Lynn Miles

Lynn Miles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Not to be confused with Lyn Miles.
Lynn Miles

Lynn Miles (born Sweetsburg, Quebec) is a Canadian singer-songwriter. She has received multiple awards including the Juno Award and three Canadian Folk Music Awards.

Early life and education

Miles was born outside Montreal in the town of Sweetsburg, Quebec. Her father was a harmonica player and jazz fan while her mother listened to both opera and country music. Miles learned to play the violin, guitar, piano and flute during her school years.[1] She began composing songs at the age of ten and began performing at the age of sixteen. While in her twenties Miles studied voice with a private teacher and classical music history and theory at Carleton University in Ottawa.[1][2]

Career

Miles became a voice teacher at the Ottawa Folklore Centre. Her first recording of original material was a nine song demo which she created in 1987.[1] In the early 1990s Miles released a self-titled album plus an additional recording called Chalk This One Up to the Moon. Her composition "Remembrance Day" became part of a nationally televised video created by the Canadian Armed Forces.[2] Miles' 1996 album, Slightly Haunted received favorable reviews in the New York Times and was a Billboard Top Ten Pick of the Year.[1] In 1997 she released the album Night in a Strange Town.[2]

Miles' reunited with collaborator and guitarist Ian LeFeuvre for her 2001 album, Unravel, which won the 2003 Juno award for Best Roots & Traditional Album of the Year: Solo.[2][3] Miles was nominated in 2005 for a Canadian Folk Music Awards.[4] In 2006 Miles recorded the album Love Sweet Love which was released in the U.S. on Red House Records. It was recorded with guitarist Ian LeFeuvre and Keith Glass, drummer Peter Von Althen, John Geggiem on bass, James Stephens on violin.[5] It was nominated for a 2006 Juno Award.[1][2][3] In 2009, the Art Of Time Ensemble featuring Sarah Slean recorded Miles' song, "Black Flowers."

Her 2010 album Fall for Beauty was nominated at the Juno Awards of 2011 in the Roots & Traditional Album of the year category.[3] Miles has re-recorded acoustic versions of her songs in a series called Black Flowers. The first two volumes were produced in 2008 and 2009 on her Cold Girl record label and later re-released by True North Records in 2009. A third volume was released in August 2012. [6] New York Times music critic, John Pareles wrote that Miles' music "makes forlorn feel like a state of grace."[7]

Personal

Miles lived in Ottawa and Nashville, Tennessee before moving to Los Angeles in 1997.[1][2] She moved to Austin, Texas before returning to her home country of Canada.[6]

Discography

  • Lynn Miles, (cassette demo) 1987
  • Chalk This One Up to the Moon, 1991
  • Slightly Haunted, 1996
  • Night in a Strange Town, 1997
  • Unravel, 2001
  • Love Sweet Love, 2006
  • Black Flowers, Volume 1, 2008
  • Lynn Miles: Live at the Chapel, 2009
  • Black Flowers, Volume 2, 2009
  • Fall for Beauty, 2010
  • Black Flowers, Volume 3, 2012
  • Downpour, 2013

Videography

  • Lynn Miles: Live at the Chapel, (DVD) 2007

See also

  • Music of Canada
  • List of Canadian musicians

References

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  6. 6.0 6.1 Lynn Miles Music.
  7. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named nytimes.com

External links

  • Lynn Miles official site
This page was last modified 16.04.2014 13:16:32

This article uses material from the article Lynn Miles from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.