Rachael
Lampa
A
day in the life of Rachael Lampa looks like that of any given
student at Monarch High in Louisville, Colorado, near Boulder.
“I get up at 6:30, crawl to the shower, dry my hair, finish my
homework from the night before,” says Rachael, a typical
American suburban teenager who occasionally peppers her usually
articulate conversations with “like, you know?” and
this-or-that “thingy.” Talking with Rachael is like talking
with any other happy, well-adjusted adolescent girl, for the most
part. There’s basketball; she’s a stand-out point guard on the
girls’ jr. varsity team (“I love playing, but I don’t watch
it on TV--it bugs me”), church (“I love my church...our youth
group leader is so cool...”) and school (“My favorite subject
is lunch—it’s very educational. I taught myself how to peel an
orange in one piece with an aluminum pop-top”).
But Rachael
Lampa, the Monarch High point guard and champion orange peeler,
and Rachael Lampa, the budding pop diva, would seem to have very
different schedules. Sports and school lunches had to wait when
Rachael went to London for the recording of the prestigious London
Session Orchestra’s contribution to her much-anticipated Word
Records CD, “Live For You.” The church youth group and
Fellowship of Christian Athletes met without her when Rachael
stayed in Nashville for meetings with some of Music City’s most
successful songwriters. And
her brother Ryan drove to Monarch High by himself the week that
Rachael flew to Nashville to record a duet with the legendary
Aaron Neville, an event that seemed almost ho-hum until Rachael
was told about Neville’s famed duet with one of her heroes (“THAT’s
him? The guy who sings ‘Don’t Know Much’ with Linda Ronstadt?
I’m singing with HIM? Oh my gosh!”).
Aaron
Neville wasn’t the first to be wowed by Rachael Lampa’s
prodigious talent—it was evident early on in her young life. Very
early, in fact: family legend has it that Rachael belted out tunes
from her baby crib and could sing perfect harmony by age 4. From
time to time, her singing got her in trouble—despite her
parents’ pride in their child’s talent, enough was enough, and
singing too loud at the dinner table won Rachael a trip to her
room more than once.
“We
knew she had a God-given talent from the beginning,” says
Marianne Lampa, a stay-at-home mom of 4 who met her husband Phil
while both were working as nurses in an Indiana hospital.
“We’ve encouraged her to sing whenever and wherever it’s
appropriate. Just not while the rest of her brothers and sisters
are trying to eat or do their homework,” Mom says, laughing.
“I’ve
dreamed of being a recording artist, for as long as I can
remember,” says Rachael. “I grew up listening to Christian
music, especially Amy Grant—‘El Shaddai’ from Age To Age
was the first thing I heard.” She was quickly at home on a
stage, from The Jenny Jones Show’s Young Talent Search (at 12)
to finishing in 2nd place at the World Championship of
Entertainment and her frequent performances of the national anthem
at Colorado Rockies baseball games, Rachael’s childhood dreams
seemed destined to come true.
Though
Rachael had already been a regular performer by the time her age
hit double-digits, it was a “chance” incident that brought her
talent to the rapt attention of Nashville record executives at a
conference in Estes Park, Colorado. “I had never even heard of
‘Praise in the Rockies,’ but this guy who was lining up the
performers happened to be staying with one of our friends, down
here,” says Rachael. “He heard my voice on a demo tape of our
friend’s song, and he wanted to hear more.”
Two
days later, Marianne Lampa got a phone call from Estes Park—it
was the same fellow, Danny Meeker, asking if Rachael could come up
the next day and perform two songs. Rachael remembers the moment:
“I was, like, getting my hair cut or something, and Mom called
me and said, ‘Oh, by the way, there will be people from five
record companies there listening to you...and you’ll be singing
after Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith.’”
A
daunting task for a 14-year-old, but she handled it like a
pro—at least on the outside (‘I was freaking out!’)—and
the record execs swarmed like flies to honey.
“When
I got done singing, I started to walk backstage and the first
person I saw was this guy who said, ‘Hi, I’m Brent Bourgeois
from Word Records.’ I thought, ‘A record company?’ I’d
never met anybody from a record company before!”
She
met plenty of them—that week, mother and daughter made daily
trips up to the mountains to meet with several record
representatives, and, shortly thereafter, the drives became
flights to Nashville for more meetings. At the tender age of 14,
Rachael Lampa signed a long-term artist agreement with Word
Records and her new friend Brent Bourgeois. Looking back just a
few short months, the teen sensation is surprisingly reflective.
“I would not have been prepared for this to happen any
earlier,” she says. “When I went to Estes Park, I had just
been to a great youth conference in South Dakota, and my faith was
building fast. It was the right time—I was really ready for this
to happen, and God opened all the doors.”
Indeed,
it’s her vibrant, personal faith in Jesus Christ that is at the
center of Rachael Lampa’s busy young life. From the parental
discipleship of the senior Lampas (“My parents are from really
strong Christian homes themselves”) to her close relationships
with adult role models at St. Louis Church and her high school’s
chapter of Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Rachael is fully
supported and thoroughly grounded in reality, despite the
whirlwind of recording sessions and media interviews.
In
the midst of juggling all of these priorities, Rachael is quick to
count her greatest blessings. Without pausing for a breath, and
with the unbridled enthusiasm of a teenager in love with life,
Rachael rattles off her list: “An awesome, supportive family and
friends! The ability to keep up a normal life in a regular high
school...people that care about me and pray for me…the privilege
to have grown up with faith and the knowledge of God. God around
me, and God’s presence, always with me.” |