A Buddhist
monk stood in singer-songwriter Jaclyn Bradley’s Ireland apartment. “You have
it all wrong,” he told her. “Reincarnation doesn’t just happen at the end of
life… Being renewed can happen in any instant; you can be reborn at any
time.”
A
week later Bradley learned things in that same apartment that led to the end of
her marriage and subsequently led to the American singer moving home. The monk,
who was her neighbor, worked at McDonalds [true story], so he brought her boxes
marked as “nuggets” and “French fries” so she could pack up her life and be
reborn.
As
a teen, Jaclyn Bradley left the lakeside town of Lorain, Ohio to pursue music.
The years and miles away led her on many adventures: studying opera at Indiana
University, working in television in L.A., and to New York City where she
stopped her roommate from going to work at The World Trade Center on September
11th. After watching the Twin Towers fall from her roof, Jaclyn turned from
singing classical works to writing her own songs.
The
road also led Jaclyn to hospitals where she conducted music therapy bedside and
in surgery. With motherhood came a move to The Netherlands, then Ireland where
she raised her daughter while recording music, making films, and starring as a
contestant on The Voice of Holland and Ireland’s Got Talent.
Arriving
full-circle, the journey back to her birthplace of Lorain and the opening of
her heart to love again is the topic of Bradley’s latest musical release,
“Hometown.”
Lorain
is a town famous for its lighthouse; perhaps it was the light of that Lake Erie
beacon guided Bradley home. In late 2019, right before the pandemic hit,
Bradley moved with her daughter back to the place she was born. “To say I
wasn't broken and scared would be untrue,” shares Bradley, “but in the nurturing
place that raised me, I was able to thrive, reinvent and find light again.”
This
is not that first time Lorain, Ohio has been reverently mentioned by a creative
native. Legendary author, Toni Morrison was also born in Lorain and wrote in
her autobiographical novel, The Bluest Eye, “Few people
can say the names of their hometowns with such sly affection. Perhaps because
they don’t have hometowns, just places they were born.” Lorain seems to be the former for Ms. Bradley.
In
2020, she opened a music school, “Rock Town Music Academy” where she now teaches students of all ages to
find their unique songs and voices. In just a few years, the school was awarded
best music instruction in Lorain County. Currently, it’s nominated for best
music school in the area by Cleveland Magazine.
Bradley
found love again. Hometown, a song about finding everything you were
searching for in your own backyard, was penned in Bradley’s garden with her
partner/co-writer Derek Connell. Jaclyn invited her local friends to be a part
of the project and throughout the song you may hear chants of friends singing
along around a campfire.
Hometown was produced in
Nashville, Tennessee by Austin Moorhead (Mickey Guyton, Carly Pearce).
“On
the way to the Nashville studio to record Hometown, we were picked up by
a Lyft driver from Lorain” proclaims Bradley. “During the drive we shared
childhood memories and called mutual friends. It’s amazing how signs and gifts
are always all around us if we are open to them.”
As
for the song, Bradley hopes that it will touch the hearts of anyone who is
connected to their roots. “Sometimes we find that everything we are searching
for already lives inside us. The most beautiful trip is always the one you take
back to your own heart.”
“Hometown”
and its b-side “Burn for You” will be available on vinyl and all streaming
services on July 7th.