Back To Artist
Donna De Lory : Bliss
Log in to add to your wishlist
Ethereal Pop - Best known as the longtime singing/dancing companion of Madonna, Donna's music is most compared to Kate Bush, Peter Gabriel, Sarah McLachlan and Tori Amos
Genre: Pop: Delicate
Release Date: 2001
Bliss © Copyright-Secret Road
  • Buy CD - $15.00
  • Download Album (MP3) - $15.00
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
On and On 5:02 $0.99
Hold Me Now 4:29 $0.99
Where I've Never Been 4:09 $0.99
Only Time 4:43 $0.99
Go Talk to Mary 5:18 $0.99
Love Never Dies 4:36 $0.99
Please 4:31 $0.99
Te Amo 3:44 $0.99
Free 3:41 $0.99
A Woman's Pride 4:37 $0.99
Amazing Grace 5:33 $0.99
preview all songs

Album Notes

"Donna's voice is gorgeous and ethereal, but then she'll let it wail. Her singing is a beautiful combination of worlds." - Paula Cole "I have always admired Donna's voice; her songwriting is poignant and heartfelt. " - Madonna *************** For Donna De Lory, creating music has always meant melding the sensual and rhythmic sides of her soul into a compelling tuneful blend that exposes her fragility as well as her strength. That beautiful fusion is evident on her current album, the appropriately titled, bliss. From the sensuous yearning of "Where I've Never Been to the breathy lover's pleading of "Please" to the set-ending, stark, haunting remake of "Amazing Grace," De Lory takes the listener on an emotional musical journey about finding one's place in this world. A lot of these songs are about realizing that love is eternal and learning to see the truth in everything," says the singer/songwriter. De Lory felt her artistic calling from an early age. Raised in a musical home, her grandfather played cello and upright bass for the Warner Bros. Studios orchestra, her mother was a singer and dancer, and her father, keyboardist and producer Al De Lory, is best known for his work with Phil Spector's Wrecking Crew, the Beach Boys and Glen Campbell's hits of the 60s and 70s. De Lory made her professional debut at age 8 singing a Recipe dog food commercial. By the time she became a teenager, she had been immortalized as the voice warbling the theme song for Disneyland's "It's A Small World" ride; she also sang vocals on albums by Barry Manilow, Kim Carnes and Santana. "It was always really easy for me to know what I wanted to do, because I was always around music, singers and players," recalls De Lory. When she was fifteen, the family moved to Nashville from Calabasas, where her father found a new professional home on Music Row. "I hung out in that scene for a while and made a lot of friends," De Lory says. "It was there that I picked up a guitar, started writing a little bit, and decided that I really wanted to be an artist and a songwriter." Moving back to LA to study dancing, singing and acting, De Lory's vocal on a demo tape led to her landing her breakthrough gig as one of Madonna's two singing/dancing stage companions. De Lory performed on three of Madonna's biggest tours -"Who's That Girl?," "Blonde Ambition" and "The Girlie Show," as well as taking part in the bold and brassy "Truth or Dare" documentary. "The biggest thing I learned from Madonna is that you can pay attention to every detail. You don't have to be this artist that just sings, and then walks away and lets other people take care of things. She took care of everything, from the music to the costumes to the set to all the details. I've never been around anyone who works as hard as she does." Her association with Madonna continues. De Lory recently joined the Material Girl in Europe and the US for the acclaimed, Drown World Tour. When not on the road with Madonna, De Lory performed with several different bands in the LA area, eventually signing with MCA Records as a solo artist and releasing her self-titled debut album in 1993. The project's hit single "Praying For Love" reached No. 1 in Japan and her second single, "Just a Dream" was a top 10 dance hit in the U.S. But the lure of collaboration eventually led her to the musical partner she was looking for - cellist, Cameron Stone. After parting ways with MCA in the mid-90s, De Lory turned to writing a new album with Stone. "We work really well together. I really love to write with the cello because it has a very haunting quality." Her pop background and his classical training combined to form a new musical hybrid in part informed by her global explorations. "At one point, I went to places like Brazil and Israel to promote my solo record," explains De Lory. "And I was getting influenced by a lot of world music. I started studying Asian dance prior to making my first video, which was s

Read more...

REVIEWS

Another great album
author: Rejean Roy
What can I say about this one :) She is one of the most underated singers of our time.
Read more...
author: Peter Siko
once again - a joy to listen to. thank you donna for sharing your gift with us !!!!
Read more...
Lovely!
author: Hanne Katharina from Norway
My favourite song on this album is “One and one” and "Go talk to Mary". I like the rhythm in “hold me now”. Listen to the lyrics on this album!
Read more...
Stunning, Amazing, Magnificent
author: Rebeca Menendez
I actually got all of her CD's now, but perhaps for being the last to get Bliss is my favourite. I listen to it On an On ;-) hope she's reading this, I adore her for being the person she actually is, my second voice... hope I'll meet you again someday... keep going baby!! make us vibe!!
Read more...