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Sarah McLachlan

 
Who2 Profiles:

Sarah McLachlan, Singer / Songwriter

Sarah McLachlan
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  • Born: 28 January 1968
  • Birthplace: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • Best Known As: Singer/Songwriter who co-founded Lilith Fair

Sarah McLachlan's first two records, Touch and Solace, were met with popular and critical success. Her 1993 release, Fumbling Toward Ecstasy, made her an international star. During the 1990s she toured and released new recordings and rarities, organized the series of concerts known as the Lilith Fair and won three Grammy awards for her 1999 live recording, Mirror Ball. In 2001 she released new versions of previous material on Remixed.

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Gale Musician Profiles:

Sarah McLachlan

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Singer, songwriter, guitarist

Sarah McLachlan knows where the best music comes from: "Sonically," she told Cover magazine's KK Kozik, "moving water is perhaps my all-time favorite sound." Water has both aural and thematic relevance for McLachlan. "Being around any kind of water is one of the most important things in my life," she commented. "I find it soothing and it's a very female thing, too." Indeed, McLachlan herself has a fluid quality; her voice is noted for its liquidity and her lyrics and production values for their tempest and storm.

McLachlan comes by her turbulent personality honestly. Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, McLachlan led a relatively sequestered life while growing up. David Thigpen of Time reported that McLachlan was "a shy, awkward child who never fell in with the crowd." He described her as a teenager who "would kill time on long, frozen winter nights writing songs." Billboard's Timothy White provided a more complex portrayal of McLachlan's youthful existence. Her mother, Dorice, sacrificed her educational pursuits in order to support her husband, Jack, an American marine biologist, and then acquainted her little girl "with the isolation that regret places in the path of personal fulfillment." But according to White, the results were worth celebrating. "McLachlan was able to fuse her mother's depth of pathos and her father's detached analysis into a calm grasp of our culture's callous objectification of women," he concluded.

From the start of her career at age 19, McLachlan was compared to other female songwriters such as Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush, Sinead O'Connor, and Tori Amos, comparisons one might ascribe to what Elysa Gardner of Rolling Stone called a voice of "astonishing strength and clarity [that] may drift at any given time from a siren-like middle range to a ghostly soprano." Her songs tended toward lyrics which explored the relationships between women and men.

During her childhood McLachlan sought out the serenading voices and sentiments of folk-rock singers Joan Baez, Cat Stevens, and Simon and Garfunkel. She had 12 years of training on guitar, six on piano, and five years of voice lessons, all of which contributed to what White referred to as "the wit, literate grace, and unfussy intricacy of her material." As a teenager McLachlan worked at restaurant counters and as a dishwasher in Halifax.

A New Maturity
Critics generally agree that with McLachlan's third album, Fumbling Towards Ecstasy (1994), she revealed new maturity as a singer, songwriter, and woman. Her first album, Touch (1988), suggested a waif-like quality to Gardner, while her second album, Solace (1991), revealed a sturdier woman, one less "ethereal."

McLachlan said of Solace, "There's a lot more of myself in my writing [there]—more the way I think, more the way I talk." Fumbling Towards Ecstasy revealed a woman with broader sensibility, and her self-awareness and melancholy have merged with a political consciousness.

McLachlan has referred to the relevance of her increased self-respect and gender appreciation. She told Billboard, "It took me six years to learn how not to edit myself, to remain open in my music so that I touched greater levels of darkness as well as some positive areas of escape."

While the bulk of critical response to McLachlan's music was admiring, some criticism contained a disparaging tone. Dave Jennings of Melody Maker was dismayed by the excess of "vulnerability" he found in Solace. He felt that while it was couched in nature imagery, it did not add up to "New Age consciousness, but really … just old-school singer-songwriter preciousness." Similarly, Spin's Joy Press found the lyrics of Fumbling "mature with a capital M, to the point of sophomoric pseudo-profundity." Sardonically, she concluded that McLachlan "obviously places herself in the category of the self-defined, strong, female songwriter," and that ultimately Fumbling provided only "an easy-listening portrait of a woman—a perfectly graceful, confident, and smart woman—but it's not the portrait of an artist."

Other critics, however, found in that album both an artist and a portrait of that artist. Thigpen attempted to remove the debate from the gender-biased charge of confessionalism: "Far from indulging in simple emotional bloodletting," he wrote, "McLachlan creates exquisitely poised songs that resist anger or pathos."

A trip to Southeast Asia in 1993, in which she represented her Canadian peer group, afforded McLachlan both disillusionment and wisdom. She admitted that she sang less about self-pity as a result of that mission, one that focused on AIDS, prostitution, and poverty, and one where she encountered thousands of men, women and children who were real victims of disease and poverty.

