
Lowell co-wrote Beyonce's Texas Hold 'Em and has the Grammy nods to prove it. Now she's gunning for a Juno
Elizabeth Boland — professionally known by her middle name, Lowell — is sitting in a tiny Toronto studio. The wood-panelled room may be small, but it's where she's crafted many of her hits, and it shows.
In front of her sit both a Juno and a framed gold record for The Beaches' Blame My Ex, the album she co-produced and the hit track, Blame Brett, which she co-wrote. To her right is a Wurlitzer electric piano, which, she remarks, is just like the one she brought on tour for one of her three critically acclaimed albums.
To her left is a PR person, bashfully telling the story about the time her five-year-old asked Lowell what Beyoncé smells like (the answer was rather unsurprising: she smells great).
And in her lap is a guitar, currently being used to play the track that captured that kid's attention, no less the rest of the world: Texas Hold 'Em. The genre-melding soul/R&B/folk/country song helped launch country back into the pop culture stratosphere, Beyoncé finally onto the Grammys' stage for album of the year, and a number of Canadians onto Canada's relatively equivalent stage this March.
"I did joke that, you know, if they didn't make this category this year, I was going to be mad," Lowell says of the new non-performing songwriter category at the Junos.
She's up for it this year for co-writing both Cowboy Carter 's Texas Hold 'Em and Bodyguard (as well as for co-writing The Beaches song Takes One to Know One). That nomination came shortly after she shared two Grammy nominations with Beyoncé for best song and best country song.
"Because if I got a Grammy [nomination] ahead of getting a Juno, that would be pretty bad. You know?"
In her 'big sister era'
The half-serious barb showcases the typical temperament of Lowell, a woman whose feminist, self-possessed lyrics mixed with occasionally heartrending, mournful arrangements have come to colour some of the biggest songs in pop music. Those qualities are likely drawn from life experiences: a driven confidence paired with natural sensitivities (she has both perfect pitch and synesthesia, a neurological condition that is not uncommon among artists) pushed her toward music in a family of non-musicians.
Then dropping out of a stuffy classical music program, years of intermittent, unreliable and unrewarding work outside of the industry — and a critically lauded but commercially-stunted debut album — left her somewhat jaded.
Her experiences with these hardships have found their way into her music, guiding her to what she calls her current "big sister era." It's pushed her to protect and guide the songs and careers of musicians like Hailee Steinfeld and Madison Beer — Lowell wrote much of Steinfeld's EP Half Written Story and helped write nearly all of Beer's album Life Support. And she's also developing the up and coming Nova Scotia artist Baby Nova.
When you're in a room with her, you can't help but notice that she has a bit of an iron-fist-in-a-velvet-glove sensibility. She's kind and funny, but not the type to be sensitive about touchy issues.
When a side-conversation around a particularly prickly subject for music nerds comes up — whether learning music theory is all that important to crafting great songs — she doesn't have to think hard for an answer.
While she's more inclined to follow more contemporary, pop-oriented schools of thought than classical techniques when crafting songs, she still always has theory in mind. It means that while creators who have no knowledge of theory might need to rely on fleeting inspiration when they have off days, Lowell can fall back on her training to crank out something good enough to get to the next opportunity.
When it's pointed out that some musicians feel that academic, theory-guided thinking gets in the way of an organic connection to the music, she finds it funny. People with that opinion on music, she says, probably don't find themselves in working studios as often as she does.
"I'm a fighter. I love to just stir the pot a little bit," she says later, laughing. "I always joke, like, 'I'm not necessarily liked, but sometimes respected.' "
Bittersweet victories
It's been a hard-fought-for respect. And though she presents her lack of Junos as a joke, there is a sad bit of truth there; it's not bitterness, she's quick to note, but something close. Because while she's spent her decade-plus in the industry writing songs for big names like the Backstreet Boys, Charlie XCX, JoJo and Demi Lovato, Lowell's own name has been slower to take hold.
When it comes to established performers, especially American ones, that's more or less to be expected. But what was harder was seeing the Canadian artists she wrote for — Tate McRae, Bülow and yes, The Beaches — earning accolades and awards from their shared home country.
Bülow's win at the 2019 Junos for the EP Damaged and its double-platinum single Not a Love Song is a particularly difficult memory for Lowell.
"It was bittersweet … being there, meant to celebrate about it, but not really being allowed to be celebrated for it," Lowell says. Because, even while stressing the joy she felt for her collaborator, that moment highlighted the intractably tough ceiling Canadian songwriters often crash into.
"I co-wrote that whole EP with her and I did feel like, you know, all of the creators behind it needed to be rewarded, not just a couple of select people," she says.
