Singer / songwriter / producer L. Young people spend considerable thought into making his album. While venturing into rock, funk and hip-hop variety, more care is spent developing the ballads that he believes will turn on public desire for the kind of numbers melodic, romantic, written and performed by Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder.
He composes and performs between writing and production of major pop singers like Patti Labelle, Gladys Knight, Toni Braxton and her late close friend Teena Marie. He is also a veteran composer of soundtracks for film and television. The main components of each song he writes are a contagious melody and lyrics that express his sensitive concern for humanity and the world in which we live. One of his recurrent themes is the situation of children today.
L. Young often presents music workshops and programs in schools in Los Angeles. Every aspect makes it more sad than before, which is especially dismayed by his recent discovery that many students can not identify the most common band and orchestral instruments. At his age, he and his colleagues around the country plunged into the band, orchestra and vocal programs in the elementary grades up. Lamented the terrible disconnect the younger generation of today because music has always been a driving force behind the changes and important events in history and has led the development of the arts for centuries.
L. Young grew up in a musical, goes to church family and sang before he could talk. After graduating from the Youth Performing Arts School in Louisville, Kentucky, went to Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio as a great performance. One of his high school classmates, Nicole Sherzinger, is best known today as a member of the Pussycat Dolls. The two worked together often during their early years and it is he who encouraged her to take their talent to the West Coast. They remain good friends.
He composes and performs between writing and production of major pop singers like Patti Labelle, Gladys Knight, Toni Braxton and her late close friend Teena Marie. He is also a veteran composer of soundtracks for film and television. The main components of each song he writes are a contagious melody and lyrics that express his sensitive concern for humanity and the world in which we live. One of his recurrent themes is the situation of children today.
L. Young often presents music workshops and programs in schools in Los Angeles. Every aspect makes it more sad than before, which is especially dismayed by his recent discovery that many students can not identify the most common band and orchestral instruments. At his age, he and his colleagues around the country plunged into the band, orchestra and vocal programs in the elementary grades up. Lamented the terrible disconnect the younger generation of today because music has always been a driving force behind the changes and important events in history and has led the development of the arts for centuries.
L. Young grew up in a musical, goes to church family and sang before he could talk. After graduating from the Youth Performing Arts School in Louisville, Kentucky, went to Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio as a great performance. One of his high school classmates, Nicole Sherzinger, is best known today as a member of the Pussycat Dolls. The two worked together often during their early years and it is he who encouraged her to take their talent to the West Coast. They remain good friends.