In Philadelphia, where blues and rock blend with the spirit of old theaters, Abby Lee shaped her sound. She didn't learn in school, but next to her mom's piano, where she soaked up jazz and blues classics like Stormy Weather and Sunday Kind of Love as if they were her native tongue. This personal and deep education is the base for everything she sings.
In Philadelphia, where blues and rock blend with the spirit of old theaters, Abby Lee shaped her sound. She didn't learn in school, but next to her mom's piano, where she soaked up jazz and blues classics like Stormy Weather and Sunday Kind of Love as if they were her native tongue. This personal and deep education is the base for everything she sings.
Her new single, Death of Me, proves it. It's more than just a song; it's an honest story of a tricky, ongoing love, written from the middle of the mess. Abby doesn't just tell you how it feels; she breathes it out with striking honesty. The song sounds like what it is: a confession turned into music, where every note carries the weight of real life.
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Abby Lee
Abby Lee



Abby sings with the soul of someone who knows the old ways but lives now. You can hear the influence of her heroes in her voice—Aretha's power, Etta James's truth, Linda Ronstadt's storytelling, Bonnie Raitt's grounded blues—but also the modern vibe of artists like ZZ Ward or Amy Winehouse's raw honesty. Still, the result is only hers. Death of Me shows what Philadelphia already knows: Abby Lee is a force. She's an artist with a great vocal range and a skill that makes her just as good in the studio as on stage. But more than talent, she has truth. And this song, with its haunting melody and unforgettable hook, is exactly that: a truth sung straight from the heart of someone who grew up hearing pain and hope named on a piano at home.
Abby sings with the soul of someone who knows the old ways but lives now. You can hear the influence of her heroes in her voice—Aretha's power, Etta James's truth, Linda Ronstadt's storytelling, Bonnie Raitt's grounded blues—but also the modern vibe of artists like ZZ Ward or Amy Winehouse's raw honesty. Still, the result is only hers. Death of Me shows what Philadelphia already knows: Abby Lee is a force. She's an artist with a great vocal range and a skill that makes her just as good in the studio as on stage. But more than talent, she has truth. And this song, with its haunting melody and unforgettable hook, is exactly that: a truth sung straight from the heart of someone who grew up hearing pain and hope named on a piano at home.
