Kellee Bradley
I Talk To The Stars
2002 In A Big Way Music

I Talk To The Stars is Kellee Bradley's second album. Recorded and produced in Nashville, Kellee was looking for a down home feeling for this project. Produced by Ron Bennett, it features some of the best session musicians in the country: Barbara Lamb on fiddle, Grammy Award-winning harmonica player Kirk "Jelly Roll" Johnson and Howard Duck on Keyboards. Here's what the press had to say:

Kellee Bradley has an excellent voice and proves herself a talented songwriter with numbers like the genuine "Goodnight Moon" and the lump-in-the-throat-inducing "Sometimes." Modern Fix Magazine, October 2002

"I love to watch those commercials that have the snippets of all those hit songs. Some of them are "sticky songs" that pop up in your head unexpectedly, but they are part of the commercial because they were big hits. The songs on Kellee Bradley's disc sound as if they should be on one of those collections. "I Talk To The Stars" is a collection of songs that touch on themes of relationships, dreams, and treasured moments. Whether a smooth ballad, like the opening track "The Ocean" or the strong statement "I'm Gonna Make You Love Me", Bradley shows the range to lure the listener into the song. There's a good reason she's had the opportunities to open before such acts as John Mellencamp, Chicago, and Crosby, Stills & Nash. The melodies can reach out to people to set them into a mood to want more." Tim Waldal, SilverPlatters.com, September, 2002

"I really have enjoyed Kellee's latest album, "I Talk To The Stars." Great production showcases her clear, strong sweet voice. She was easily chosen as a winner of this year's emerging artist competition." Deborah Semer, Executive Director, PNW Branch of the Recording Academy, August 2002

"When a singer has a great voice and excellent songs, there can be a tendency to concentrate on getting a pristine presentation of the performer delivering the material. This can result in an album that's pretty but bland. Fortunately, that is not the case here, as Kellee Bradley shines and emotes and bounces and ultimately touches your emotions in a, well, in a big way. Hell, there's enough heartache pouring out of these recordings that some of her tunes could make a stone cry." The G-Man, Cd Scene and Heard, September, 2002

"Kellee Bradley's new CD is titled "I Talk To The Stars" and while she means it in the astronomical sense, that phrase will likely soon hold true in terms of celebrity friendships. The disc- recorded in Nashville and fine-tuned in Seattle - is a cinemescopic work, boldly performed and fully formed. Yes, it has quiet moments like the reflective "Sometimes," but the album really touched greatness when Bradley cuts loose. .......hopefully "I Talk To The Stars" will take Bradley from Mill Creek into national prominence, but for now, she's ours. Savor the moment; it might not last long." Claude Flowers, Eastside Journal, August 2002