Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox musical artist
Nanci Caroline Griffith (July 6, 1953 – August 13, 2021) was an American singer, guitarist, and songwriter.<ref name="Larkin">Template:Cite book</ref> She often appeared on the PBS music program Austin City Limits, starting in 1985 during season 10. In 1990, Griffith appeared on the Channel 4 program Town & Country with John Prine in a segment entitled "White Pants", where she wore white pants at the Bluebird Café in Nashville, Tennessee, along with Buddy Mondlock, Barry "Byrd" Burton, and Robert Earl Keen. In 1994, Griffith won a Grammy Award for the album Other Voices, Other Rooms.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Griffith toured with various other artists, including Buddy Holly's band - the Crickets, John Prine, Iris DeMent, Suzy Bogguss, Judy Collins, and the Everly Brothers.<ref>Steve Hochman: Country Music’s Griffith Has A Few Novel Ideas, latimes.com, Oct. 1, 1986</ref> Griffith recorded duets with many artists, among them Prine, Emmylou Harris, Mary Black, Don McLean, Jimmy Buffett, Dolores Keane, Willie Nelson, Adam Duritz (of Counting Crows), the Chieftains, John Stewart, and Darius Rucker. Griffith referred to her backing band as the Blue Moon Orchestra.
Early life and careerEdit
Griffith, the youngest of three siblings, was born in Seguin, Texas, and grew up in Austin, where her family moved shortly after her birth.<ref name="texasmonthly">Nanci Griffith Was More Loved Than She Knew , texasmonthly.com, August 16, 2021</ref><ref name="popdose" /> Her mother Ruelene was a real estate agent and amateur actress; her father, Marlin Griffith, was a graphic artist and barbershop quartet singer.<ref name="globemediawire">Nanci Griffith’s death: Grammy-winning singer dies at 68 , globemediawire.com, Aug 14, 2021</ref><ref>Nanci Griffith: Grammy-winning singer dies aged 68, independent.co.uk, August 14, 2021.</ref> Griffith began her music career at age 12, singing in a local coffeehouse.<ref name="globemediawire"/> When she was a teenager, her father took her to see Townes Van Zandt. At 14, she performed her first professional gig at the Red Lion Cabaret in downtown Austin.<ref>Remembering Nanci Griffith, the greatest Austin-raised singer-songwriter ever, statesman.com, Aug 27, 2021</ref> Her debut album, There's a Light Beyond These Woods, was released in 1978; the cover was designed by her father.
Griffith's career spanned a variety of musical genres, predominantly country, folk, and what she termed "folkabilly."<ref name="Larkin"/> She won a Grammy for Best Contemporary Folk Album in 1994 for her 1993 recording, Other Voices, Other Rooms.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The album features Griffith covering the songs of artists who were her major influences. One of her better-known songs is "From a Distance," which was written and composed by Julie Gold. Similarly, other artists have occasionally achieved greater success than Griffith herself with songs that she wrote or co-wrote. For example, Kathy Mattea had a country music top-five hit with a 1986 cover of Griffith's "Love at the Five and Dime" and Suzy Bogguss had one of her largest hits with Griffith (and Tom Russell)'s "Outbound Plane".<ref name = people1/>Template:Citation needed
In 1994, Griffith teamed with Jimmy Webb to contribute the song "If These Old Walls Could Speak" to the AIDS benefit album Red Hot + Country produced by the Red Hot Organization. She survived breast cancer which was diagnosed in 1996, and thyroid cancer in 1998.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} originating from nancigriffith.com Retrieved January 31, 2013</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Christine Lavin, a singer and songwriter, remembers the first time she saw Griffith perform:
I was struck by how perfect everything was about her singing, her playing, her talking. I realized from the get-go that this was someone who was a complete professional. Obviously she had worked a long time to get to be that good.<ref>Deitz, Roger (May/June 1995). "Home at Last". Acoustic Guitar. No. 30. p. 52.</ref>
Griffith contributed background vocals on many other recordings.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Griffith performed four songs, "The Day the Earth Stopped Cold", "Gravity of the Situation", "So Strange", and "Hold My Hand" with Hootie & the Blowfish during their MTV Unplugged performance in 1996 in Columbia, South Carolina, to raise awareness for Sweet Relief Musicians Fund.
