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This
Year's (2006) Guest Artists
Nanci
Griffith

Nanci Griffith travels well. Her musical
journey has taken her from folk and country roots, to her
own brand of "folkabilly"; from Austin's Hole In The Wall
bar to New York's Carnegie Hall, Nashville's Grand Ole Opry
and London's Royal Albert Hall; from an eight-year-old girl
in Texas learning to play guitar from a television
instructor to a woman of the world, visiting and performing
in Vietnam, Cambodia and Kosovo in support of the abolition
of landmines. Today, the journey of one of the most admired
and acclaimed of singer-songwriters--a career marked by a
beautiful voice, brilliant songwriting and uncommon
emotional commitment--continues.
The torchbearer of a music that brings
together folk and country, the female sensibility of a new
genre that embraced the likes of Lyle Lovett, Dwight Yoakam
and Steve Earle, Griffith has penned such classics as "Gulf
Coast Highway" (a notable duet by Emmylou Harris and Willie
Nelson), "Love At The Five And Dime" (a Grammy nominated hit
for Kathy Mattea) and "Outbound Plane" (a hit for Suzy
Bogguss). In turn, she was the first to record Julie Gold's
Grammy winning classic "From A Distance." She has also been
honored with five Grammy nominations, three as a solo artist
(winning once) and twice for performances on albums by The
Chieftains (winning once).
Born in 1953 in Seguin, near San Antonio,
Griffith grew up in Austin. She learned to play the guitar
from a Saturday morning PBS series hosted by Laura Weber and
began writing her own songs because she found that easier
than learning how to play those of other people. Her first
professional gig was at Austin's Red Lion club on a
Thanksgiving holiday evening when she was 14. Later that
year, singer-songwriter Tom Russell heard her singing around
a campfire at the Kerrville Folk Festival and became her
earliest champion.
She would play the local club circuit, at
first with her parents as chaperones, throughout high school
and college and her first jobs as a teacher. Graduating from
the University of Texas with an education degree, she taught
kindergarten and first grade in Austin during the '70s even
as she held a five-year Sunday night spot at the Hole In The
Wall.
In 1978, she debuted on album with the
locally released There's A Light Beyond These Woods. In
1982, Poet In My Window was issued via another hometown
indie. Her third album, 1985's Once In A Very Blue Moon, was
released by the nationally distributed Philo/Rounder label
and the following year she formed The Blue Moon Orchestra,
her backing band.
Her breakthrough finally came with 1986's
Grammy nominated Last Of The True Believers. Featuring
Griffith's signature songs "Love At The Five And Dime" and
"The Wing And The Wheel," the album was Grammy nominated.
When Mattea covered "Love At The Five And Dime" for her Walk
The Way The Wind Blows that same year, the recording reached
#3 Country. It was also Grammy nominated for Best Country
Song of The Year (a songwriter's award) and won a BMI Award
for Griffith, whose first two albums were now re-released by
Rounder. Major labels quickly came courting and Griffith
joined MCA. Her 1987 major label debut, Lone Star State Of
Mind, was helmed by MCA Nashville executive and renowned
producer Tony Brown, who had signed Earle and Lovett as well
as Griffith (she also co-produced the album). Along with the
Country Top 40 title track, the Country Top 30 album
introduced "From A Distance," which reached #1 in the U.K.
and Ireland, places where Griffith has been a major star
ever since. Five years later Bette Midler would have a smash
hit with the song, though it is Griffith's version that was
used twice to awaken astronauts on space shuttle
missions.
Hailed by Rolling Stone as "the Queen of
Folkabilly," she followed with 1988's Little Love Affairs,
again Top 30 Country, which was graced by "Outbound Plane"
(co-written with Russell), the Top 40 Country "I Knew Love"
and a duet with Mac McAnally, "Gulf Coast Highway"
(co-written with Danny Flowers and long-time Blue Moon
Orchestra pianist James Hooker). That year also brought the
live-in-Houston One Fair Summer Evening. The next year found
her singing "The Wexford Carol" on the Grammy-winning A
Chieftains Celebration.
Controversy ensued with the poppier sound
on 1989's Storms, produced by Glyn Johns (The Beatles,
Rolling Stones, Eagles, The Who), and 1991's Late Night
Grande Hotel, produced by the British team of Rod Argent and
Peter Van Hook. Though the albums drew a wider audience,
Griffith decided to return to her roots as well as move to
Elektra Records. Meanwhile, her performances on The
Chieftains' An Irish Evening: Live At The Grand Opera House,
Belfast helped that 1992 disc win a Grammy and her "Outbound
Plane" went Top 10 Country for Bogguss from the latter's
Aces album.
Her Elektra debut, 1993's Other Voices,
Other Rooms, won her the Grammy for Best Contemporary Folk
Performance. Her interpretation of songs written by other
artists, the album included Bob Dylan's "Boots Of Spanish
Leather," a song that Dylan the previous year requested she
perform at his historic Madison Square Garden 30th
anniversary concert. After Griffith's 10th studio album,
Flyer, the following year, her momentum suffered when she
was treated for breast cancer in summer 1996, which caused
her to exit from a tour with The Chieftains.
In 1997 she celebrated 10 years with The
Blue Moon Orchestra on Blue Roses From The Moons, and in
1998 released Other Voices, Too (A Trip Back To Bountiful),
the sequel to Other Voices, Other Rooms. She also published
her first book, Nanci Griffith's Other Voices -- A Personal
History of Folk Music, a companion to the Other Voices
albums. And again she battled illness as she underwent
treatment for thyroid cancer. A renewed Griffith took a
fresh look at her recording career in 1999 with The Dust
Bowl Symphony, featuring her best-loved songs performed with
the London Symphony Orchestra at the famed Abbey Road
Studios.
In January 2000, she traveled to Vietnam
and Cambodia with the Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation
(VVAF), tracing the steps of her ex-husband and still friend
Eric Taylor, a veteran of that war and a songwriter for
Griffith, Lovett and others. The next year she returned
there and also visited Angola and Kosovo for the VVAF. In
addition, Griffith has supported the VVAF, along with the
U.K.-based Mines Advisory Group and the Campaign For A
Landmine Free World, in their efforts to locate and remove
existing landmines and to rehabilitate the victims of
landmines with counseling and prosthetic limbs, helping them
to regain their independence and self-respect as well as
mobility. Clock Without Hands, her first album of new songs
in four years, arrived in 2001, and the live Winter Marquee
(which briefly returned her to Rounder) in 2002. The latter
included a duet with Russell on Phil Ochs' "What's That I
Hear," the theme song of the TV show that taught her how to
play guitar and in fact the first song she learned to
play.
The new millennium also brought three new
retrospectives, including 2002's two-CD The Complete MCA
Studio Recordings, which marked the U.S. debut of "Stand
Your Ground," an impassioned anti-war statement she recorded
during Gulf War-era sessions a dozen years earlier for Late
Night Grande Hotel.
In 2003, more than 20 years after
Griffith left her Texas home for Nashville and became one of
the brightest lights in a new generation of artists merging
country with folk and pop music, she made her first
appearance at the Grand Ole Opry.
2004 has brought her return to a
Universal Music label, the newly formed New Door Records,
and the release of her new studio album, Hearts In
Mind.
The title of her debut album has proved
prophetic: There is indeed a light beyond these woods--and
it's Nanci Griffith.
(Bio from her website)

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