Sunleadsme Magazine first connected with Lucy Sky, when we got the offer to head out to Ottawa last Summer to review Ottawa Bluesfest 2018. We covered the last week of the event from the family perspective (Feature here). We wanted to highlight the family festival experience and the history of the event and Lucy was a great contact as not only does she have a very special talent for capturing the musicians' unique moments on stage, she has been attending Bluesfest since she was a little one. We connected on many levels over our love of music and writing and we are delighted to share her perspective and her shots with our readers here from 2018 and 2019.

We also bonded over some of the previous artists we have both interviewed including recently featured The Beaches, Royal wood and more.

As stated on her site, Lucy is an alumnus of the Humber Print and Broadcast Journalism program, now contributing to Aesthetic Magazine and The Spill Magazine and the Rock Source as a featured interviewer, writer, and photographer. Lucy has also contributed to The Scene Magazine and Tour Bus Entertainment as a reviewer, interviewer, and photographer. Upon graduation, Lucy immediately began contributing to Music Vice and This is Vinyl House as a photographer, reviewer, and writer.

 We chatted about last  year's festival and highlight her beautiful photos here an on our Photo feature page HERE

SLM: I love that what you wrote on your website about your passion for live music and sharing your experiences (Lucy Sky Press), “You live for it and that leaves you forever asking the questions that you think the world should hear the answers to.”

I thought that was so cool. Tell me about how your journey when you first started writing and professionally taking pictures. 

 Lucy:  I went to Humber College and took the Journalism, Print, and Broadcast program, and I always kind of had a knack for photography, it wasn't highlighted in our program whatsoever. Neither was music, as journalism is usually centred around the news. I was never really interested in that industry. It's corrupt and weird and depressing. 

In my final year, I thought I was going to go in for broadcasting. That's what I initially went into, but in the final year, you pick what you major in. So, I chose print because I fell in love with it on the way. Writing, you know, I have too much to say. I can't fit in a fifteen-second clip.  I did my internship with a place in Toronto called, Music Place.  My first festival was Field Trip in Toronto, with them, and I did the Canadian music week and then I finished up my internship with them.
It's kind of funny now but I was moving back to Ottawa, I had signed the lease at the place that I'm still in now. That day, I got the call from Aesthetic magazine saying that they wanted me to write for them and I freaked out a little bit. They let me do this remotely and ended up at the top of their masthead. I think that they would say that I'm their lead writer. But I don't do photography for them, I got more into photography later and, I just went to shows and took them myself and ended up hooking up with a few photographers here in Ottawa and working with them.  Spill magazine I believe is where you saw my stuff first. 

SLM: Yeah that's right. 

Lucy: So they gave me a little bit more freedom, Aesthetic is very picky with their photographers.

In my first year ever I got to shoot Rockfest, with Music Place and Rockfest is my biggest festival for sure. I've had Bluesfest the past two years. I've done it with three places, I go to shoot for Music Place, The Scene Magazine and Spill magazine.  2018 might have been the only year with Spill magazine, and that was kinda directly through me because I had made the connections with the people that host the festival. 

SLM: It would also be great to get your perspective on The Ottawa Bluesfest from your youth and coming full circle to taking professional photographs and writing about the event. Can you share a few memories of Blues Fest as a child?

 

Lucy: I've been going since the festival started - my parents love music, and they are definitely a huge influence on why I love it so much. The first concert that I technically ever went to, I was still in my mum's stomach. My first memory is from about three or four.

It's such a different festival, now, I can't even compare to now, it's not the same festival at all. 

My mum has a picture of me with my hands in the air, and I am wearing these striped pants and this really loud shirt and I loved it. Bluesfest was at a smaller event back then.

You could run around and your kids could run everywhere and have a great time and you weren't worried and there's just- it’s just blankets and chairs and not this big giant crowd of people fighting for a spot. You could see it, you could hear it everywhere for miles, and you could hear it when you're walking on the street coming towards the festival. Then it was more was blues centric, it didn't have all this pop and rap. I understand why they do it obviously, it has to progress and it’s progressed phenomenally, kudos to the people that put it on, because for a festival to survive and get that big is just phenomenal. 