Griffith suffered from severe writer's block after 2004, lasting until the 2009 release of her The Loving Kind album, which contained nine selections that she had written and composed either entirely by herself or as collaborations.<ref>"Her songs were an extension of her literary interests – she wrote long-form and short-form fiction that sometimes became songs, and vice versa – and when songs wouldn't come (she suffered from songwriter’s block between 2004 and 2009), she would use prose to try and keep the words flowing." Obituary: Nanci Griffith, Grammy-winning singer-songwriter, by Rob Adams, heraldscotland.com, August 16th, 2021</ref> After several months of limited touring in 2011, Griffith's bandmates the Kennedys (Pete & Maura Kennedy) packed up their professional Manhattan recording studio and moved it to Nashville, installing it in Griffith's home. There with her backing group including the Kennedys and Pat McInerney, she co-produced her album Intersection over the summer. The album included several new original songs and was released in April 2012 on Proper Records.<ref name="Proper Records">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
AwardsEdit
Griffith won the 1994 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album for Other Voices, Other Rooms. She was inducted into the Austin Music Hall of Fame in 1995.<ref>Powerfully Poetic Folk and Country Songwriter Nanci Griffith Has Died at Age 68, austinchronicle.com, Aug. 13, 2021</ref> Griffith was awarded the Kate Wolf Memorial Award by the World Folk Music Association in 1995.<ref name="noble">Template:Cite book</ref> In 2008, the Americana Music Association awarded her its Lifetime Americana Trailblazer Award.<ref>"In 2008, the Americana Music Association gave her a Lifetime Americana Trailblazer Award." in: Nanci Griffith, Singer Who Blended Folk and Country, Dies at 68, nytimes.com, Aug 13, 2021</ref> Lyle Lovett, who contributed backing vocals to her third album, Once in a Very Blue Moon,<ref>"Doster played guitar on Griffith’s first album in 1978, and joined her in Nashville for her third, “Once In A Very Blue Moon,” six years later. By then, Griffith had a record deal with folk label Rounder, and a lot of friends and musical collaborators to call on. Her acoustic sound had been amped up a notch, with stalwart Nashville players like Béla Fleck, Roy Huskey Jr. and Mark O’Connor – and a lanky guy she knew from the Texas music scene named Lyle Lovett, singing harmony." in: Remembering Nanci Griffith: ‘She Was Just A Good, Good, Good Songwriter’, by Shelly Brisbin, texasstandard.org, August 16, 2021</ref> had won it before her. In 2010, Griffith received a Lifetime Achievement Award at BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.<ref>Lifetime Achievement Award for Nanci Griffith, bbc.co.uk, Feb 1, 2010</ref>
Griffith was posthumously inducted into the Texas Heritage Songwriters Association's Hall of Fame in February 2022 at the Paramount Theatre in Austin.<ref>Remembering Nanci Griffith, the greatest Austin-raised singer-songwriter ever, by Peter Blackstock (Austin American-Statesman), austin360.com, Aug 27, 2021</ref><ref>Lefty Frizzell, Nanci Griffith, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Mark James To Join Texas Songwriters Hall Of Fame, musicrow.com, May 28, 2021</ref><ref>Texas Heritage Songwriters’ Association announces 2022 Hall of Fame inductees, ntxe-news.com</ref>
The Blue Moon OrchestraEdit
Griffith called her backing band the Blue Moon Orchestra. With regard to the chosen stage name, she wrote:
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
During the Christmas holidays of 1986, I organized a band of musicians to work this road of touring and to pass effortlessly through mine fields of studio sessions. They chose their name, the Blue Moon Orchestra, from my third album, Once in a Very Blue Moon. Some of them I had recorded and toured with prior to 1986: and some simply wandered into the Blue Moon Orchestra through this revolving open door of the road.{{#if:Nanci Griffith in 1997|{{#if:|}}
— {{#if:|, in }}Template:Comma separated entries}}
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The title selection of the Once in a Very Blue Moon album reached number 85 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in 1986.<ref>"Griffith didn't write the title song from Once In A Very Blue Moon, but she made the Pat Alger tune her own – so much so that the band she formed in the late 1980s, and toured with for 20 years, was called the Blue Moon Orchestra." in: "Remembering Nanci Griffith: 'She Was Just A Good, Good, Good Songwriter'", by Shelly Brisbin, texasstandard.org, August 16, 2021</ref><ref>"From that point on, Griffith named every band she fronted, big or small, the Blue Moon Orchestra. The clear desire, I assume, was to honor and recall that album's familial spirit. The core of the band stayed with her for the long haul." in: "Music Remembrance: Singer-songwriter Nanci Griffith (1953-2021)", by Daniel Gewertz, artsfuse.org, September 14, 2021</ref> In 1986, Griffith showcased tracks from her Lone Star State of Mind album on The Nashville Network TV show, New Country.