Though McLachlan did not address the Southeast Asian journey directly in her songs, its impact could be felt. Critics implied that her experiences there enriched her lyrics and music, even while she remained devoted to songs about interpersonal relationships. Thigpen identified McLachlan's audience as "the desperately troubled," to whom she offered the suggestion "that the answers to life's emotional earthquakes can come through perseverance and compassion." Terry McBride, the president of Nettwerk Records, remarked, "There's more soul in her singing on this album. [This] record finally makes you believe that she means what she says."

Though still inspired to look outward, McLachlan explained that her strengths as a singer and songwriter were nurtured in solitude. With Rainer Maria Rilke's self-searching philosophies at the core, in 1994 McLachlan was focused on how to reach her artistic potential. With expressed gratitude toward her producer and sometime-collaborator, Pierre Marchand, and all the talking and thinking he required of her, she still remarked, "I find that to open up myself as much as I have to get at what I need, I need to be by myself." McLachlan conjured images of herself walking the moors of Nova Scotia, out in the country where "everything just seemed so huge and so much bigger than I'd ever known it to be before."

Fumbling lingered on the music charts for well over one year and attained multiplatinum sales. The album's hit single, "Possession," reached number 14. Likewise "Good Enough" reached number 16. McLachlan released an alternate version of Fumbling, called The Freedom Sessions, in 1995.

Lilita Fair Music Festival
In 1997 she released Surfacing, which made its debut at number two. The album scored two hit singles, two Grammys, four Juno (Canadian) Awards, and earned multiplatinum sales certification. McLachlan used the momentum from the success of Surfacing to inaugurate the first Lilith Fair music festival that toured in the summer of 1997 to honor the advances of women in music. Lilith Fair met with success, and earned a reprise in 1998 and again in 1999. Also in 1999, McLachlan released a live album, Mirrorball, which made its debut at number three, igniting the largest sales surge of her career. The album was recorded during McLachlan's tour in support of Surfacing in 1998.

In February of 1997 McLachlan announced that she had eloped with drummer Ashwin Sood in Negril, Jamaica. The couple set up residence in Canada in the Dunbar District of Vancouver, British Columbia. McLachlan won a Grammy Award for her 2000 song "When She Loved Me" from Toy Story 2, and she was also featured among the all-star lineup of "Music Without Borders," which aired on Canadian television and radio stations on September 29, 2001, to benefit the victims of the September 11 terrorist attack on the United States.

McLachlan's ensuing release, Remixed, made its debut at the top of the Billboard Top Electronic Albums chart in 2001. That same year, after giving birth to a daughter, India, McLachlan turned to the peaceful retreat of a cabin in the woods. There, while caring for her new baby, she completed an all-new album. The recording, Afterglow, won Juno Awards for Songwriter of the Year and for Pop Album of the Year. One year later she released a live version of the album, recorded on tour following the release of the original disc.

In 2003, in collaboration with director Sophie Muller, McLachlan created a video from Afterglow's "World on Fire." The video compared the expense of making a music video with the cost of badly needed medical and food supplies for many poor nations, juxtaposing footage of the film crew with footage of third world hardship. To underline the video's message, Muller and her film crew donated funds from their work—$150,000—to 11 charities. "When Sophia Muller and I made ‘World on Fire,’" McLachlan told Media That Matters Film Festival, "our hope was to show how easy it can be to use your wealth to help make immeasurable improvements in peoples lives."

McLachlan embarked on a lengthy tour in 2004-05 through Canada, Britain, and the United States, her first since 1999. "At the center," Steven Mirkin wrote of one performance in Variety, "is McLachlan's dusty, discursive voice, which in the high end of her range can achieve the dewy vulnerability of Joni Mitchell." In 2004 McLachlan released Afterglow Live, a CD collection drawn from her 2004 tour and featuring songs from Surfacing and Afterglow. As a bonus to fans, the collection included a DVD with backstage footage and the politically-tinged video for "World on Fire." "It's a great set of music with some new tweaks to such favorites as ‘Possession’ and ‘Ice Cream,’ wrote Victor Smith in Star Pulse.

In 2006 McLachlan surprised fans by releasing two albums, Mirrorball: The Complete Concert and Wintersong. Mirrorball: The Complete Concert returned to previous material that had produced Mirrorball and issued the complete contents of the last date on her 1998 tour. "It's a strong set," wrote Marisa Brown of All Music Guide, "presenting the best of what chick-rock was in the late '90s." In the fall, McLachlan followed with her first-ever holiday album, Wintersong. "Recorded at home in a relaxed Canadian setting," wrote PR Newswire, "Wintersong combines traditional and standard Christmas tunes with several contemporary classics that are close to Sarah's heart."

Selected discography
Touch, Nettwerk, 1988.
Solace, Arista, 1991.
(Contributor) No Alternative, Arista, 1993.
Fumbling Towards Ecstasy, Arista, 1994.
The Freedom Sessions (multimedia CD-ROM), Nettwerk, 1994; reissued, BMG/Arista, 1995.
Rarities, B-Sides, and Other Stuff, Nettwerk, 1996.
Surfacing, BMG/Arista, 1997.
Mirrorball, BMG/Arista, 1999.
Remixed, Nettwerk, 2001; reissued, Arista, 2003.
Afterglow, Arista, 2003.
Afterglow Live, Arista, 2004.
Mirrorball: The Complete Concert, BMG/Arista, 2006.
Wintersong, BMG/Arista, 2006.

