New Logo riveting riffs magazine  Kelita - Heavenly Night (Christmas Album)

Kelita Photo One

Kelita Haverland’s Christmas album Heavenly Night has been out for a few years now, but the nice thing about albums like this is each time December rolls around they take on a new life. This Christmas also served as an opportunity for Kelita (she is easily recognized by music fans by just her first name) and this writer to sit down and do an interview, something that we have attempted to do several times over the years and busy schedules for one or the other or both of us simply got in the way.

The Juno Awards are Canada’s top music award and Kelita has been nominated five different times for an award. She is recognized as an impactful, inspirational speaker who does not try to charm you or sell you some magic potion that will cure all life’s ills and nor does she try to tell you that if you do everything a certain way that you will never have a problem again. She just tells you how it is, through her music and through her speaking. She has experienced more tragic events than most and yet if you did not know her story you would never guess that was the case. When we first became aware of Kelita, about sixteen years ago she brought to life several funny characters she had created over the years. Since that time she has also been featured as a keynote speaker for TED X. She would also tell you that the most important thing you can know about her is that her faith in God informs the way that she lives her life and the decisions that she makes.

Kelita talks about how Heavenly Night came to be, “I saw a program on television that was on the sex trafficking of little girls in Cambodia and I was so impacted by what I saw that I ended up writing a song, “Not Just This Christmas,” that is on the Christmas CD and I ended up performing it on TV. I met the producer of the segment and then she turned me onto one of the men that was in the video that was actually doing something over there in Cambodia. He happened to be the founder and director of Ratnak International an organization out of Vancouver. I connected with him and I said that I was just so moved by his story and the work that he was doing over there that I wanted to help. I didn’t know what I could do, but I felt so moved. I thought, well what I do is music and all of a sudden I got this vision of doing a Christmas CD and a big concert that would raise awareness and fun for this restoration center that was just opening up. It was taking rescued girls and then rehabilitating them.  That was the beginning of a very amazing journey and after I met him and told him what I wanted to do, of course he was very supportive.

My husband Gord and our son, who was a young teenager at the time, all went to Cambodia and we spent three weeks there. I thought if I am going to advocate for this cause and for these people in this very dark country I need to go and experience it for myself. When we returned I knew what I needed to do and I hit the road running. I raised money for the project (through the) album and a fund raising concert. Then this whole project took over my life for about seven years. I did a lot of fund raising, not just with the concerts, but by getting out there and sharing the vision with people and educating people as to what was really going on. This is kind of when human trafficking wasn’t talked about as it is now. For those seven years I did lots of concerts and I had great opportunities to let people know what was going on. People caught the vision. I thought maybe we could raise $25,000 and send it over, but through all of those different avenues we were able to raise $250,000 and to send it over to this restoration center and to this organization that was on the ground there. That whole thing changed my life in many ways, just one song.”

Kelita Photo TwoThe good news is if you buy the album Heavenly Night this year some of the proceeds will still go to helping combat human trafficking.

There is also a personal connection for Kelita when it comes to trying to draw more awareness to the problem of human trafficking and more importantly trying to motivate people to do something about it.

She explains, “I am a survivor of child sexual abuse and on some level I could relate to these young girls. But really, what they go through over there (she pauses)…it is just a whole other world over there. I think I was drawn to it for the compassion that I felt for these children who have no means of escape. Some of them are trapped for a few years even. While I was over there I met one girl and I continue to be in contact with her today.  When you get down to it, I have compassion for people that have been hurt or that are in these situations. It is just the way that I am wired.”

Kelita is a survivor of an awful lot and we asked her to share her back story, “My father was an alcoholic and he suffered severely from depression. He committed suicide when I was eleven. Unfortunately, my mom married a guy who wasn’t the nicest of guys, so there was more abuse there, not sexual or physical, but very much verbal and emotional. Shortly after that my mom found out she had breast cancer and I lost my mom when I was fifteen. Two years after she passed my oldest brother was found dead of a heroin overdose. He was a wild child and if he was alive today he would be labeled a deviant. He abused several people in my family and several friends of the family. It was a crazy time and not only was there abuse and all of the secrets and the hiding, but there were (also) a lot of repressed memories. There was so much loss and I felt like I was abandoned. Then I left home at age 18 and I wasn’t really welcome there any longer.

I finished high school, before I left Calgary and I moved to Toronto. I went to university and I studied to be a big star (she laughs). I studied theater at York University. I was really blessed with the ability to be funny and to transform myself. Even today I talk more about it in my speaking and in my concerts. Creating all of those different comedic characters over the years is like all of these different masks. I think when I was a little kid and I started creating all of these characters it was a way for me to deal with everything that I was going through. It is amazing how the human spirit will kick and it will gravitate towards those things that come easily to us, those gifts that we have. It was protective. It was a way for me to protect myself and for me to take attention off of what was happening in my family and make people forget that when I put these masks on.

