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2005 Canadian
Folk Award for
the CD Love
Sweet Love
Best English Songwriter and Best Contemporary
Singer
2003 Juno for the
CD Unravel
Best Roots
and Traditional Album (Solo)
“Canadian songbird
Lynn Miles sings lusciously on her fifth
country-tinged, folk-pop album. Smart lyrics abound as she expounds
on love lost and gained, sketched with dark hues and rising tempos.” - Billboard
Magazine
Born outside
Montreal in Sweetsburg, Quebec, Lynn Miles grew up in a musical home.
Her father played the harmonica and listened to his jazz collection
while her mother was a lover of both opera and country music. Miles’ mother
recalled once that she knew when Lynn had finally fallen asleep in
her crib: Lynn stopped singing. During her elementary school years,
Miles learned guitar, violin, flute and piano. She began performing
in public at around the age of sixteen and when she was in her early
twenties she studied with an opera singer to strengthen her voice
and enrolled for a time at Carleton University in Ottawa where she
studied classical music history and theory. Years later, Miles put
this training to good use while serving as a voice teacher at the
Ottawa Folklore Center. While at the center, she taught voice to
many students including a then fourteen-year-old Alanis Morrisette.
The lessons came just prior to the making of Morrisette’s first
album.
Though Miles had been writing her own songs
since the age of 10, she didn’t end up recording any of her
own material until 1987 when she cut 9 original compositions for
a demo at Happyrock Studio in Ottawa. An avid reader and music-lover,
those early recordings were inspired by the books she loved to
read, and the music she listened to on the radio.
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Miles continues to draw inspiration
from music and literature to this day. On her latest album (Love
Sweet Love) for example, the opening track, “Flames of Love,” was
inspired by a long period of reading Sufi poetry. "I’m
fascinated by the way the Sufis write about love," Miles says. "Their
love is spiritual, and I reinterpreted it and wrote ‘Flames
of Love,’ about jumping in the fire, Lynn Miles letting go
and not being afraid and letting it get hot and not caring about
what other people think. Just really going for it." The idea – and
the song itself – is exhilarating and exciting, yet full of
hidden corners and alleyways from where the joy can be blindsided
without notice. But as Miles notes, "You don't learn from happiness."
If that's true, one gets the sense
that Miles has learned a lot. In a career that has seen her move
from Ottawa to Nashville to Los Angeles and back to Ottawa, and release
albums as varied as the slick Night in a Strange Town (co-produced
by Larry Klein, of Shawn Colvin and Joni Mitchell fame, and featuring
renowned west-coast studio musicians David Piltch, Dean Parks, John
Cody and Tal Bergman) and the stark Unravel, Miles has consistently
been unflinching in putting it all out there: the unbridled ecstasy
of new-found love, the fragile process of sweeping up the pieces
when it breaks.
The accolades, meanwhile, continue to pour in.
Her 1996 album, Slightly Haunted, was a Billboard Top 10 Pick of
the Year. Unravel (released 2001) was praised by critics – All
Music Guide describing it as "sounding as if it's been produced
by Daniel Lanois in an Appalichian town" and "a diamond
in the rough." Canadian folk-music icon Valdy once said, "I'm
sorry for all the heartache she has to go through in order to get
those juices going, but, yeah, she's marvelous." The New York
Times may have said it best: "Lynn Miles makes being forlorn
sound like a state of grace."
Her latest album, Love Sweet Love (Red House Records – February
7, 2006), is a road album. Songs like “Night Drive”, “Sweet
and Tender Heart”, “8 Hour Drive” and “Never
Coming Back” trace the metaphorical journey of the human heart,
sketching a roadmap of modern relationships and heartache. Miles
recorded Love Sweet Love with a first-rate collection of Canadian
musicians: Unravel producer, guitarist, longtime-friend and collaborator
Ian LeFeuvre and drummer Peter Von Althen (both of the Canadian band
Starling); Chelsea Bridge double-bassist John Geggiem; Prairie Oyster
guitarist Keith Glass and violinist James Stephens all lend their
talents to Love Sweet Love. The result of this collaboration is a
warm, hopeful sound in perfect harmony with Miles’ smart, heartbreaking
lyrics. |