Sources
Periodicals
Billboard, January 8, 1994; March 19, 1994.
Cover, March 1994.
Melody Maker, June 13, 1992.
People, November 10, 2003, p. 56.
PR Newswire, December 6, 2006.
Rolling Stone, February 6, 1992; June 16, 1994.
Spin, March 1994.
Stereo Review, August 1989.
Time, March 21, 1994.
Variety, July 26, 2004.

Online
"Sarah McLachlan," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (September 26, 2001; July 20, 2007).
Sarah McLachlan Official Website, http://www.sarahmclachlan.com (September 26, 2001).
"Sarah McLachlan Reviews," Star Pulse, http://www.starpulse.com (July 20, 2007).
"Star! to Air ‘Music Without Borders,’" Star!, http://www.startv.com/news/index.asp?thisArticle=252 (September 26, 2001).
"World on Fire," Media That Matters Film Festival, http://www.mediathatmattersfest.org (July 20, 2007).
Additional information for this essay was obtained from Arista publicity materials, 1994.
AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Artists:

Sarah McLachlan

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  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Since her debut in 1988, Sarah McLachlan's atmospheric folk-pop has gained a devoted following not only in her native Canada, where she established star status with her first album, but also in the U.S. and U.K. The following two decades saw her growing both as a musician and songwriter, continually redefining herself and emerging as a major voice in the growing adult alternative pop format. She also founded Lilith Fair, a concert tour that helped usher other female songwriters into the mainstream during the late '90s, while maintaining her own presence on the charts.

McLachlan was born on January 28, 1968, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where she began taking lessons for voice, classical piano, and guitar as a child. Following a year of art training at the Nova Scotia School of Design, McLachlan (who had also been fronting a new wave band named October Game) was approached by Nettwerk Records and offered a solo deal. She initially turned it down in favor of continued studies; however, she reconsidered and accepted the offer in late 1987, relocating to Vancouver soon after. On the strength of her debut, 1988's Touch, the budding songwriter was signed to Arista for international distribution. The album eventually reached gold status in Canada and was reissued worldwide in 1989. In 1991, she followed up with Solace, an impressive collection that showed a great leap in songcraft and began to build a strong cult following in the U.S.

In September 1992, following a 14-month promotional tour, McLachlan traveled to Cambodia and Thailand to work on World Vision, a Canadian-sponsored documentary on poverty and child prostitution. Inspired by her experiences, she retreated to a secluded house outside of Montreal to write material for her next album. After six months in a Montreal studio with collaborator/producer Pierre Marchand, she released Fumbling Toward Ecstasy, her strongest and most personal effort to date, in late 1993. The album peaked in the U.S. charts at number 50; by the end of 1994, it reached platinum status after spending 62 weeks on the chart. "Possession," an atmospheric single that mixed electronica influences with lyrics inspired by a stalker, broke the Top 100 and received considerable airplay, especially on modern rock radio, where it peaked at number 14. "Good Enough" also found a home in that format, reaching number 16. The Freedom Sessions, consisting mainly of alternate versions of tracks from Fumbling, arrived in 1995; that same year also saw the release of "I Will Remember You," which McLachlan wrote as the theme for Brothers McMullen. Rarities, B-Sides & Other Stuff, a collection of non-LP tracks and remixes, was issued in Canada in 1996.

In 1997, McLachlan began work on her fourth album, the enormously successful Surfacing, which debuted at number two on the pop albums chart. She also organized the Lilith Fair tour, a package tour focusing on emerging women singer/songwriters. Released in 1999, the multi-platinum Mirrorball chronicled McLachlan's performances on that tour and served as her first live release. In 2003, after a short hiatus from the business, she put out the successful Afterglow, followed by another concert release titled Afterglow Live. Both releases eventually went multi-platinum, and McLachlan continued to tour through 2005. In June of that year, she performed on the Philadelphia stage of Live 8, the multi-city anniversary celebration of Live Aid and G8 summit protest coordinated by Live Aid founder Bob Geldof. She released Bloom, her second remix collection, several months later. While most of its material was drawn from Afterglow, it also included a version of the 1989 McLachlan track "Vox" and a previously unreleased collaboration with DMC and Black Eyed Peas' will.i.am.

