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"After being in these two eight-hour days of going in and out of the room with different girls," Fuller recalls, "we found out that we made it. They narrowed it down to ten women. So it was a great process, but it was really strenuous."
Fuller says touring with Beyoncé was an amazing experience. She learned a lot from the R&B singer and got to witness her work ethic firsthand. "She's like a workaholic," she says of the famous diva. "Just to see how she works and how she's really a facilitator and has people in place around her to facilitate certain things, it's really taught me — and continues to teach me — how to function as a bandleader. I've really tried to take that experience in watching her, just on a smaller scale, bringing it back to the jazz community and seeing how I could function as a leader and as an artist and how I'm able to reach out to the masses.
"Night after night of playing venues of 20,000 people was just, like, crazy," she continues. "So a lot of times, I'd come back home and I'd sit in at a jam session, and I'm like, 'Wow! People are people, whether it be thirty people or 30,000 people.' It's just a matter of reaching out and putting that energy out there in whatever venue you're in, so that's really what I'm trying to work on now."
This week, Fuller will be putting her energy into a two-night stand at Dazzle, where she'll be joined by her older sister, pianist Shamie Fuller-Royston, who also wrote three songs for Healing Space. The Fuller sisters grew up around music. Tia recalls her childhood in Aurora, hearing John Coltrane and Charlie Parker while she and Shamie played in the front yard. The girls come from a family of musicians, including a younger brother who plays drums and their parents, Ethiopia and Fred, who started a band called the Fuller Sound. The group released a disc titled Eternal Journey nearly a decade ago.
"Growing up with both my parents being musicians and being around the music really laid the groundwork and a strong foundation for me," Fuller points out. "I think it was an advantage, because I was able to hear the music playing constantly. Like my dad — if we were cleaning the house or if we were having a barbecue, music was constantly playing throughout our house. It was a definite advantage coming from a musical family."
Indeed. Fuller's parents started her on piano lessons at age three, and by the time she was thirteen, she'd switched to the sax, inspired by Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane and Branford Marsalis. After graduating from Gateway High School, she began working on a bachelor's degree in music at Atlanta's Spelman College. That's where she read about how Duke Ellington's compositions reflected the times and realized the impact that telling a story through music could have.
"You can give a chronological thing of what's happening, either with the social times or personally with what's happening with your life," she notes, going on to explain how she applied that sentiment to her music. "That's what I was really trying to aim for with Healing Space. And pretty much every tune is a reflection of some form of healing that I composed. There were a lot of transitions in my life. I was just getting over a relationship, and I was really trying to make some stuff happen career-wise. And so with all of that, I was just really trying to heal from that and, I don't know, just dealing with life, seeking restoration and some healing. I used this album as a sort of testimony to myself, and hopefully for other people, that I could I help myself and others."