"So that was when I really started thinking about this category, and whether it needed to change."
WATCH | Lowell on her Grammy nomination:
Calgary artist nominated for Grammy for work on Beyoncé album
4 months ago
Duration 1:03
Changing the game
That thinking translated first into a common strategy for Canadian songwriters — moving to L.A., where it seemed necessary to go to find work and recognition.
But after the move and steady success, her strategy changed. Instead of accepting the bleak prospects currently on offer for songwriters in Canada, she thought, why not work to change them?
"The way that Canada doesn't embrace their own talent can be a little bit of a deterrent to sticking around," she explains. "I went down there, but I think that it's in coming back I've realized you can make more change. You can't just run away from things all the time."
Now, the category she's championed for years finally exists. And its existence means that as fellow Canadians Shawn Everett and Jack Rochon compete for their work as producers on Cowboy Carter, she and her Canadian Texas Hold 'Em co-writer Nathan Ferraro also get to head to Canada's biggest night of music for their chance at a Juno.
To be fair, she already picked up Billboard Canada's inaugural non-performing songwriter award last year. And if she wins at the Junos, she already has her (fingers crossed) speech planned out. Like this year's Grammy-winner Amy Allen, who lamented that it's only the third year of their non-performing songwriter award, she would acknowledge and thank all the songwriters who came before her.
But more than that, Lowell wants to keep fighting for songwriters who don't want to flee south.
"My hope is for people to be able to stay here," she says, while admitting that the competitive nature she learned in L.A. helped her back home. "I'm hoping I can bring that nature here, bring up talent here … so that people, at least, don't have to go so early to find their way, you know?"
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
a day ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
WhyHunger marks 50 years of fighting for food security, a point of ‘pride and shame'
NEW YORK (AP) — WhyHunger would have liked to be out of service by now. Singer-songwriter Harry Chapin and radio DJ Bill Ayres founded the grassroots support organization in 1975 with the idea they could eradicate hunger at its root by leveraging their music industry connections to fund community groups advancing economic and food security. And, yet, the global nonprofit is hitting the half-century mark this year — an anniversary that reflects the sobering need for continued food assistance. 'It is pride and shame in equal measure,' said Jen Chapin, the daughter of Harry Chapin and a WhyHunger board member, at the nonprofit's gala Wednesday night. 'That this organization is still relevant when hunger is a completely solvable problem — it's embarrassing.' Established amid transformative expansions of federal food programs just before the United States significantly cut social welfare, WhyHunger marks its 50-year milestone at a time of worsening food insecurity worldwide when some of the wealthiest countries are decreasing their humanitarian commitments. As part of the Trump administration's swift scaling back of the federal government, funding streams are being shut off for many in the nonprofit's network that help millions of hungry people access nutritious food. Chapin said the immense need, and 'that the political conversation has gone backward,' would be 'infuriating' to her late father. 'But he wouldn't pause to rant,' she said. 'He'd be like, 'OK, what can we do?'' The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates more than 47 million people, including nearly 14 million children, lived in food-insecure households in 2023 — a crisis WhyHunger blames on 'deeper systemic issues' of rising inflation, the rollback of pandemic relief and poor wages. Those statistics were 'ridiculous' to Grammy award-winning rockers Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo. The couple, which performed its hit 'Love Is a Battlefield,' was recognized Wednesday with the ASCAP Harry Chapin Humanitarian Award, given to artists who use their influence to foster social justice. Giraldo said they've been involved with WhyHunger for 30 years. The support began with their relationship to Harry Chapin and his family, as well as their advocacy for children's causes. 'Music brings so many people together,' Benatar told the Associated Press. 'I think it's just always a good start.' 'If we can help in any way, that's what we're trying to do: just be helpers,' Giraldo added. The annual awards gala, hosted by Jazz at Lincoln Center's Frederick P. Rose Hall, raised more than $125,000 on Wednesday night alone. The proceeds directly supported WhyHunger's programs in the U.S. and 24 other countries. The nonprofit aims to not only feed people but create systems-level change by training local farmers, connecting people to government benefits, promoting indigenous food sovereignty and defending food workers' rights. 'It's not enough to feed people for a day,' Jen Chapin said. 'It's not even enough to teach a man to fish so that he can get his own food. You have to also create the social movement so that there is a food system that enables that farmer, that fisherperson, to get a fair price for their work, feed their local community.' Among the benefactors were WhyHunger Board of Directors Chair Cindy Secunda and billionaire Bloomberg L.P. co-founder Tom Secunda, whose family foundation has contributed over $8 million to WhyHunger since 2020. Like many WhyHunger supporters, Cindy said she was first introduced to their work during Harry Chapin concerts in college. She would donate $10 or so, per his end-of-show requests. But she said she didn't ramp up her giving until more recently when she was invited to see the work of WhyHunger's partners up close. 