McLachlan released two albums in 2006: Mirrorball: The Complete Concert, which captured the entirety of the last date on her 1998 tour, and Wintersong, a collection of traditional and modern Christmas covers (plus one new song, the title cut). She then returned to original material for 2010's Laws of Illusion, her first studio album in nearly seven years. Featuring “One Dream,” which she wrote for the 2009 Vancouver Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony, the album was released several weeks before the start of Lilith Fair 2010, the festival's first appearance in more than a decade. ~ Chris Woodstra, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Sarah McLachlan

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Sarah McLachlan

Sarah McLachlan after a performance at JFK Airport, July 2010
Background information
Birth name Sarah Ann McLachlan
Born January 28, 1968 (1968-01-28) (age 44) Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Genres Pop, soft rock, adult contemporary
Occupations Singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, painter, executive producer
Instruments Vocals, piano, keyboard, guitar, banjo, harp[1]
Years active 1988–present
Labels RCA Records, Arista, Nettwerk
Website sarahmclachlan.com

Sarah Ann McLachlan, OC, OBC (born January 28, 1968(1968-01-28)) is a Canadian musician, singer and songwriter.[2] Known for her emotional ballads and mezzo-soprano vocal range,[3] as of 2009, she has sold over 40 million albums worldwide.[4][5] McLachlan's best-selling album to date is Surfacing, for which she won two Grammy Awards (out of four nominations) and four Juno Awards. In addition to her personal artistic efforts, she founded the Lilith Fair tour, which showcased female musicians. The Lilith Fair concert tours took place from 1997 to 1999, and resumed in the summer of 2010. Since 2006 she has also been known as a highly visible supporter of the ASPCA, as well as various other charities.

Contents

Biography

Sarah Ann McLachlan was born on January 28, 1968(1968-01-28), and adopted in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. As a child, she took voice lessons, along with studies in classical piano and guitar. When she was 17 years old and still a student at Queen Elizabeth High School, she fronted a short-lived rock band called The October Game. One of the band's songs, "Grind", credited as a group composition, can be found on the independent Flamingo Records release Out of the Fog and the CD Out of the Fog Too. It has yet to be released elsewhere. Her high school yearbook predicted that she was "destined to become a famous rock star."

Following The October Game's first concert at Dalhousie University opening for Moev, McLachlan was offered a recording contract with Vancouver-based independent record label Nettwerk by Moev's Mark Jowett. McLachlan's parents insisted she finish high school and complete one year of studies at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design before moving to Vancouver and embarking on a new life as a recording artist, and McLachlan finally signed to Nettwerk two years later before having written a single song.

In 1994 McLachlan became the target of a lawsuit, when she was sued by Uwe Vandrei, an obsessed fan from Ottawa, who alleged that his letters to her had been the basis of the single "Possession." The lawsuit was also challenging for the Canadian legal system—Vandrei was a self-admitted stalker whose self-acknowledged goal in filing the lawsuit was to be near McLachlan physically. Consequently, special precautions were planned to ensure McLachlan's safety if at any time she had to be in the same location as Vandrei. The lawsuit never came to trial, however, as Vandrei was found dead in an apparent suicide before the trial began. This topic was explored at length in Canadian author Judith Fitzgerald's book, Building a Mystery: The Story of Sarah McLachlan & Lilith Fair.

In 1997, Sarah McLachlan married her drummer, Ashwin Sood, in Jamaica. McLachlan lost her mother to cancer in December 2001, while McLachlan herself was pregnant. McLachlan gave birth to a daughter, named India Ann Sushil Sood, on April 6, 2002, in Vancouver. By this time, McLachlan had already completed three-quarters of the production on her next record, Afterglow. On June 22, 2007, she gave birth to her second daughter, named Taja Summer Sood, in Vancouver. McLachlan announced her separation from Ashwin Sood in September 2008.[6]

Sarah McLachlan currently resides in Vancouver.

Musical career

Touch and Solace

The signing with Nettwerk prompted McLachlan to move to Vancouver, British Columbia. There she recorded the first of her albums, Touch, in 1988, which received both critical and commercial success and included the hit song "Vox". During this period she also contributed to an album by Manufacture, and embarked on her first national concert tour as an opening act for The Grapes of Wrath.[citation needed]

Her 1991 album, Solace, was her mainstream breakthrough in Canada, spawning the hit singles "The Path of Thorns (Terms)" and "Into the Fire". Solace also marked the beginning of her partnership with Pierre Marchand. Marchand and McLachlan have been collaborators ever since, with Marchand producing all of McLachlan's albums and occasionally co-writing songs.[citation needed]

Fumbling Towards Ecstasy, and Surfacing

McLachlan at a 1993 benefit for Clayoquot Sound

1993's Fumbling Towards Ecstasy was an immediate hit in Canada. From her Nettwerk connection, her piano version of the song "Possession" was included on the first Due South soundtrack in 1996. Over the next two years, Fumbling Towards Ecstasy quietly became McLachlan's international breakthrough as well, scaling the charts in a number of countries.

In 1993, Darryl Neudorf filed a lawsuit against McLachlan and her label, Nettwerk, alleging that he had made a significant and uncredited contribution to the songwriting on Touch, and alleging that he wasn't paid properly for work done on Solace. The judge in this suit eventually ruled in McLachlan's favour on the songs; though Neudorf may have contributed to the songwriting, neither regarded each other as joint authors. The judge ruled in Neudorf's favour on the payment issue.

