Erin McCarley

Erin McCarley
Background information
Born (1979-01-08) January 8, 1979
Garland, Texas, United States
Genres Adult alternative
Occupation(s) musician, singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, Guitar, Omnichord
Labels Universal Motown, Universal Republic, Republic
Associated acts
Website http://www.erinmccarley.com/

Erin Elizabeth McCarley[2] (born January 8, 1979 in Garland, Texas) is an alternative music singer-songwriter. McCarley attended college at Baylor University, and is now based in Nashville, Tennessee.[3][4] She has been compared to Sara Bareilles, Regina Spektor, and Sheryl Crow.[3][5] Erin released her follow-up to 2009's Love, Save the Empty on August 28, 2012, titled My Stadium Electric.

Biography

Influences

Near the top of the list of McCarley’s favorite artists are names like Fiona Apple, Patty Griffin and Greg Laswell (the latter of whom co-wrote “Bobblehead”).

Beginning of Musical Career

McCarley currently calls Nashville home, but she cut her musical teeth in San Diego, where she’d moved after college to pursue a life that did not feature music at its center. It was during this bout that McCarley met producer/writer/keyboardist Jamie Kenney (the rare partner she felt 100 percent comfortable with), and the two began honing the songs that would make up Love, Save the Empty.

Love, Save the Empty

In 2008, McCarley traveled the annual SXSW Music Festival where she was discovered by her label Universal Republic Records. Love, Save the Empty, was released digitally on December 30, 2008 via iTunes debuting #86 on the Billboard Top 200 Album. Chart[6] A physical album followed on January 6, 2009. The first single from the album, "Pony (It's OK)" was the iTunes Single of the Week for the first week of 2009.

During 2008, she was part of the "Hotel Café Tour" playing across the United States, and also performed at the 2008 SxSW festival.[7][8] She was also part of the "Ten Out of Tenn" tour in Winter 2008/2009. Erin spent 2009 on the road with various musicians including Brett Dennen,[9] James Morrison,[10] Paolo Nutini[11] and Mat Kearney.[12] In May 2013, she performed the song "Re-arrange Again" with K.S. Rhoads at the Oslo Freedom Forum in Oslo, Norway.[13]

My Stadium Electric

On August 28, 2012, McCarley's second album, My Stadium Electric, was released exclusively to iTunes. "Amber Waves" was promoted as the iTunes Single of the Week.

Discography

Albums

No. Title Length
1. "Pony (It's OK)"    
2. "Blue Suitcase"    
3. "Sticky-Sweet"    
4. "Lovesick Mistake"    
5. "Love, Save the Empty"    
6. "It's Not That Easy"    
7. "Hello/Goodbye"    
8. "Pitter-Pat"    
9. "SleepWalking"    
10. "Bobble Head"    
11. "Gotta Figure This Out"    
No. Title Length
1. "Elevator"   3:33
2. "You're Not That Someone"   3:22
3. "What I Needed"   3:38
4. "Pop Gun"   2:45
5. "Vertigo"   3:17
6. "Re-Arrange Again"   4:04
7. "Fever"   3:32
8. "There's No Holding You Down"   3:29
9. "Survey"   3:45
10. "Amber Waves"   4:14
11. "Just Another Day"   3:03
12. "Hush Hush"   3:47
Total length:
42:29

Singles

Guest appearances

Music videos

Compilations

[14]

Television performances

References

  1. "Deorro feat. Erin McCarley - I Can Be Somebody (External Video)". Ultra Music. 14 August 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
  2. "Texas Births, 1926-1995". familytreelegends.com. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  3. 1 2 Chase, Sandy (2008) "LIVE AND DANGEROUS: Erin McCarley floats with ease, Hana Pestle drowns and Joshua Radin sadly goes 'belly up': Recent performances at this venue have viewers either 'happy' or 'sad'.", The America's Intelligence Wire (registration required)
  4. Zuckerman, Suzanne (2009) "Who's That: Singer Erin McCarley
  5. Leahey, Andrew (2008) "4 to watch in early '09", Washington Times, December 26, 2008
  6. "iTunes Sales Lift Three Acts To The Billboard 200 | Billboard.biz". web.archive.org. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  7. The Hotel Café Tour 2008
  8. Belz, Leigh (2008) "Erin McCarley checks in from the Hotel Cafe Tour", Teen Vogue, October 29, 2008
  9. "Erin McCarley Proves Shes More Than Pops Pretty New Face | MusicWorld | BMI.com". bmi.com. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  10. "BrightestYoungThings: Heartthrobbing: James Morrison / Erin McFarley @ 930 Club". eb.archive.org. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  11. "Paolo Nutini with Matt Hires and Erin McCarley @ 9:30 Club, Washington DC | popwreckoning". eb.archive.org. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  12. "Soul-Audio » Features » Concert Review: Mat Kearney with Erin McCarley". eb.archive.org. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  13. "YouTube - Erin McCarley and K.S. Rhoads - Re-Arrange Again - Oslo Freedom Forum 2013". youtube.com. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  14. "iTunes Store". ax.search.itunes.apple.com. Retrieved 2014-01-26.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.