My story has become a huge part of what I do. I guess you could say that I am an inspirational speaker who sings and does comedy. That seems to be where the emphasis is on what I do these days.  They all fit together. When I was in the Country music business some of the big wigs in the record business they always have such a hard time of pinning me down. They would say oh she’s just a singer or songwriter. I had the funny stuff and they were confused and maybe I was too.

Now I feel so fortunate, because I get to speak. I get to sing all my original songs and I throw in some standards too, depending on the gig, (plus) I get to make people laugh. By sharing my stories I am encouraging other people to share their stories. There is such freedom and such healing when we can take off those masks and we are able to process that and we allow the shame to dissolve. We can really become who we are meant to be instead of having all of these chains on us. To be able to do what I do, I just feel wow, I have the best.  I have the best job ever.”

Back to the Christmas album, “Before this project came in front of me, my life was actually going quite well. That was surprising, because I have been through a lot, but it was like wow there was a reprieve. I wrote down these words, God break my heart. I thought what breaks the heart of God and in a few weeks or so this came across my path. I thought really, this is what you want me to do. This is not something you choose to go into. There has to be a heart connection there. For me I knew that I had to go. It is really crazy and I don’t think that I have ever felt so driven in my life by something. I would wake up in the morning and I would go to bed at night thinking how I can make a difference in the lives of these kids,” she says.

In collaboration with her husband Gord Lemon, whom she describes as “a great arranger,” they decided to record some familiar Christmas songs such as, “Joy To The World,” “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen,” “O Holy Night,” and “The First Noel,” to name a few.

“I thought let’s really make them our own. When you are putting together an album you want to take standards and make them have a life of their own and you want to put your own spin on them. That is fun and it gets your creative juices going. You can maybe try some new things,” says Kelita.

Christmas music when done well never really seems to fade into the distant past and Heavenly Night’s story has been the same.  

“Christmas music is timeless really. It is funny, because I know at my concerts there is a certain strain of people who collect Christmas music. It is just a hobby that they have.  I will always have some copies of the Christmas CD on my merch table, because there are always those that I run into who are looking for new Christmas music. I always travel with them. It is fun. I always tell people that there are a couple of tunes on this album that you can dance to, so you don’t just have to play it at Christmas (she laughs lightly).

There is a Wynona Judd song on there. She recorded one of the songs (that I have) on there, “Let’s Make A Baby King,” which was written by Jesse Winchester. I always have loved Wynona and I loved that song when she recorded it years ago. She didn’t record it on a Christmas album, but the lyrics lend themselves, because they talk about when Jesus was born. I love the flavor that she brought to it and it allowed me to go a little bit more Country than I have on past albums. It has lots of energy and I love doing it live,” says Kelita.

“Don’t Save It All For Christmas Day,” was recorded as the fourth song on the album and Kelita first heard it when she was in a store around Christmastime. She was not familiar with the song and since the store was playing a CD, she asked the cashier if she would mind checking the song title for her.

She says, “It is a good song to stretch you vocally, but it has such a beautiful sentiment. Don’t save your love for just Christmastime, spread it around, year round and every day. That one really touches a chord in me.”

The title song from the album, Heavenly Night is very special to Kelita and she explains why, “I wrote it twenty-four years ago. It was shortly after our only son, our only child was born. My husband Gord was off touring with Frank Mills. It was a Christmas tour and as soon as the baby was born Gord was back on the road doing the tour. I was at home alone having moved from Toronto to Mississauga. I didn’t know a soul and I was a new mother. I didn’t have any family close by. I was quite overwhelmed. I think it was the first time since he was born that I actually had a moment when I could put him in the little seat and I sat at the piano and I finally had the opportunity to just play.

I was so overwhelmed with all of those hormones that were flowing as a new mother. I felt the incredible unconditional love that I had for my child and that was the inspiration for that song.

I had also done a few tours with the armed forces and before I recorded the song I had the opportunity to sing it over in the Middle East, Germany, Cypress and Israel for our Canadian troops. There is a line in that song about praying for the babies in places where soldiers fight, so they would know peace for one heavenly night. It started with the inspiration of my son being born and then these peace keepers who weren’t on the front lines, but were certainly away from their families.  I have to say that one is my favorite. I sang it for years before I recorded it. It waited a long time, before it saw the light of day.

The memory of performing for our peace keepers and doing a Christmas show for them was one of the most rewarding shows that I have ever done. To take some Canadian love over to these men and women who are away from their families for at least six months at a time. They are such appreciative audiences.

We got to eat Christmas dinner and hang out in the Golan Heights. It is not a very nice place, it is very cold and windy up there, but on that particular peace keeping base I have memories of sitting with the soldiers and having Christmas dinner with them. Those are really special memories.”

Please visit Kelita's website.                Return to Our Front Page

 This interview by Joe Montague  published November 27, 2016 is protected by copyright © and is the property of Riveting Riffs Magazine All Rights Reserved.  Except where indicated photos are the the property of  Kelita Haverland and are protected by copyright © All Rights Reserved. This interview may not be reproduced in print or on the internet or through any other means without the written permission of Riveting Riffs Magazine,  Protected by Copyright ©, by Joe Montague and Riveting Riffs Magazine  All Rights Reserved