Following the success from Fumbling Towards Ecstasy, McLachlan returned in 1997 with Surfacing, her best selling album to date. Earning her two Grammy Awards and four Juno Awards, the album has since sold over 11 million copies worldwide and brought her much international success. Still in the spotlight from the album, McLachlan launched the highly popular Lilith Fair tour. Her song "Angel"—inspired by the fatal overdose of Smashing Pumpkins touring keyboardist Jonathan Melvoin—made sales skyrocket. In Spring 1998, the motion picture City of Angels featured "Angel". It became the No. 1 album on the Billboard chart. More than five months after the movie disappeared from the theatres, City of Angels: Music from the Motion Picture remained firmly entrenched among Billboard's top 40 albums. This soundtrack earned quadruple-platinum status.[7]

Lilith Fair

In 1996 McLachlan became frustrated with concert promoters and radio stations that refused to feature two female musicians in a row.[8] Bucking conventional industry wisdom, she booked a successful tour for herself and Paula Cole. At least one of their appearances together – in McLachlan's home town, on September 14, 1996 – went by the name "Lilith Fair" and included performances by McLachlan, Cole, Lisa Loeb and Michelle McAdorey, formerly of Crash Vegas.

The next year, McLachlan founded the Lilith Fair tour, taking Lilith from the medieval Jewish legend that Lilith was Adam's first wife.[9]

In 1997, Lilith Fair, featuring McLachlan as one of the headlining acts, garnered a $16 million gross, making it the top-grossing of any touring festival.[8] Among all concert tours for that year, it was the 16th highest grossing.[8] Lilith Fair tour brought together 2 million people over its three-year history and raised more than $7 million for charities. It was the most successful all-female music festival in history, one of the biggest music festivals of the 1990s, and helped launch the careers of several well-known female artists. Subsequent Lilith Fairs followed in 1998 and 1999 before the tour was discontinued.

Nettwerk CEO and Lilith Fair co-founder Terry McBride announced that the all-female festival would make its return in summer 2010.

Hiatus

McLachlan performing for Good Morning America in 1998

In 1998, in addition to performing her own set, she performed a cover of "Sad Lisa" with rock band Phish at the annual Bridge School Benefit concert in California, hosted by Neil Young, after which McLachlan began an extended period away from recording or touring. Six years elapsed between the release of Surfacing and that of her next studio album, Afterglow.

However, she did release a live album in 1999, entitled Mirrorball. The album's singles included a new live version of her earlier doubles "I Will Remember You", a studio recording of which had previously been released on The Brothers McMullen soundtrack as well as Rarities, B-Sides and Other Stuff.

Also that year, McLachlan (in the singing voice of "Jessie") recorded the Randy Newman song "When She Loved Me" on the Toy Story 2 soundtrack. This song was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Song in 2000, and McLachlan performed it at the awards ceremony, but the award went to "You'll Be in My Heart" from Tarzan, written and recorded by Phil Collins.

In 1997, McLachlan co-wrote and provided guest vocals on the Delerium song "Silence" for their album Karma. This song achieved a massive amount of US top 40 airplay when released as a single in late 2000 and also featured on the soundtrack for the movie Brokedown Palace. In 2001, McLachlan provided background vocals, guitar, and piano on the closing track "Love Is" from Stevie Nicks' eighth solo album, Trouble in Shangri-La, in addition to drawing the dragon used for the "S" in Stevie's name on the album cover. In May 2002, her duet with Bryan Adams was released on the Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron soundtrack. She sang harmonies and played the piano on the song "Don't Let Go" while Sood did the drum work.

McLachlan also participated in several concerts during her break, such as Sheryl Crow's Live from Central Park in 1999, the Arista Records twenty-fifth anniversary celebration in 2000, as well as the 2002 British Columbia Cancer Foundation Benefit Concert in memory of cancer victim Michele Bourbonnais. She participated along with four other Canadian artists: Bryan Adams, Jann Arden, Barenaked Ladies, and Chantal Kreviazuk.

Afterglow

McLachlan in Menlo Park, California, USA

McLachlan returned to public life and touring with her 2003 album release, Afterglow, which contained the singles "Fallen", "Stupid", and "World On Fire". Rather than shoot a conventional music video for "World On Fire", McLachlan donated all but $15 of the $150,000 budget to various charitable causes around the world and then used the video to explain how it benefited the communities that received the money.

Another live album, Afterglow Live, was released in late 2004. The CD consisted of several tracks from a full-length concert, which was included in its entirety on a DVD, as well as the three music videos from Afterglow.

In 2004, Darryl "D.M.C." McDaniels, who credits McLachlan and her music for lifting him from a period of depression, invited her to join him on a track from his solo album. Although the album was not released until early 2006, remixes of the song "Just Like Me" were included on a number of compilations in 2005.

