|
|
||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() Meet Singer / Songwriter
Katy Moffatt
International Recording Artist {>}Click here for podcast! Join Katy Moffatt and our Purveyor of Music, Bobbi Jean, recorded on Saturday, April 16, for an hour of music and chat on KHTS 1220 AM, Around the Barn with Heads Up! SCVTV PRESENTS THE OUTWEST CONCERT SERIES Katy Moffatt & Andrew Hardin {>}Katy Moffatt with Andrew Hardin and Fats Caplan, click here to see this concert filmed by SCVTV!The most memorable American roots music -- be it western, country, folk, rock or the blues -- is always informed by a simple fact of life: you live and you learn. Just ask Katy Moffatt. Or better yet, listen to her sing, be it a song from her own prolific pen or a choice cut from a favorite songwriter. It’s clear that Katy sings and writes with the voice of hard-won authority. As BAM observes, “She doesn’t just hit the notes and get the words right, Moffatt evokes the emotions behind the tunes and meaning between the lines.”
Andrew Hardin says, “Fewer Things is the most satisfying to me of the recordings Katy and I have This is no faint praise given the spectrum of her rich history. Debuting in 1976 with Katy on Columbia Records, Moffatt has continued to grow and expand her own artistry so effectively that November 2002 saw the reissue of her first two Columbia albums on compact disc. In 2008, she participated by special invitation in a star-studded tribute to Les Paul presented by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Hers is a career marked by consistent critical acclaim, industry appreciation (a 1985 Academy of Country Music nomination as Best New Female Vocalist), movie appearances (Billy Jack, Hard Country and The Thing Called Love), songs covered (by talents such as Hoyt Axton and Janie Fricke), and an album that outsold Garth Brooks on the U.K. country charts (The Greatest Show on Earth a.k.a. The Evangeline Hotel, which stayed on those charts for six months). But then again, Katy Moffatt has been learning her lessons well ever since she first became enthralled with music as a child growing up in Fort Worth. Captivated by Broadway show tunes, the Beatles and Motown, she was an avid listener to Top 40 radio and says, “I used to come home from school, have dinner, go to bed, and set the alarm for midnight. Then I’d get up and do my homework and listen to the radio. It was my favorite time -- I could be alone with the music.” This she recalls in Midnight Radio, the title song of her lauded second Watermelon Records release, which was preceded by the Gavin Americana Chart success Hearts Gone Wild. By high school, she was absorbing Tom Rush, Judy Collins and Leonard Cohen (whose ‘Dress Her two Columbia albums Katy (produced by Billy Sherrill) and Kissin’ in the California Sun won rave notices from Rolling Stone and Newsweek, but the ever eclectic Moffatt found herself caught in the crossfire between country and pop divisions of a large corporate record company. “I started six albums, finished three, and two were released,” she recalls. “I often had marvelous opportunities and no way to maximize them.” A move to California in 1979 landed her within a burgeoning community of like-minded country rockers, and after recording another unreleased album (whose three single releases earned her the ACM nomination), Moffatt appeared on the groundbreaking A Town South of Bakersfield compilation amid kindred spirits such as Dwight Yoakum and Rosie Flores. Three new film offers had her cast as a singing performer in Hard Country (with Michael Martin Murphey), Honeymoon in Vegas, and Peter Bogdanovitch’s The Thing Called Love. Sessions with Steve Berlin of Los Lobos yielded the album Child Bride, whose European release spurred Moffatt’s growing popularity on the Continent. After meeting Tom Russell and his guitar playing side kick Andrew Hardin at the Kerrville Music Festival in Texas, she began an ongoing songwriting relationship with Russell, and recorded Walkin’ On The Moon with Hardin, her first US album release in over a decade (on Philo/ Rounder in 1989), and hailed as “substantive in both its emotions and its ideas” by the San Jose Mercury News. Rounder followed it with the Stateside issue of Child Bride (“American songs delivered with full-throttled passion,” noted The Washington Post) in 1990; The Greatest Show on Earth in 1993 (“One ‘Greatest Show’ well worth catching,” said The Atlanta Journal-Constitution) prompted legal action by the Ringling Brothers circus, predicating a name change to The Evangeline Hotel , but by now Moffatt had reclaimed her place as one of America’s most honest and affecting singer-songwriters. As the Detroit News and Free Press notes of Moffatt’s songs, they “provide stirring, poignant and incisive glimpses into the lives of the long-suffering everyman and woman who once populated Springsteen’s scenarios -- except with a dusty Southwest spirit.” On her 1999 Hightone Records album, Loose Diamond, Katy teamed with labelmate and Grammy winner Dave Alvin as her producer for the first time. Together, they crafted a collection of songs to convey all the power and soul in her voice in a direction clearly aimed at a roots country audience. In recent years, Moffatt has been able to enjoy a career that’s become as broad as her varied interests. In early 1996, Rounder issued Sleepless Nights, her collaboration with traditional singer Kate Brislin, and later that year she was heard duetting with the legendary Country Dick Montana on his posthumously released solo album, The Devil Lied To Me (Rolling Stone magazine called her participation, a “vocal star turn.”) She also contributed a track to the acclaimed songwriters’ tribute to Merle Haggard, Tulare Dust; did time in The Pleasure Barons with Montana, Dave Alvin, Mojo Nixon, and John Doe; and in 1992 released Dance Me Outside, an album of duets, with her brother, Nashville songwriter Hugh Moffatt.
Now, with Fewer Things, Katy continues her unique path, cutting through to a place where the honesty, power, and purity of her sound reside and flourish like a wild rose. Shop Katy Moffatt:
|
![]() |
||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||