"Pure magic, exceptional, brilliant, superb: perfect in EVERY respect."--Coquet-Shack.com
Summer/Fall 2006--58 station/18 state radio tour to promote Just Another Day to Music Row and R&R/Billboard stations
Fall/Winter 2006--Just Another Day spends 12 weeks on the Music Row Breakout chart, peaks at #56
Dec 2006--Chosen as "One to Watch" for 2007 by CMT radio
Dec 2006--Video for Just Another Day added to CMT.com and Promo Only video reel
Jan 2007--Video debuted on nat'l television on Positively GAC
Jan 2007--Video distributed internationally, including military bases, embassies and consulates through Get Reel
Feb-April 2007--Featured Artist on Clear Channel NEW! Music website
Jan 2007--Establish in-store events and retail relationship with nat'l retailer Borders
Jan 2007--Spokesperson for the Mason Lindley Foundation, Burlington, NC
Feb 2007--Second single, I'd Leave Me, goes to radio
Feb/Mar 2007--Internet promotion with www.goldbucklenetwork.com
Mar 2007--Distribution deal with Select-O-Hits out of Memphis, TN
April 2007--Just Another Day added to Promo Only country music CD for distribution to DJ’s and clubs
April 2007--Sign exclusive management contract with Thompson Entertainment Group.
May 2007--No One Like Me hits Wal*Mart shelves.
June 2007--I'd Leave Me added to Promo Only country music CD for distribution to DJ's and clubs
August 2007--Second single I'd Leave Me reaches #39 on Music Row Breakout Chart.
October 2007--Open shows for Trent Tomlinson and John Michael Montgomery
October 2007--Featured country artist on mycoke.com
October 2007--Video for Just Another Day enters the Top 64 in CMT's Music City Madness competition for the best unsigned artist in America
November 2007--Begin series of in-store performances for Wal*Mart
November 2007—Begin in-store jukebox promotion with Waffle House
Lisa Dames is neither timid nor cold. She is a sassy, sexy wife and mother who is set to make her mark on country music. On Dames’ new album, No One Like Me, she explores her songs from the inside out, investing each one with a sense of urgency ripped from her own life. A life that could have been inconsequential in someone else’s hands.
The songs on Dames’ album No One Like Me represent a penetrating and sometimes humorous view of life from a woman’s perspective. “There seems to be a prevailing thought that once a woman gets married and has kids, she stops being a woman,” comments Dames. “I tend to believe the oppositethat a woman may get married and have kids, but first and foremost she’s a woman.”
From the comforts and confidence of leading the single life (“Good Time Lookin’ and “Kinda Fun (Getting Over You)” to the isolation of loneliness (“Way Down Here”) to the serious life struggles of “Just Another Day,” the songs create a tapestry of a relationship moving through its various stages.
The first single, “Just Another Day,” penned by Trey Bruce and Kylie Maree Sackley, immediately struck a chord with Dames. “When I first heard this song I thought, that is so right on,” Dames remembers. “When my dad died I expected the whole world to grieve. Of course they didn’t, but it was surreal how one of the two people who had known me my whole life was suddenly gone and no one noticed.”
Likewise the newest single, “I’d Leave Me” hit Dames the first time she heard it. “There are days I wake up and I’m mean, grouchy and generally not a nice person to be around. Unfortunately I always seem to take it out on my husband. I know that he is not going to walk out because I’m having a bad day, but it doesn’t stop me from wondering why he doesn’t and why he puts up with me. And the simple answer is, because he loves me. Anyone who has ever been in a long-term relationship, male or female, can relate to that.” Dames grew up in St. Louis, Houston and Cincinnati. It didn’t take long for her to become swept up by country music. “When I was nine years old,” she says, “my best friend and I would play Dolly Parton’s ‘Here You Come Again’ and sing along at the top of our lungs.” Unfortunately, Dames was not surrounded by encouraging adults. “My father wanted me to get a business degree,” Dames recalls. “But I loved to sing and although it was discouraging sometimes, I never let go of my dream.”
“During college Dames had a brief tenure working in sales at a country radio station in Cincinnatithe Beaver, 96.5. Later, while doing summer stock theatre, her roommate introduced her to Pam Tillis’ ‘Maybe It Was Memphis’ and Suzy Bogguss’ ‘Aces.’” “Those two albums really showed me what country music could do”, says Dames. “The voices and songs were both so compelling. I was hooked.” During this period, Dames met the man she would soon marry. Once her husband was out of school, the young couple moved to his native Milwaukee. There, Dames worked with several of the city’s professional theater companies. “After being told I wasn’t a singer,” Dames says with quiet satisfaction, “I worked nonstop for six years.” She became known as one of the best voices in Milwaukee.
It was in Milwaukee that Dames gave birth to her two daughters, her motivation for success. “I never want my children to think that a dream is too big or beyond their grasp.”
In November of 1999, after giving birth to her second daughter, Dames got an unexpected phone call from an old college friend who was working at a professional theatre in Greensboro, North Carolina. They were getting ready to do A Closer Walk with Patsy Cline and they needed an actress to play Patsy Cline. “I told her I’d never done anything like that and that I didn’t sound like Patsy Cline. She said, ‘I know, but I think you can do it.’ Between January 2001 and September of 2004, Dames performed in seven productions of both Patsy Cline showsAlways . . . Patsy Cline and A Closer Walk With Patsy Clinetouring in several states.”
“It’s funny, but portraying Patsy Cline is what helped me to develop my own style,” says Dames. “While most of the other actresses who were doing these shows were so focused on sounding just like Patsy, I was focused on the emotion she put into her songs. And, that’s how I try to sing everything. Without the emotion, it’s just a bunch of words. Patsy knew this. That’s why she’s timeless.”
No One Like Me is produced by Grammy nominated producer David Grow, best known for his studio work with pop piano icon Jim Brickman. It features songs by such Music Row luminaries as Brett James, Troy Verges, Victoria Shaw and Hillary Lindsey.
After hearing Dames’ demo, Grow was intrigued. “David called me right away,” says Dames. “and said that there was ‘something distinctive but familiar about my voice’ and that he thought we could create ‘something magical.’” In No One Like Me, they have.