Michele Lundeen may have grown up in Oakland, Calif., but her blues music grew up in Reno. Reno is where she learned to take a chance on her music, and itโs where she met some of her great blues friends. Before moving back to San Diego to further pursue her career, she lived here for 20 years. While in Reno, she cofounded the Reno Blues Society and further discovered and honed her style. It was a new world for Lundeen as her friends introduced her to thousands of blues artists from all over the world.
But above all, Reno is where she was christened the โQueen of Steamโ by then Reno disc jockey Emerson Biggins in the mid โ90s. Biggins probably didnโt realize what he was doing then. But the name has stuck with Lundeen, and ever since, musicians and the media continue to refer to her as the Queen of Steam. The name is fitting. Lundeen sings from a place that isnโt timid or shy. In fact, her music is the opposite of timid and shyโitโs outright powerful.
Her single โSong Inside Meโ takes her singing and songwriting to a new level and is one of Lundeenโs best-known songs. โ I think the epitome of that song to me was that I have a gift that I can care that Iโm still passionate about,โ says Lundeen. โBut my song is about being confident and sharing that song, or whatever your passion is, and not letting it go by the wayside.โ
Lundeen considers this song a calling for all people to get moving, as she did long ago. โOne day I thought, oh my gosh, I need to do this,โ she recalls. โAnything can happen to anybody. And, if we donโt follow our passions, we could walk off a curb and get hit by a car, and there it isโthatโs it. Weโre walking around being paranoid, and I thought, โI am not leaving this Earth without sharing this song inside me.โโ
For this yearโs Rollinโ on the River, Lundeen returns to Reno for another performance. As a devout blues fan and performer, she challenges the audience to think of blues not solely as music lamenting love lives. There are many different genres of blues, but the basis of it is that blues is truth and honesty, she says. Sheโs met more than a few converts along the way.
She performed at Rollinโ on the River in 2008, and itโs no wonder sheโs headlining again this year. While Reno is special to her, San Diego has also been kind. In 2000, she was given the San Diego Blues Challenge award and has been nominated on six occasions as San Diegoโs โBest Bluesโ musician. She was also the headliner for the first National Women in Blues Festival in Wilmington, N.C., in 2006.
For her, Reno is a second home, and Lundeen wonโt be visiting without singing her song and leaving a lasting impression.
โThe fact that I get to see my old friends and family, that to me is so moving and so exciting to me,โ she says. โIt almost feels like I never left when I get there.โ