- Final members
- Nanci Griffith – lead vocals, guitar
- Pat McInerney – drums, percussion
- Maura Kennedy – vocals, guitar
- Pete Kennedy – guitar, vocals
- Previous members
- James Hooker – piano, B-3, keyboards, vocals
- Byrd Burton – guitar
- Frank Christian – guitar
- Philip Donnelly – guitar
- Danny Flowers – guitar
- Clive Gregson – guitar, vocals
- Thomm Jutz – guitar, vocals
- Doug Lancio – electric guitar
- Lee Satterfield – vocals, rhythm guitar, mandolin
- Denny Bixby – bass, harmony vocals
- Ron De La Vega – bass, cello
- Le Ann Etheridge – vocals, bass guitar, rhythm guitar
- Pete Gordon – bass
- Pete Gorisch – bass, cello
- Danny Milliner – bass
- J. T. Thomas – bass, vocals
- Fran Breen – drums
- Liam Genockey – drums
- Steve Smith – drums
- Guest backing vocalists
- Emmylou Harris
- Iris DeMent
- Lyle Lovett
- Denice Franke<ref>"From those early Kerrville campfires to her angelic harmonizing with Nanci Griffith and that classic unreleased tape with Mickie Merkens...to crowded folk venues from Texas to Switzerland, Denice Franke's music has always moved me. She's a deeply talented writer, singer, and guitarist. One of Texas' finest." --- Tom Russell | Source: denicefranke.com</ref>
Personal lifeEdit
Griffith's high-school boyfriend, John, died in a motorcycle accident shortly after taking her to the senior prom. He inspired many of her later songs.<ref name="popdose">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> She was married to singer-songwriter Eric Taylor from 1976 to 1982. In the early 1990s, she was engaged to singer-songwriter Tom Kimmel.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
DeathEdit
Griffith died in Nashville on August 13, 2021, at the age of 68. The exact cause of death was not reported<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name = people1>People magazine August 30th, 2021 issue Page 24</ref> but her management company attributed it to natural causes.<ref name="Dansby">Template:Cite news</ref>
Tribute albumEdit
On September 22, 2023, a tribute album, More than a Whisper: Celebrating the Music of Nanci Griffith, was released by Rounder and Concord Records. The compilation featured covers of Griffith's songs by her friends and fans, including Sarah Jarosz, John Prine, Kelsey Waldon, Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle, Emmylou Harris, Lyle Lovett, Kathy Mattea, Brandy Clark, Shawn Colvin, Ida Mae, Steve Earle, Aaron Lee Tasjan, Todd Snider, Iris DeMent, Mary Gauthier, and The War and Treaty.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
DiscographyEdit
Studio albumsEdit
Year | Album | Peak chart positions | Label | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Country <ref name="Prometheus Global Media">Template:Cite magazine</ref> |
US <ref name="ReferenceA">Template:Cite magazine</ref> |
UK <ref name="British Hit Singles & Albums">Template:Cite book</ref> | |||
1978 | There's a Light Beyond These Woods | — | — | — | B.F. Deal |
1982 | Poet in My Window | — | — | — | Featherbed |
1984 | Once in a Very Blue Moon | — | — | — | Philo |
1986 | The Last of the True Believers | — | — | — | |
1987 | Lone Star State of Mind | 23 | — | — | MCA |
1988 | Little Love Affairs | 27 | — | 78 | |
1989 | Storms | 42 | 99 | 38 | |
1991 | Late Night Grande Hotel | — | 185 | 40 | |
1993 | Other Voices, Other Rooms | — | 54 | 18 | Elektra |
1994 | Flyer | — | 48 | 20 | |
1997 | Blue Roses from the Moons | — | 119 | 64 | |
1998 | Other Voices, Too (A Trip Back to Bountiful) | — | 85 | — | |
1999 | The Dust Bowl Symphony | — | — | — | |
2001 | Clock Without Hands | — | 149 | 61 | |
2004 | Hearts in Mind | — | — | — | New Door |
2006 | Ruby's Torch | — | — | — | Rounder |
2009 | The Loving Kind | — | — | — | |
2012 | Intersection | — | — | — | Hell No |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Live albumsEdit
Year | Album | Peak chart positions | Label |
---|---|---|---|
US Country <ref name="Prometheus Global Media"/> | |||
1988 | One Fair Summer Evening | 43 | MCA |
2002 | Winter Marquee | 45 | Rounder |