In 2007, McLachlan's song "Answer" featured in The Brave One starring Jodie Foster.

Wintersong

In October 2006, McLachlan released a Christmas album called Wintersong. The album included 11 new recordings, featuring covers of Joni Mitchell's "River", Gordon Lightfoot's "Song for a Winter's Night", and John Lennon's "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)", which she recorded with her outreach children and youth choir, and seasonal favourites: "Christmas Time Is Here", "O Little Town of Bethlehem", "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas", "Silent Night", "The First Noel", and "Greensleeves (What Child Is This?)", among others. The title track is an original work of McLachlan's.

Wintersong debuted at No. 42 on the Billboard 200 album chart the week ending 4 November 2006. It peaked at #7. For the week of 5 December 2006, it was the #1 album on iTunes. Worldwide the album has sold over 1.1 million copies to date. It has been certified Platinum in the U.S. and 2x Platinum in Canada.

Wintersong was nominated for both a Grammy Award, in the Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album category, as well as for a Juno Award, for Pop Album of the Year.

Guest appearances

In November 2006, McLachlan performed the song "Ordinary Miracle" for that year's feature film, Charlotte's Web. The song was written by Glen Ballard and David A. Stewart of Eurythmics. McLachlan was the subject of rumours of an Oscar nomination for the song, but in the end was not nominated. She helped to promote the song and movie by performing it on The Oprah Winfrey Show as well as during the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. She also performed the song during the opening ceremony of the 2010 Winter Olympics in her hometown of Vancouver, in front of an estimated 3 billion television viewers worldwide.

In early 2007, she sang on Dave Stewart's Go Green, alongside Nadirah X, Imogen Heap, Natalie Imbruglia, and others.[10]

McLachlan also appeared on Annie Lennox's album, Songs of Mass Destruction. Together with Madonna, Céline Dion, Pink, Sugababes, Angélique Kidjo, k.d. lang, Faith Hill, Fergie, Melissa Etheridge, Bonnie Raitt, Shakira, Anastacia, Joss Stone, Dido, and KT Tunstall, she performed on the song "Sing".

In 2010, McLachlan appeared as herself on the television series Life Unexpected and performed. On September 8, 2010, McLachlan performed and sang "Forgiveness" from her 2010 album Laws of Illusion on a semi-final show of America's Got Talent; she did so again on the Tonight Show, two days later.

On November 22, 2010, McLachlan again performed and sang "Forgiveness" this time on the Regis and Kelly show.

On September 10, 2011, she performed I Will Remember You and Angel at a ceremony in Stonycreek, Pennsylvania, commemorating the passengers and crew of hijacked United Airlines Flight 93 who fought the hijackers and brought down their airplane on September 11, 2001. The event marked the dedication of the Flight 93 National Memorial and was attended by President Bush and First Lady Bush, President Clinton, Vice President Biden and Speaker Boehner.[11]

Rereleases, Rarities Vol 2, and Greatest Hits

On October 3, 2006, the live album Mirrorball was re-released as Mirrorball: The Complete Concert. This release contains 2 discs that were compiled from 2 concerts performed on consecutive nights in April 1998 at the Rose Garden arena in Portland, Oregon.

April 29, 2008 saw the release of Rarities, B-Sides and Other Stuff Volume 2. The tracklist includes McLachlan's recent covers of Joni Mitchell's "River" and Dave Stewart's "Ordinary Miracle", as well as collaborations throughout her career with The Perishers, Cyndi Lauper and Bryan Adams, among others.

August 5, 2008 saw the release of the 15th anniversary 3-disc edition of Fumbling Towards Ecstasy. The set includes the original re-mastered album, The Freedom Sessions and a DVD that includes live performances, music videos and more. The album was released by Legacy Recordings.

McLachlan released a greatest hits album, Closer: The Best of Sarah McLachlan, on October 7, 2008. On August 12, 2008, she released a new song from the album, "U want me 2", a mid-tempo contemplative love song, as a digital single on iTunes; also accompanied with a video performance. McLachlan also admitted the song was inspired by the dissolution of her marriage, which she announced in September 2008, during initial promotion. Being quietly released as a single on 3 February 2009 the other new song found on the album, "Don't Give Up on Us", signalled a wrap.

2010 Winter Olympics, Laws of Illusion and Lilith Fair 2010

A new single, "One Dream," was released on September 29, 2009 and was the official theme song of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.[12] McLachlan's first studio album of original material in seven years, Laws of Illusion, was released on June 15, 2010. New York Times music critic John Pareles says about Laws of Illusion - "It’s a kindly, enveloping sound that Ms. McLachlan has long used to conjure passion and empathy laced with melancholy. But now it encompasses a new anguish, deeper and sharper than what she hinted at with Afterglow in 2003." It features 10 new songs in addition to the previously released tracks "U Want Me 2" and "Don't Give Up on Us," as well as various bonus tracks. Previews of the tracks and bonus materials were made available on iTunes and Amazon.com for listening and viewing on May 26, 2010. Lilith Fair kicked off in Calgary, AB on June 27, 2010. In anticipation of the album and the summer's tour, McLachlan appeared on the WNYC-produced radio show Soundcheck. During the wide-ranging interview, McLachlan discussed the last eleven years of her life and how she has changed — especially as working mother of two — over that time with Soundcheck host John Schaefer. She also played solo two songs from her new album.

