Image Courtesy of IMG Artists.
Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, and Dolly Parton revolutionized country music and blazed a trail for future generations of female artists. With their chart-topping hits and record-breaking sales, Patsy, Loretta, and Dolly wove threads of contemporary womanhood throughout the tapestry of country music, resulting in unprecedented commercial success and earning each a place in the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Trailblazing Women of Country, will entertain and inspire audiences during this pivotal moment in our nation’s history, featuring soloists, Miko Marks, CMT's 2022, "Next Woman of Country"; and Nashville based singer, KristinaTrain, supported by a 5-member all-female band.
Cline, Lynn, and Parton harnessed country music’s rich storytelling tradition to offer their uniquely empowered—and unmistakably female—perspective on issues faced by women of their day. Their shared legacy of musical excellence, earthy glamour, and unapologetic authenticity continues to resonate with listeners of all ages and backgrounds in the 21st century.
Patsy’s assured contralto affirms that a woman can be heartbroken and sure of herself at the same time (“Crazy,”“Walkin’ After Midnight”); Loretta Lynn’s songs exalt autonomy attained through contraception (“The Pill”) andself-respect (“Don’t Come Home A-Drinkin’ with Lovin’ On Your Mind”); and Dolly Parton demonstrates that a womancan ascend the career ladder (“9-to-5”) while never losing sight of her roots (“Coat of Many Colors”).
Through their singular voices and artistry, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, and Dolly Parton defied restrictive gender norms, proving that women can be at once beautiful and strong, vulnerable, and powerful.
Photo courtesy of IMG Artists.
The Wall Street Journal has described it as a “genre and industry-defying mission.” NPR declared it a “multilayered experience.” The New York Times commended the movement as carving out a new path in country music. All tell the story of Miko Marks’ resurgence as she deftly blends country, blues, southern rock and even gospel to create a sound and experience that has literally brought every audience to its feet. This new sound along with her warm and soulful spirit catapulted her into a community of change with her doing more than breaking ground - she’s shattering it. It’s a serendipitous realization that Marks was meant to be here, at this time, in this moment, for good.
After releasing her critically-acclaimed album, Our Country (via Redtone Records) in March 2021, Marks dove head first into an industry that previously never fully embraced her. She closed out 2021 with her EP release, Race Records, which shined a light on the arbitrary divisions forced upon artists and audiences in the early days of music marketing in the 1940s. In January of this year, Marks was named to CMT’s Next Women of Country Class of 2022 and by April, she stood alongside five other artists and managers chosen to participate in the inaugural Equal Access Development Program, a program designed by mtheory and CMT to foster and support marginalized communities underrepresented in the genre of country music. Now more than ever, the change needed is beginning to come to fruition; a change Marks feared she wouldn’t bear witness to in her existence: “I get emotional around it, because I didn’t think I would see any of this in my lifetime,” Marks says.
Nearly one year after the release of Our Country, Marks released the first single, “Feel Like Going Home” (March 25, 2022) from her forthcoming project of the same name, due this fall. The lyrics sing, “Rest for the wanderer who never more shall roam.” For Marks, the time to reclaim her roots that were planted long ago is now; a powerful reconnection that can be felt in every note. No longer a wanderer, Marks has returned to her true self after years of trying to figure out her place in the world and in her first true love: music.
Feel Like Going Home is an amalgamation of where Marks has been and where she is going. What she has learned and what she wants to teach. It’s an innermost look at the ebb and flow of her past, present and future. It’s the stories she wants to tell but hasn’t been able to speak into existence ever before. The messages are profound: healing, restoration and distinctly individual. Feel Like Going Home will be released on October 14, 2022.
Find Miko Marks on her , , , , and .
Photo courtesy of IMG Artists.
It is in the briefest of phrases, notes and words, that Kristina Train shows herself to be that all-too-rare thing: a singer who can take the simplest of lyrics and not only occupy them, heart-and-soul, but wring from them alevel of emotion, conviction and intensity that has always sorted truly great singing from the merely average.
As Kristina sings, you hear not only the immaculate phrasing and innatemusicality, but the experiences-the joy and the heartache, the set backs and the triumphs-that she brings to them. Singing was always this ingrained and significant for her, she says. “I’ve learned that the clichés about music and being musical exist for a reason. I was singing before I started speaking-it was a completely natural thing. As a child, it wasalways music, only music, always singing, only singing, and that’s all I cared about.”