Compilation albumsEdit
Year | Album | Peak positions | Label |
---|---|---|---|
UK<ref name="British Hit Singles & Albums" /> | |||
1993 | The MCA Years: A Retrospective | — | MCA |
The Best of Nanci Griffith | 27 | ||
1997 | Country Gold | — | |
2000 | Wings to Fly and a Place To Be: An Introduction to Nanci Griffith |
— | |
2001 | 20th Century Masters – The Millennium Collection: The Best of Nanci Griffith |
— | |
2002 | From a Distance: The Very Best of Nanci Griffith | — | |
2003 | The Complete MCA Studio Recordings | — | |
2015 | Ghost in the Music (unofficial release) | --- | VOX ROX |
2023 | Working in Corners | --- | Craft Recordings |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
SinglesEdit
Year | Single | Peak chart positions |
Album | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Country <ref name="Billboard Charts">Template:Cite book</ref> |
CAN Country <ref name="RPM Country Songs">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |
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Irish Singles Chart <ref name="Irish Charts">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |
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1986 | "Once in a Very Blue Moon" | 85 | — | — | Once in a Very Blue Moon |
1987 | "Lone Star State of Mind" | 36 | — | — | Lone Star State of Mind |
"Trouble in the Fields" | 57 | 43 | — | ||
"Cold Hearts/Closed Minds" | 64 | — | — | ||
"Never Mind" | 58 | — | — | Little Love Affairs | |
1988 | "From a Distance" | — | — | 9 | Lone Star State of Mind |
"I Knew Love" | 37 | — | 20 | Little Love Affairs | |
"Anyone Can Be Somebody's Fool" | 64 | — | — | ||
1989 | "It's a Hard Life Wherever You Go" | — | — | — | Storms |
"I Don't Wanna Talk About Love" | — | — | — | ||
1991 | "Late Night Grande Hotel" | — | — | — | Late Night Grande Hotel |
1993 | "Speed of the Sound of Loneliness" | — | — | — | Other Voices, Other Rooms |
1994 | "This Heart" | — | — | — | Flyer |
1995 | "Well...All Right" (with the Crickets) | — | 87 | — | Not Fade Away (Remembering Buddy Holly) |
1997 | "Maybe Tomorrow" | — | — | — | Blue Roses from the Moons |
"Gulf Coast Highway" | — | — | — | ||
1999 | "These Days in an Open Book" | — | — | — | Flyer |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
VideographyEdit
- Bob Dylan: The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration Sony VHS (1993)Template:Citation needed
- Other Voices, Other Rooms Elektra Video VHS (1993)Template:Citation needed
- Winter Marquee Rounder/Universal DVD, Widescreen, (2002)Template:Citation needed
- One Fair Summer Evening...Plus! Universal Music & VI DVD, Fullscreen, (2005)Template:Citation needed
Music videosEdit
Year | Video | Director | |
---|---|---|---|
1988 | "I Knew Love" | Michael Salomon | |
1989 | citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Willy Smax |
1991 | citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Sophie Muller |
1993 | "Speed of the Sound of Loneliness" (with John Prine)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Rocky Schenck |
1994 | "This Heart" | ||
1996 | "Well...All Right" (with the Crickets) |
BibliographyEdit
Non-fictionEdit
Title | Authors | Year of first publication |
First edition publisher |
---|---|---|---|
Nanci Griffith's Other Voices: A Personal History of Folk Music | Nanci Griffith and Joe Jackson | 1998 | Three Rivers Press |
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Nanci Griffith official site (archived final version 2021-02-25)
- Comprehensive Nanci Griffith discography
- Chart History Nanci Griffith, Billboard 200
- Interview with Nanci Griffith, PopMatters, 2012.
- The Popdose Guide to Nanci Griffith, popdose.com, January 8, 2008
- Roger Deitz: Remembering Singer-Songwriter Nanci Griffith (1953–2021), Acousticguitar.com
- {{#if:Nanci Griffith|Template:PAGENAMEBASE discography at Discogs|{{#if:Template:Wikidata|Template:Wikidata Template:PAGENAMEBASE discography at DiscogsTemplate:EditAtWikidata|Template:PAGENAMEBASE discography at Discogs}}}}
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