KC Groves
KC Groves | |
---|---|
Born | 15 March 1971 |
Origin | Dearborn, Michigan |
Genres | Americana Bluegrass |
Instrument(s) | Mandolin, Guitar, Vocals |
Website | KC Groves' website |
Katherine "KC" Groves (born March 14, 1971) is an American mandolin player and singer specializing in old-time music and bluegrass. She grew up in Dearborn, Michigan and lives now in Lyons, Colorado. Coming from a musical family, her father is a singer and a country yodeler, she had piano lessons at the age of six, though she hated them.[1]
In the early 1990s she began playing guitar, writing songs, and learning mandolin.[2] Groves established herself in the Ann Arbor / Detroit alternative music scene. In 1999, she released her first CD, Can You Hear It, produced by Charles Sawtelle, and won the Detroit Music Award for Best Bluegrass Artist / Group.[2][3] KC liked piano enough to play jazz gigs on the weekends while attending UM and played with the band Tomcat. In addition, she painted the mural on the iconic local party store: The Blue Front.[4] Prior to 1999 She released 2 CDs in the Ann Arbor/ Ypsilanti area. The Uncle Earl Album was produced by John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin. [5] Together with Jo Serrapere she founded the old-time music band Uncle Earl.
Her second solo CD, Something Familiar was released in 2004.
Discography
Can You Hear It
1999 (One Man Clapping Records)
- Can You Hear It?/Lost Indian
- Peach Pie
- New Mexico
- Little Sky
- You Think We're Friends
- Pony Days
- When the Wind Blows Free
- Hold On
- Weedin' Onions
- I'll Take You in My Arms
- Bad Boy Blues
- And the World Turns Around
Something Familiar
2004 (KC Groves)
- Snapshots of a Life
- Thinking in Terms
- Denver to Telluride
- Heidi
- Soft Complaint
- Something That Happens
- Keep on Lookin'
- Just Like the Snow
- Song in My Heart
- What Went Wrong
- St. Vrain Waltz
External links
References
- ^ "Uncle Earl Website". Uncle Earl. Archived from the original on 2007-11-27. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
- ^ a b "Review on cd baby". CD Baby. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
- ^ "Review on Elderly Instruments". Elderly Instruments. Archived from the original on 2011-01-01. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
- ^ Steve Richter former Ark sound tech
- ^ Bob Goodden, fellow member at Nakamura Co-op where she boarded and lived in the ICC Inter-Co-operative Council