Valentine's Day Live Music and Dining
The best dressed room in SoHo presents a chorus of champagne and romance for Valentine's Day.
There’s a new singing star in town, and her name is Dolly Lowe. And from the moment she set foot on The Club Room stage, audiences have been clamoring for more.
“I love how intimate and cozy it is,” the 21 year-old chanteuse says of the storied SoHo venue. “I feel at home there. I just rock up with my band, and we do our thing. People always have so much fun when I interact with them. It’s such a great venue. That’s New York!”
Lowe grew-up around music in her native France. “My parents used to direct opera in the most beautiful opera houses in Paris,” she tells us. “I was around five years old. My mother at the end of the show would make me go on stage and bow to the audience so I could feel what it’s like to have the lights on me, the people cheering and the applause. I remember being so nervous but so happy to be up there. I associated music with beauty, enthusiasm, and passion. In France I was classically trained by an Iranian opera singer who as well as singing Mozart, sang the songs of her homeland and once performed at Burning Man. My first paid gig was actually in a cabaret in Paris with my Dad. I was 13 and we did a father/daughter vaudeville show. I was paid 20 Euros.”
“When I moved to LA at the age of 15, my parents introduced me to the late, great blues singer Barbara Morrison.” Lowe continues. “She took me under her wing and taught me a lot about performing the blues. I graduated quickly so I could stop going to school and concentrate on making music with her and her band. At the age of 18 I decided to move to NYC and pursue my dream. I had a choice between going to NYU or performing. I chose performing. When I was 19, I flew my dad out to New York to perform with me again. He told stories about Paris and I sang famous French songs.”
A Dolly Lowe Club Room show is wild ride, full of unexpected twists and turns. And what kinds of things does this rising star cite as musical influences?
“I started listening to really old songs like Fats Waller and Hoagy Carmichael, “ she explains. “My dad would play them on the piano in the morning while everyone else was asleep. I just loved how simple a lot of them were… and beautiful and moving. I have a bit of a crazy musical taste. I’ve got my jazz side, my blues side, my Odetta side, but I also have my crazy side – like Pulp, New Order, Pattie Smith, and Iggy Pop.”
Catch all sides of Dolly Lowe when she’s at the Club Room throughout the winter!
The best dressed room in SoHo presents a chorus of champagne and romance for Valentine's Day.
Join us for the 16th Annual Black & White Masquerade Ball.