Emmylou Harris
Emmylou Harris is truly a modern innovator. For over 30 years, Emmylou
has flowed effortlessly between genres, achieving popularity in pop,
folk, country and now alternative. The common bridge is an exquisite
vocal style and a gift for discovering the heart of a song.
Born in Birmingham, Alabama, on April 2, 1947, the daughter of Walter
and Eugenia Harris grew up near Washington, D.C. As a college student
in the late ‘60s, she sang with a local folk duo and eventually
moved to Greenwich Village. She played the clubs on the local folk scene
occasionally sharing the stage with Jerry Jeff Walker and David Bromberg.
Emmylou was discovered in 1971 by Chris Hillman. Hillman brought Gram
Parsons to hear her sing in a small club in the Washington D.C. area.
In 1972, she answered the call from Gram to join him in Los Angeles
to work on his first solo album, GP. After Gram died in 1973,
Emmylou went back to the D.C. area and formed a country band, playing
with them until her 1975 major label debut, Pieces of the Sky, when
she formed the first version of the legendary Hot Band. Over the years
the Hot Band included world class players such as Albert Lee, Rodney
Crowell and Hank DeVito.
Emmylou has been called by Billboard Magazine a "truly
venturesome, genre-transcending pathfinder." Throughout her career,
she has been admired for her talent as an artist and song connoisseur,
but it was with her 2000 album, Red Dirt Girl, for which Ms.
Harris was awarded her tenth (out of eleven total to date) Grammy, that
she revealed she is also a gifted songwriter. Continuing the trend with
her September 2003 album, Stumble Into Grace, Emmylou wrote
ten of the album's eleven tracks.
Though Emmylou is the most admired and influential woman in contemporary
country music, her scope extends far beyond it. She has recorded with
such diverse artists as Ryan Adams, Beck, Elvis Costello, Johnny Cash,
Lucinda Williams, Bob Dylan, Tammy Wynette, Neil Young, The Chieftains,
Lyle Lovett, Roy Orbison, The Band, Willie Nelson and George Jones.
A longtime social activist, Harris has lent her voice to many causes.
She is active in cultural preservation issues, notably the Country Music
Foundation and the Grand Ole Opry. As an animal rights activist and
the owner of several dogs and cats, Emmylou also supports PETA (People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) and the Humane Society. Since
1997 she has been the most visible spokesperson for the Campaign for
a Landmine Free World, drawing public attention and notable musical
artists to the cause.