'They get so much more done with such a small staff,' she said. 'I've never seen anything like it.' The nonprofit has not increased its staff totals much over its 50 years to 'stay nimble and serve those who are serving,' according to Chapin. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. The biggest change has been the philanthropic sector's overall approach to fighting food insecurity, staff say. Paternalistic, top-down attitudes toward aid were more dominant when the organization was founded. The idea that hunger is connected to issues of racism and climate was not as widespread then, according to Debbie DePoala, WhyHunger's senior director of communications The nonprofit has long centered public policy in conversations about hunger, according to Jan Poppendieck, a former board member and CUNY professor who has studied the history of food assistance. She hopes the outlook isn't lost. 'What they have done best is assist local innovative progressive organizations,' Poppendieck said. 'Assist them financially because of this ability, as I say, to extract moolah from the entertainment industry, and assist them with sharing best practices, introducing them to each other, bringing them together so that people can learn from each other.' ___ Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP's philanthropy coverage, visit


Globe and Mail
2 days ago
- Globe and Mail
English pop singer Jessie J says she has been diagnosed with early breast cancer
The English pop singer Jessie J says she has been diagnosed with breast cancer and will undergo surgery after her performance at the London music festival Capital's Summertime Ball next weekend. Jessie J, 37, shared the news in an Instagram video on Wednesday. 'I was diagnosed with early breast cancer,' she said in the clip. 'Cancer sucks in any form, but I'm holding onto the word 'early'.' 'It's a very dramatic way to get a boob job. I am going to disappear for a bit after Summertime Ball to have my surgery, and I will come back with massive (expletive) and more music.' The annual Summertime Ball will be held at Wembley Stadium on Sunday, June 15. She told her social-media audience that she felt compelled to share her diagnosis. Gen X and millennials blindsided by rising rates of cancer 'I just wanted to be open and share it,' she said. 'One, because, selfishly, I do not talk about it enough. I'm not processing it because I'm working so hard. I also know how much sharing in the past has helped me with other people giving me their love and support and also their own stories. I'm an open book. It breaks my heart that so many people are going through so much similar and worse – that's the bit that kills me.' The Grammy-nominated Jessie J has long been celebrated for her robust soprano and R&B-informed pop hits, like the 2014 collaboration with Nicki Minaj and Ariana Grande, Bang Bang, and 2011's Domino. She has released five albums across her career, most recently, 2018's Christmas album, This Christmas Day. She has been releasing new music in 2025, including the singles Living My Best Life and No Secrets. A new album is expected later this year. She has a son, Sky Safir Cornish Colman, born in 2023. A representative for Jessie J did not immediately respond to the Associated Press' request for comment.


Winnipeg Free Press
2 days ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Pop singer Jessie J says she has been diagnosed with early breast cancer
NEW YORK (AP) — The English pop singer Jessie J says she has been diagnosed with breast cancer and will undergo surgery after her performance at the London music festival Capital's Summertime Ball next weekend. Jessie J, 37, shared the news in an Instagram video on Wednesday. 'I was diagnosed with early breast cancer,' she said in the clip. 'Cancer sucks in any form, but I'm holding onto the word 'early'.' 'It's a very dramatic way to get a boob job. I am going to disappear for a bit after Summertime Ball to have my surgery, and I will come back with massive (expletive) and more music.' The annual Summertime Ball will be held at Wembley Stadium on Sunday, June 15. She told her social media audience that she felt compelled to share her diagnosis. 'I just wanted to be open and share it,' she said. 'One, because, selfishly, I do not talk about it enough. I'm not processing it because I'm working so hard. I also know how much sharing in the past has helped me with other people giving me their love and support and also their own stories. I'm an open book. It breaks my heart that so many people are going through so much similar and worse – that's the bit that kills me.' The Grammy-nominated Jessie J has long been celebrated for her robust soprano and R&B-informed pop hits, like the 2014 collaboration with Nicki Minaj and Ariana Grande, 'Bang Bang,' and 2011's 'Domino.' She has released five albums across her career, most recently, 2018's Christmas album, 'This Christmas Day.' She has been releasing new music in 2025, including the singles 'Living My Best Life' and 'No Secrets.' A new album is expected later this year. Weekly A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene. She has a son, Sky Safir Cornish Colman, born in 2023. A representative for Jessie J did not immediately respond to The Associated Press' request for comment.