Guitars and equipment

For years, Sarah McLachlan's main stage guitar has been a late-'70s Larrivée C-10 with rosewood back and sides, a spruce top, and a Florentine cutaway. The guitar is amplified with a Fishman Rare Earth Blend (which combines a magnetic pickup and an internal mic), running through a Radial JDV Mk3 active DI. She has also performed with Canadian-made Morgan guitars, and at the time of the interview, she was trying out Taylor models with Expression System electronics.

McLachlan strings her guitars with phosphor-bronze or vintage bronze Dean Markleys. She uses medium-lights (.012–.054) for her guitars in E A D G A D and D A D G A D tunings. Sometimes she uses lights (.011–.046) and raises E A D G A D a whole step so her capo positions can be two frets lower. For instance, in the past she played "Building a Mystery" in E A D G A D with a capo at the seventh fret, but now she tunes to F# B E A B E and capoes at the fifth fret. McLachlan's capo of choice is a Dunlop C-Four.[13]

Awards and achievements

McLachlan has been nominated for twenty-one Juno Awards and awarded eight. In 1992, her video for "Into the Fire" was selected as best music video. In 1998, she won Female Vocalist of the Year, Songwriter of the Year (along with Pierre Marchand), Single of the Year for "Building a Mystery", and Album of the Year for Surfacing. In 2000, she won an International Achievement award and in 2004, won Pop Album of the Year for Afterglow and again shared the Songwriter of the Year award with Pierre Marchand for the singles "Fallen", "World on Fire", and "Stupid."

She has also won three Grammy Awards. She was awarded Best Female Pop Vocal Performance in 1997 for "Building a Mystery" and again in 1999 for the live version of "I Will Remember You." She also scored Best Pop Instrumental Performance in 1997 for "Last Dance." Among these, she is credited for various nominations.

Her song "Building A Mystery" came in at 91 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the 90s.[14]

McLachlan has been extensively profiled by media including cover stories for Rolling Stone, Time magazine, Entertainment Weekly and Flare, a Canadian fashion magazine.

Through her career, she has also received many awards, primarily in recognition of her efforts in launching Lilith Fair. She was awarded the Elizabeth Cady Stanton Visionary Award in 1998 for advancing the careers of women in music. In 1999, she was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Canada by then-Governor General Adrienne Clarkson in recognition of her successful recording career, her role in Lilith Fair, and the charitable donations she made to women's shelters across Canada. In 2001, she was inducted to the Order of British Columbia.

On February 12, 2010, McLachlan performed her song "Ordinary Miracle" at the opening ceremony of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

On June 15, 2011, she was recognized with an honorary degree from Simon Fraser University.[15]

Philanthropy

McLachlan contributed the track "Hold On" to the 1993 AIDS-Benefit Album No Alternative produced by the Red Hot Organization. She also performed at the Leonard Peltier Defense Fund Benefit Concert on February 12, 1997 and went on to release a haunting cover version of Unchained Melody created as part of her support for Peltier and later included on the album Rarities, B-Sides and Other Stuff Volume 2.[16]

In early 2005, McLachlan took part in a star-studded tsunami disaster relief telethon on NBC. On 29 January McLachlan was a headliner for a benefit concert in Vancouver along with other Canadian superstars such as Avril Lavigne and Bryan Adams. The show also featured a performance by the Sarah McLachlan Musical Outreach Choir & Percussion Ensemble, a children's choir and percussion band from the aforementioned Vancouver outreach program. In addition to her own headliner show she also joined Delerium live on stage for their first-ever performance of 'Silence'. The concert was titled One World: The Concert for Tsunami Relief, and raised approximately $3.6 million for several Canadian aid agencies working in south and southeast Asia. The show was the brainchild of McLachlan's manager, Terry McBride, CEO of Nettwerk. It ran for four hours and aired live on CTV across Canada.

She is an avid supporter of the ASPCA and animal welfare. She filmed a two-minute advertisement for the organization which featured her song "Angel".[17] The advertisement's imagery of shelter animals mixed with the soundtrack and McLachlan's simple appeal for donations has raised $30 million for the ASPCA since it began to air in 2006, which allowed the organization to air appeals in higher profile prime-time cable ad slots; subsequently the organization produced a new ad for the 2008 holiday season featuring McLachlan appealing for the ASPCA over her Wintersong performance of "Silent Night", and a new ad with her was released in January 2009 featuring the song "Answer".[17]

On July 2, 2005, McLachlan participated in the Philadelphia installment of the Live 8 concerts, where she performed her hit "Angel" with Josh Groban. These concerts, which were held simultaneously in nine major cities around the world, were intended to coincide with the G8 summit to put pressure on the leaders of the world's richest nations to fight poverty in Africa by cancelling debt.

