Carsie Blanton

Carsie Blanton
Background information
Birth name Carson Amanda Blanton
Born July 22, 1985
Origin Luray, Virginia
Genres Singer-songwriter, rock music, folk, jazz
Occupation(s) Vocalist, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 2005-present
Labels Independent
Associated acts Devon Sproule, The Wood Brothers, Anais Mitchell, Mark Erelli
Website www.carsieblanton.com

Carson Amanda "Carsie" Blanton (born July 22, 1985 in Bethesda, Maryland) is an American singer-songwriter based in New Orleans, Louisiana who performs on guitar and piano.

Blanton has released five studio albums—Ain’t So Green (2005), Buoy (2009), Idiot Heart (2012), Not Old, Not New (2014), So Ferocious (2016)—and three EPs—Hush (2002), Beau (2010), Rude Remarks and Dirty Jokes (2013). In November 2011, Blanton opened multiple shows on Paul Simon's So Beautiful or So What tour [1]

In 2013, she ran a successful Kickstarter campaign to fund her record Not Old, Not New, raising over $60,000. She is also known for her blog, which deals with topics of a sexual nature. Blanton is considered "one of the best singer/songwriters in the business." Loudon Wainwright III says she is a "young up-and-comer . . at the top of my list.".[2]

Life and career

Carsie Blanton grew up in Luray, Virginia. She began taking piano lessons at age six, and playing guitar and writing songs at age thirteen. In 2002, at age sixteen, Blanton went to live in a group house with other artists and musicians in Eugene, Oregon. In Eugene, she sang back-up vocals for a touring funk group (The Champagne Syndicate), took up swing dancing, and started her first band (The Short Skirts). She recorded and self-released her first album Hush in 2002. Her first studio album Ain’t So Green, produced by Steve Van Dam of Everything), followed in 2005.

In 2006, Blanton relocated from Eugene to Philadelphia to pursue her music career full-time. She began working with manager Bill Eib (Amos Lee, Mutlu Onaral), and by 2007 she was playing over one hundred live shows a year. In 2010, Blanton performed live on NPR's nationally syndicated program, Mountain Stage,[3] and opened for The Weepies [4] and Shawn Colvin.[5] In 2011, Blanton toured with Anais Mitchell's Hadestown: A Folk Opera, playing the role of Head Fate,[6] and opened multiple shows on Paul Simon's So Beautiful or So What tour. In 2014, Blanton performed on the nationally-syndicated NPR program Song Travels with Michael Feinstein.

Blanton's "Smoke Alarm" is used as the theme song for the podcast Tangentially Speaking with Dr. Christopher Ryan.[7] She has appeared multiple times as a guest of the show.

Discography

Year Album
2002 Hush
2005 Ain't So Green
2009 Buoy
2010 Beau EP
2012 Idiot Heart
2014 Not Old, Not New
2016 So Ferocious

Music Videos

Year Video
2010 Baby Can Dance
2012 Backseat
2013 Backbone
2013 Smoke Alarm
2014 Laziest Gal in Town
2016 Hot Night
2016 Vim & Vigor

Industry Influence

Blanton is co-founder of an online tool for the music industry, Quidplayer, an embeddable “pay what you please” MP3 player and store.[8] Quidplayer allows fans to download tracks directly from artists, and to set the price they want for those tracks.

Blanton created Quidplayer in 2008 with Jon Darvill. In her online biography, Blanton states the following in reference to this approach: “My true calling as an artist is to share…What I actually want to do is make beautiful music and then give it to everyone, regardless of what they give me back.” Since 2011, Blanton has released all of her music (digital and physical) using the "pay what you please" approach.[9]

References

  1. "Paul Simon Still Approaches His Songs with Enthusiasm". Richmond Times Dispatch. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  2. "Carsie Blanton - Bio". carsieblanton.com/about. Retrieved 2015-03-15.
  3. "Carsie Blanton on Mountain Stage". npr.org. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  4. "Married indie-pop duo The Weepies, now parents, return with reflective album". news-herald.com. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  5. "Shawn Colvin Serenades Sold-Out Landmark Audience". Port Washington Patch. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  6. "Songwriter Anais Mitchell brings "Hadestown" folk opera to Norfolk". dailypress.com. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  7. "Tangentially Speaking". feralaudio.com. Retrieved 2014-07-21.
  8. "Quidplayer". quidplayer.com. Archived from the original on 2011-11-03. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  9. "The Big Exciting News". blogspot.com. Retrieved 2012-01-12.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.