 

SLM: Rifflandia (returning in 2020 hosted by MRG) out here in Victoria is still like that. There is a "Kidlandia" so you can be part of the festival experience while your kids are playing in the sandbox and enjoy it. I felt that that type of family-friendly element was missing from this event. Over the years, do you have a favourite family member to share from Blues Fest, I mean like a specific artist you saw for the first time being little or something like that? 

 

Lucy: Yeah, I hope don't mind if I get a little emotional when I tell this one. My step-dad, he passed away when I was about 12, but I think I was probably that was a big thing about this (2018) year, it was huge for me. I didn't end up getting to take pictures of it, unfortunately, because like you said when we chatted earlier, you know, coming full circle like that is a phenomenal feeling. But when I was younger me, my mum and my step-dad went when it was at Confederation Park, Bryan Adams played.  I love Bryan Adams growing up I mean he's Canadian, and he's just awesome. So we were there for that, and I was super excited and all I wanted was summer of '69, that's all I wanted. And my mum was getting tired of the crowd and my step-dad didn't mind but we were in the crowd and she was off to the side. And I guess he got a text from her saying, “okay you know that's enough lets go, it’s getting late, we don't need to see the whole show,” and I got all upset and I said, “but he hasn't played it, he hasn't played it.” my step-dad looked at me and he said, “I'm sorry kid, your mum wants to go,” and I said, "but come on," and he said, "okay, I'll make you a deal, the next song if he plays summer of '69, I'll put you up on my shoulders and we can stay here and we can listen to the whole thing and your mum can get mad at me after." But if he doesn't, then we gotta go." Then, sure enough, the next song was "Summer of '69". 

SLM: That's amazing, that really would've been full circle as Bryan Adams played again this year, and was the opening headliner of this festival this year.

 Lucy: It really was, that was a pretty surreal moment for me. Something that I kept of my step-dad's was this bandana and I wore it on my head that day. I went and I kind of brought him with me. 

 SLM: That's an amazing memory, thank you for sharing that. Other than Bryan Adams do you have a favourite artist from this year's festival or previous years that was your most memorable to shoot? 

 Lucy:  This year honestly Dear Rouge surprised me. You know, I wasn't going to do it, as I didn't know who they were, nut then you asked me for the feature and Danielle (Danielle McTaggart, DEAR ROUGE) was so much fun to take pictures of.  I think the best pictures that I got throughout the festival and the whole thing was Dear Rouge.  That picture that I have of her with the microphone around her neck, I was just in the perfect spot at the perfect time. I had people trying to push in and get in on my side and get my picture. But that's the fun feeling when you get something like that, it's so rewarding. Especially when you've been going to this festival for so long and you've seen it progress, it just- it's surreal it makes you feel very accomplished. Also, Three Days Grace, because I'm a '90's kids, and Rise Against, was cool to shoot. I've shot them before but you know that was fun. Greta van Fleet was probably the coolest for me as well. 

 We finally met at photo pit during the Dave Matthews set on our last night at Bluesfest 2018, though we had limited time to chat at the festival we stayed in touch ever since. Lucy has photographed some amazing artists and truly loves Rock and Roll.

Check out all of Lucy Sky's photos, features and interviews on her site https://lucyskypress.com 
Here are some great shots of Bluesfest 2018 (Check out our review here at BLUESFEST) and some of her favourites from her catalogue.

Lucy captures the souls of the ARTists in their moments of emotion and she photographs and you can feel the emotion, she is also an absolutely amazing talent and are so proud to include her in the SLM family!

 

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Bluesfest highlights with Lucy Sky Press

"A look at everything that's come and gone"- Bryan Adams - "Summer of 69" 

p.tinham 10.21.2019

Featured SLM Artist from 2018 Bluesfest 

(Danielle McTaggart,

DEAR ROUGE) 

SLM FEATURE ON DEAR ROUGE 2018

Favourites from this PHo ARTist 

CHECK OUT RECENT FESTIVAL COVERAGE OF RIOTFEST AND BLUESFEST 2019 HERE