McLachlan also funds an outreach program in Vancouver that provides music education for inner city children. In 2007, the provincial government announced $500,000 in funding for the outreach program.[18]

For raising millions of dollars for causes including women's charities, AIDS sufferers and inner-city kids, Simon Fraser University conferred Sarah McLachlan the degree of Doctor of Fine Arts, honoris causa on June 13, 2011.[19]

Discography

References

  1. ^ "Wintersong > Credits". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. http://www.allmusic.com/album/r857256/credits. Retrieved March 13, 2010. 
  2. ^ "Order of Canada — Sarah McLachlan, O.C., O.B.C.", Governor General of Canada (Office of the Secretary to the Governor General), March 30, 2006, archived from the original on March 18, 2007, http://web.archive.org/web/20070318050704/http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/honours-desc.asp?lang=e&TypeID=orc&id=6456, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  3. ^ Dean, Maury (2003-04). Rock N Roll Gold Rush: A Singles Un-Cyclopedia. Algora Publishing. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-87586-207-1. http://books.google.com/?id=lJS4EArRBwoC. 
  4. ^ "Sarah McLachlan At Her Best", CBS News (CBS Interactive Inc), October 9. 2008, http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/10/09/earlyshow/leisure/celebspot/main4511840.shtml, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  5. ^ "Mom makes music", Canada.com (Canwest), September 30, 2008, http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/news/arts/story.html?id=e8f5f589-b813-472a-aef1-9a38da2a8204, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  6. ^ "New McLachlan Songs Evoke Personal Turmoil", Billboard (Nielsen Business Media), http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003848771#/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003848771, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  7. ^ Essex, Andrew (December 27, 1998), "MUSIC; Forget the Movie. Listen to the CD.", The New York Times (The New York Times Company), http://www.nytimes.com/1998/12/27/movies/music-forget-the-movie-listen-to-the-cd.html?sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  8. ^ a b c Freydkin, Donna (July 28, 1998), "Lilith Fair: Lovely, lively and long overdue", CNN (Turner Broadcasting System), http://www.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/Music/9807/28/lilith.fair/, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  9. ^ Looking for Lilith
  10. ^ "Greenpeace Works". Greenpeace. http://www.greenpeaceworks.org/go_green.php. Retrieved March 13, 2010. [dead link]
  11. ^ "Flight 93 victims remembered in emotional ceremony » Local News » The Tribune Democrat, Johnstown, PA". The Tribune-Democrat (Johnstown, PA). 10 September 2011. http://tribune-democrat.com/local/x1095944616/Flight-93-victims-remembered-in-emotional-ceremony. Retrieved 10 September 2011. 
  12. ^ Inwood, Damian (September 24, 2009), "Olympic songbird Sarah McLachlan releases One Dream", The Province (Canwest), http://www.theprovince.com/entertainment/Olympic+songbird+Sarah+McLachlan+releases+Dream/2030150/story.html, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  13. ^ Pepper Rodgers, Jeffrey (May 2004), "Artist Gear Picks", Acoustic Guitar (String Letter Publishing) (137), http://www.acousticguitar.com/issues/ag137/gear137.html, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  14. ^ "100 Greatest Songs of the '90s — Full Episode Summary". MTV Networks. http://www.vh1.com/shows/the_greatest/episode.jhtml?episodeID=127759. Retrieved March 13, 2010. 
  15. ^ Proctor, David (June 16, 2011), "SFU honours McLachlan", Metro (Vancouver: Metro International), http://www.metronews.ca/vancouver/local/article/891406--sfu-honours-mclachlan, retrieved June 21, 2011 
  16. ^ Sarah McLachlan Biography at Blue Rodeo. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
  17. ^ a b Strom, Stephanie (December 25, 2008), "Ad Featuring Singer Proves Bonanza for the A.S.P.C.A.", The New York Times (The New York Times Company): A20, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/26/us/26charity.html?_r=1, retrieved March 13, 2010 
  18. ^ "B.C. gives $500,000 to music outreach project for youth". Office of the Premier. May 14, 2007. http://www2.news.gov.bc.ca/news_releases_2005-2009/2007OTP0063-000619.htm. Retrieved March 13, 2010. 
  19. ^ "Sarah McLachlan - Doctor of Fine Arts, honoris causa". Simon Fraser University. June 13, 2011. http://www.sfu.ca/sfunews/stories/sarah-mclachlan---doctor-of-fine-arts--honoris-causa.html. Retrieved June 25, 2011. 

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Profiles. Copyright © 1998-2012 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Sarah McLachlan biography from Who2.  Read more
Gale Musician Profiles. Contemporary Musicians © 1989-2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Artists. Copyright © 2012 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Sarah McLachlan Read more

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