Although born in New York, Kristina moved with her mother to Savannah, Georgia when she was 10, living in a house without cable television, but plenty of classical, rock, pop and soul music. Even at that young age, she was already something of a veteran on her first instrument, violin. “I’m very grateful to my mother for that,” Kristina says,“because not only did I have my voice, I was able to train my ear and communicate, to ‘speak’ music because of playing violin.” Even so, there were times, she admits, where the regime of daily practice along with school and community orchestra began to lose its appeal. Especially asher mother had, she says, first got her started on the instrument afterreading that very young children who took up the violin were more likely to excel academically. “When I was growing up, my mother played records all the time-music was always there. Home was an incredibly nurturing environment, artistically, because I was anonly child who enjoyed filling mytime with music. It was another family member or friend to me. Yet, as free as my artistic upbringing was, it was also extremely strict and by-the-book.
My mother is a school principal, so herlife's work is education, andalthough at home, I had a spacious creative allowance, as far as academics went, there was none of that. She encouraged music mainlyto bolster mystudies andwanted me to realise that the real world doesn’t always afford you the dreams you desire.“But to me,” she says,“I knew I was going to be a musician, and I couldn’t understand why anyone would want me to do anything else.”
Growing up in the American South, Kristina says, meant music was a nonstop soundtrack to your life. “It’s rooted in the place,” she enthuses. “Everywhere you go you hear southern sounds: soul, gospel, blues, southern rock, country, jazz; it’s such a vivid part of living down there. People love listening to music, and that really stuck with me.”
In her teens, Kristina would standon her roof during thunderstorms, liftback her head and holler at the tempestuous sky. Why, exactly? The answer is not what you would expect. She did it, she says, in order toroughen up her voice, which she considered too sweet for the music–Janis, Led Zeppelin, Howlin' Wolf-she was then listening to. The experiment was only partly successful. Yes, there is an unmistakableedge to Kristina’s voice these days; but there is also the soulful poppurity she once sought to banish–and it is the tension between the two that elevates her singing to greatness. Think "gritty" double-dapping" pretty."
Kristina’s sublime 2009 debut album released on Blue Note Records,Spilt Milk, alerted critics, who raved about the arrival of asinger of such captivating gifts. Making the record was also a return toher birthplace, New York City, where she regularly enjoyed advice andconversations with Arif Mardin and Bruce Lundvall. Work on Dark Black, her second album, began when she got off the road following a 20-month world tour with Herbie Hancock. This was a particularly fertile period of growth, learning from the "Maestro," as she lovingly refers tohim. While her multi-layered richness took her beyond genre on this album, her emotion and believability indicated soul atits deepest andmost timeless, prompting Bruce Springsteen to count himself a new fanand friend.
After years living in New York and London, Kristina decided when itcame to recording again, she wanted the sessions to be intimate, low-key, and a return toher roots. Kristina sought out the musicians who hired her for her very first recording session and began writing and recording whilst decompressing on a farm in Tennessee.
She's travelled a long and sometimes circuitous path to the latest release of her single, We The People. New York, Savannah, back to New York, London, and finally Nashville. Along the way, she has gathered life experiences-some of them welcome, some of them not. But now she has achieved what all great singers seek to achieve: the channelling of these experiences into songs.
The musicians who draw most evocatively from life in their songs have tended to be those who, musically, carry no passport. There are no defined boundaries in their creative explorations. Kristina is emphatically one of those. “I have yet to feel that I've gone everywhere I want to go in mylife, or my music. I don't think I ever will. I enjoy moving around, and want to understand more of theworld we live in.”
That said, she finds Nashville endlessly inspiring. “I'm glad to feel athome for abit. I'm still a loner, but I think feeling a little isolated anduncertain can help you discover things about yourself. It's also given me time and space to develop meaningful relationships with people I love making music with."
After two albums filled with musings on relationship-basedl ove and loss, Kristina returns with a heart-breaking reflectionon the socio-political landscape of America. Blending influences from chamber music, folk, and jazz, We the People, is a call for change.
“What’s the price of our freedom?” Train sings, “It’s the light we possess.”
Find Kristina Train on her , , , , and .
Musician's Name | Instrument | Photo |
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Megan Palmer | Musical Director, Piano | ![]() |
Morgan Blaney | Bass | ![]() |
Heather Thomas | Drums | ![]() |
Thayer Sarrano | Acoustic Guitar, Keyboards | ![]() |
Anne McCue | