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Kate Jacobs

 
Artist: Kate Jacobs

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  • Born: January 11, 1959, Virginia
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Folk
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "You Call That Dark", "The Calm Come After", "What About Regret

Biography

Guitarist, singer and songwriter Kate Jacobs has an angelic voice and a unique gift for inventing characters and telling stories within the format of the four-minute song. Jacobs was born in Virginia but lived around the world in her youth, as her father worked as a diplomat. At the Unitarian Church in Virginia, Jacobs and her sisters learned civil rights marching songs, many of which were variations on old gospel traditionals. Jacobs cites such early influences as Elizabeth Cotten and Pete Seeger, both of whom visited her neighborhood Unitarian Church.

Jacobs' first album, The Calm Comes After, was a collection of songs with a band that skirted the borders between country and folk music. She followed up her independently released debut (on her own Small Pond Music) with a second album for Hoboken-based Bar/None Records, What About Regret (1995). Her first album, released in 1993, was later reissued on Bar/None.

Her music has been featured in the documentary film Delivered Vacant, and she's also written a book for children, A Sister (Hyperion Press), based on her song of the same name. But, of course, Jacobs' soprano voice is as attention-grabbing and captivating as her ballads and other song forms. She returned in 1998 with Hydrangea. Shortly thereafter, Jacobs briefly exchanged music for marriage and motherhood. You Call That Dark followed after a five year break. ~ Richard Skelly, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Kate Jacobs
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Kate Jacobs
Born January 11, 1959 (1959-01-11) (age 50)
Alexandria, Virginia, United States
Origin New York, New York, United States
Genres Folk, Americana
Instruments Guitar, Singing
Years active 1980s–present
Labels Bar/None
Website www.katejacobsmusic.com

Kate Jacobs (born January 11, 1959) is an American Singer/songwriter.

Contents

Biography

Jacobs was born in Alexandria, Virginia, and initially wanted to be a ballet dancer. Her father was in the United States Foreign Service, and she moved to Austria when she was eleven[1].

Her family was a singing one, if not formally musical. Her father sang old Tin Pan Alley songs at home, and her mother sang Russian ballads and American standards. At church she sang songs of the civil rights era and the folk revival and some wackier songs like Up Up and Away. | issue = 4 | last = Wilcock | first = Steve | title = Kate Jacobs | work = Triste | accessdate = 2008-02-06 | url = http://www.triste.co.uk/artjacobs.htm }}</ref>. She was a fan of Fred Astaire, and her disparate musical tastes included standards written by Cole Porter, Irving Berlin, and Johnny Mercer[2], as well as country music by artists like Loretta Lynn[3].

During the early 1980s Jacobs moved to New York City. She continued to dance, but by 1987 she had started to write songs. In 1992 she recorded her first album, The Calm Comes After Bar/None Records. She followed in 1995 with What About Regret.[1] In 1999 she released her third album, Hydrangea, to which guests Peter Holsapple, Vicki Peterson and Susan Cowsill added their musical contributions, as did long-time cohorts Dave Schramm and James MacMillan. The key songs on the album are taken from her family's history. "Never Be Afraid" is based on a phrase of her Aunt Katia's in 1938 when the family was emigrating to the US; "A Snowy Street" is based on a journal entry of her doctor grandfather in post-revolutionary Russia; "Eddy Went To Spain" is about an uncle who fought in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade for the republican side in the Spanish Civil War, and "Good Doctor" was based on a journal of Elena, a fourteen year old Tuberculosis patient of her great grandfather's, who fell in love with her physician.[4]

After Hydrangea, she became busy with her family life, and did not release another album for six years. In 2004 she released her fourth album, You Call That Dark. [1]

Discography

  • The Calm Comes After (Bar/None, 1993)
  • What About Regret (Bar/None, 1995)
  • Hydrangea (Bar/None, 1998)
  • You Call That Dark (Bar/None, 2004)

References

  1. ^ a b c Lankford, Ronnie D.. "Jacobs, Kate Biography". eNotes. http://www.enotes.com/contemporary-musicians/jacobs-kate-biography. Retrieved 2008-02-06. 
  2. ^ "Kate Jacobs interview". Triste (4). http://www.triste.co.uk/jacobs.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-06. 
  3. ^ Muir Wallner, Courtney. "INTERVIEW Kate Jacobs". WestNet. http://www.westnet.com/consumable/1995/09.05/revkate.html. Retrieved 2008-02-07. 
  4. ^ Wilcock, Steve. "Kate Jacobs". Triste (4). http://www.triste.co.uk/artjacobs.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-06. 

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