If there is such a thing as a prodigy rock star, Serena Ryder was probably one.
She first took the stage at a wedding at age two, grabbing a microphone and belting out a toddler version of Michael Jacksonâs hit, âBeat It.â
âWhen I was a little kid I used to be obsessed with just performing wherever I was,â recalled Ryder. âAnd I always wanted to be a musician and to play in front of as many people as possible.â
Her first real gig came when she was all of eight years old, with her music teacher, Terry Finn. Accompanying her on piano, she sang before about 200 people at the Royal Canadian Legion in her hometown of Millbrook, Ontario.
âI didnât know what I was doing at all but I loved it. It was so awesome. It was super fun just to be on a microphone,â said Ryder.
While she remembers the performance fondly, she also remembers being less enthused with the gift she received afterwards, a Barbie doll, which she quickly discarded.
Even at that young age it was obvious to those around her that she had great potential as a performer.
âShe certainly had the talentâ said Finn. âI thought, well, her voice is sure never going to hold her back and her motivation wouldnât, either.â
That motivation and single-minded focus on becoming a singer/songwriter had Ryder performing at the local baseball diamond, coffee shop and outdoor festivals through her childhood and teens.
By the time she was 17 she had recorded her first full length album. But it was in her twenties that those years of work paid off in a big way.
She recorded a series of ever more popular singles, including the breakout hit, âWeak in the Knees,âand won her first of what would be six Juno awards. Her career was ascendant, at least until a devastating bout of depression took over her life.
âA big depression is like you literally feel like thereâs a cloud around your head and that everythingâs kind of fuzzy. You have a lack of inspiration, you donât care about anything and youâre just really tired all the time,â said Ryder.
That depression would incapacitate her for six months, but thanks in large part to therapy and anti-depressants, Ryder finally re-emerged from her fog.
Over time she shared her experience with others, even becoming a spokesperson for the Bell Letâs Talk mental health campaign. She readily acknowledges that she continues to be susceptible to depression.
âIt sucks sometimes but itâs important to speak about it so that people donât feel like theyâre the only ones going through it.â
In the wake of that crippling bout of depression came Ryderâs most acclaimed album to date, 2012âs âHarmonyâ, with the break-out hits âWhat I Wouldnât Doâ and especially, âStompaâ, which reached the top of the charts in both Canada and the U.S.
âIt was my first real gigantic hit, which is great,â says Ryder âIâm so proud of that record and it opened up a lot of doors for me.â
Now, five years after âHarmonyâ, the long-awaited follow-up album, âUtopiaâ, will be released in May.
She co-wrote seven songs on the album, including the title track with her close friend, Simon Wilcox, daughter of legendary Canadian guitarist David Wilcox. Simon attributes part of her kinship with Ryder to their shared Ontario roots.
âWeâre both kind of hosers,â said Wilcox. âWe grew up hearing Canadian rock and being around grown-ups who were drinking Canadian beer.â
Wilcox, now living in California, is a much sought after songwriter, who recently has collaborated with a wide array of popular artists including Enrique Iglesias, 5 Seconds of Summer and Nick Jonas, whose hit song âJealousâ she wrote.
She believes Ryder has talents unlike any other performer.
âHer voice is important because itâs so human and honest,â said Wilcox, âimportant in that when I hear her sing it sounds like nature is singing to me. I donât know that thereâs anyone else who does that for me."
W5's 'Serena' airs at 7 p.m. on Saturday, April 15 on CTV, CTV GO and will be available in our player above after 8 p.m.