soul
stylings in tracks like “Lately,” but she branches out on tracks
like the epic stadium rock-stomper “Kissed It” (featuring a
blistering guitar solo from longtime friend Slash) or the Prince-like
slow funk jam “Stalker” that wouldn’t be out of place on Sign
O’ The Times.
According to Gray, many of the songs started out with a four-on-the-floor
dance beat, but then, “everyone started doing it and I needed
to stay true to who I am.” That shows up on the album’s first
single, the breezy “Beauty In The World” which started out
as a David Guetta-style house track but switched after Gray
turned it into more of a rollicking peace & love sing-a-long.
“You get bombarded with opinion and expectations and what other
people want and you forget what you do well,” she says. “That
song is what I do well.”
Gray also clearly ups her game in the lyrics department, filling
out the portrait of herself as an artist. Many of her songs
have her trademark wit (check out the horny banter between
her and guest Bobby Brown on the steamy “Real Love”) but others
are more agonizing, whether it’s the deeply confessional “On
And On” or the making amends of “Still Hurts.” “I was depressed,”
she admits. “I had been through two or three relationships
in that time so my love life wasn’t going well. Last year was
a real bummed out time.”
But leave it to her three teenage children to put things in
perspective. “Beauty” was inspired by her daughter who one
day Macy overheard laughing hysterically in the next room.
“I was having a really bad day and I heard my daughter just
cracking up in the next room,” she recalls. She has this really
great laugh and I didn’t even know what she was laughing at.
I thought ‘at least she’s happy.’ And I felt at least I hadn’t
failed there, because my daughter’s happy.”
Despite the rejection, the uncertainty and the heartache, The
Sellout is a total triumph and success. It’s a testament to
Gray’s resolve and songwriting chops that the material feels
so honest and authentic but yet effortless, moving seamlessly
from one track to the next. There’s nothing forced, nothing
that feels out of place. Fittingly, the album ends with the
anthemic track, “The Comeback,” a bookend declaration of things
accomplished and the hope for better things to come:
“Hey big world it’s me again/I’m coming way back to be big
again.”
“I just poured my heart out,” she says. “I didn’t set out to
have a theme, but when I put them all together it was a picture
of my life in that time. I’m dying for people to like it.”
It’s the comeback. And The Sellout. And it proves that Gray
has no intention of fading away.