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$14.79 UMKC CONSERVATORY STUDENT RELEASES DEBUT ALBUMBy Melissa Cowan, UNews reporterGabrielle Tee could have been an athlete like the majority of her family. Fate had other plans for her.Instead, she's a well-rounded singer, songwriter and musician, whose talents include the guitar, piano, violin and percussion.And she's releasing her first album, Try Me, this week.Tee is a senior at the UMKC Conservatory. Her major is Music Therapy, and she proudly displays her passion for it in a tattoo on the top of her foot. She also teaches out of her own home-based studio, giving lessons to younger music students in piano, guitar and voice.Tee plans to take six months off after she graduates in May and tour with her album, as well as new material."You only get one chance to be 21, so why not?" Tee said with a smile.Her debut album also features Mike Judge (drums) and fellow UMKC Conservatory student Jamie Searle (bass and secondary guitar)."(The title track) envelops and embodies the whole concept of the CD," Tee said. "It's just about being entirely accepting of yourself and other people … despite your rough edges and your little mishaps and quirks."Tee believes everyone genuinely wants a chance to be themself.Despite most of her family being athletes, (and being named after a tennis player), Tee was more drawn to music."We had this kind of nasty, old bar piano at our house, and it happened to be in my room growing up," Tee said. "No one played it and there was nowhere else to put it."Instead of the natural child's inclination to pound on anything, Tee was "more cautious with it." She would touch the keys lightly.She was five when she asked to be enrolled in piano lessons; she was around 13 when she taught herself to play guitar.This was also when she lost interest in classical music."I stole my brother's Ben Folds Five CD, and it was like, wow!" Tee said. "The piano can do a lot more than just play Beethoven sonatas."A year later, she saw Ben Folds Five in concert. It inspired her to start writing her own music, she said. She also started performing five nights a week at a jazz restaurant in her home state of Iowa.Though Ben Folds is her biggest influence, she is also compared to newer pianists like Regina Spektor and Ingrid Michealson, she said. "I'm going for piano pop jazz or jazz piano pop," Tee said with a laugh. "I'm trying to figure out which way to order those words."Try Me starts off very upbeat, but "mellows out" toward the end."I think the most honest and exposed song is 'Letters to the Next'," Tee said. "It's the only just guitar and voice (song) on the record."The song is about her acceptance of letting go of a past relationship."I always feel very personally moved when I perform it," she said.Though relationships are a theme of the album, Tee focuses more on specific feelings and moments."I'd like to think there's a little different spin to all of them," Tee said. "It's not just an 'I love you' or 'I hate you' song."Tee wants the message to be more about "the resilience to push through, no matter what."Her album ...
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