“She is truly admired for her passion, drive to stay true to herself and live her dream.”
Miss Hope has been named one of Cosmopolitan Magazine’s Awesome Women of 2014, an accolade that recognises some of South Africa’s standout achievers.
I’ve wanted to be a lot of things in my life. Most people assume that the only thing I’ve ever wanted to be was a musician, but that’s not true. Music is just who I am without trying…
“Hope’s exquisite voice accompanied by her own piano-playing soars above us as she sings of all the joys and pitfalls of love, the longing and surprises woven into relationships, while the dancers interpret the lyrics in fluid, organic short stories of seamless choreography…”
“The courage of a performer and choreographer to lay bare the most vulnerable parts of themselves – their hearts – for all to see on stage, is always a humbling and emotional experience for me…”
Pretending to be a superhero is one of my favourite favourite things to do! Without realising it (until recently), I’ve always had a fascination with danger and an addiction to pushing one’s limits as far as they will go…
Shannon Hope was named amongst the Mail & Guardian 200 Young Africans 2014 for Arts & Culture, in recognition of her passion and commitment to not only “living the dream”, but living who you truly are…
The ever-inventive Shannon Hope has embarked on a new and challenging project. Called The Bedroom Sessions…
Sharing my music and story is one thing. Seeing others share it in their own unique way is something entirely different, and I have to admit, it’s a pretty crazy cool sensation when your art is reinterpreted by someone else…
This Movember, Shannon Hope once again shows her support for Mo Bros everywhere who are banding together and cultivating some fine face furniture in an effort to change the face of men’s health…
“Her haunting voice and her adroit accompaniment on a grand piano set the scene and continued to fascinate and enthral for the duration of Flatfoot’s contribution…”
Straight from the legendary streets of Buenos Aires, the Tango Jazz Quartet will be performing their unique style of musical fusion in Johannesburg and Cape Town in late August, and it is with great pleasure that Miss Hope joins them for this special collaboration…
“HOPE. It is the name of one of the most compelling dance works I have seen in a long time. It is also what I left the Playhouse Theatre with on the eve of Women’s Day last week…”
By invitation from The Playhouse Company for the South African Women’s Arts Festival, Shannon Hope teams up with the Flatfoot Dance Company in August to present “Hope”, choreographed by Lliane Loots, and showcased at The Playhouse Drama Theatre in Durban…
With sad, dark, from-the-core stuff to light-hearted and almost joking tunes, her music takes one on an emotional roller-coaster ride that will leave your brain in a knot at the most and a little touched at the least…
Miss Hope caught up with East Coast Radio’s Abi Ray a few weeks back about all things music and London and orchestras and dancers and dreaming…
Performing with an orchestra is one of the biggest dreams I’ve had since I first started writing music, and the first surreal notes of that big dream have finally sounded…
Award-winning South African pianist and vocal artist Shannon Hope will be making her mark on the London music scene this April…
Having unplugged their late 90s brand of musical genius from the SA scene well over a decade ago, I didn’t think I’d ever get the chance to see my favourite SA band perform ever again, let alone find myself sharing a stage with them…
Holiday Inn Express hosted a Shavathon on Friday, 1 March at hotels around the country as part of this year’s nationwide drive to raise funds and awareness for CANSA…
Award-winning pianist and vocal artist Shannon Hope joins forces with Dividable Grand for “Come Together” – a show featuring a collaborative approach to their respective original songs and some songs they wish they wrote.
“I never said it would be easy. I only said it would be worth it.” – Mae West
‘Alone In The City’ was featured in the theatre production ‘Luz Verde’, which was staged in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Holiday Inn Express and Rolling Stone are calling for musicians from across South Africa to take part in the Holiday Inn Express Song Writing Challenge 2012.
“On stage, South African singer Shannon Hope is a feline presence, her lithe body accentuated by a tight, black satin dress, spiked onyx hair, glossed lips and red stilettos. She moves languidly behind her instrument of choice, an electric piano. But when she starts to sing, it’s apparent that she’s no purring pussycat.”
You will make mistakes. You will change your mind. You will lose yourself and find yourself and reinvent yourself again.
“She began to sing in a voice that I can only describe as intensely forlorn, yet at a pitch that almost instantly had the flesh on my arms raised in full goose-bump salute.”
Announcing the new single from Shannon Hope, a remastered radio edit of ‘Being Brave’, now available for exclusive FREE download and a chance to win a free weekend at Holiday Inn Express.
It’s been two wild months and almost 10,000km of fighting since my last confession.
Shannon Hope joined fellow Holiday Inn Express brand ambassadors Graeme Watkins Project, Jacques Terre’Blanche, and Daniel Baron for the launch of the Sweet September, a campaign launched in conjunction with “Tourism month”.
Shannon Hope joins South African blues legend Dan Patlansky for 14 shows in venues across South Africa as he embarks on his first acoustic tour.
Matador spoke to South African musician Shannon Hope about surviving time on the road.
“You only get one chance to live the life you want to live, but all the motivational quotes in the world don’t make it any easier to actually take the chances you need to take, and to keep taking them.”
Shannon Hope has signed a publishing deal with Peermusic South Africa, joining a distinguished stable of artists such as Goodluck and Gazelle, amongst others.
“Hope bangs out her music on piano like a possessed forest banshee, and when she lets go that deceptively dense voice, it should raise the hair on your forearms.”
On request from Rolling Stone Magazine, Miss Hope wrote an article entitled “Living the Dream, But Not Making A Living”, which was published in June 2012. This is the moving and honest piece that got people talking.
I grew up thinking I had to be a certain kind of person to get somewhere, that there were rules I’d have to follow to live the life I was meant to live, and if I just checked those boxes, everything would be okay. But it doesn’t work like that.
“Her music and her lyrics took me back to places that I thought I had tucked neatly away behind a well-built wall. The pain, the anguish and the reality of love, heartbreak and life. By the end of the evening I felt like I had been on a journey to my inner core and all my old wounds felt raw and exposed.”
“It’s an experience that lingers long after the rapturous applause has faded. Shannon touches people. She reaches in and connects with your heart, your innermost fears, your wildest fantasies and your guarded core. It’s liberating letting yourself go – surrendering all to her majestic music and allowing yourself to be carried away. To a place she likes to call home.”
Music is a powerful thing. It speaks to your emotions; it translates your reality into something you can understand; it connects you to the world, to experience, to people… and it transports you back in time.
I’ve learned that believing that you can be everything you want to be, and pursuing that passion, are two very different things…
Courage, motivation, and believing in everything you can become is paramount. But believing in everything you already are, and acknowledging how much you’ve done and how far you’ve come, is just as vital.
I’m big on honesty, I always have been, and I’ve been thinking about the concept a lot lately, particularly how much honesty I communicate to a world in which I want to live authentically. How much honesty is too much…?
“Hope’s technical strengths are matched by the passion in her performances, and when she leans into a note she’s singing, it’s easy to picture the front row at a concert having to lean towards her to avoid being flattened by the power of her voice.”
It’s true what they say. Everyone has a broken heart and every heart has broken a little before, but I believe that a broken heart will always find its way.
“The voice is powerful, very powerful, and Shannon’s not afraid to show it off, constantly stretching her range and launching into powerful wails/roars/soulful pleas.”
This is what my dream looks like. There aren’t enough words in the English language to describe what it was like to finally live this day.
I have been dying to share this song with the world and as we wrap things up in studio this week, I’m thrilled that it’s almost time.
“I discovered my true love for music only when I discovered I could connect with any of it if I just got myself out of the way…”
I think it’s important to acknowledge the difference between that cherished part of my heart, and the relentless passion with which I pursue a career in the music business.
“What I hear when she sings, is the emotional power of Tori Amos combined with the eccentric whimsy of Regina Spektor, all firmly bound together by Hope’s impassioned soul.”
Currently on a break from fulltime touring, Shannon Hope is utilising her other talents in digital creative spaces… but there will be another studio album, and some exclusive performances every now and then. It’s not over. It’s just different.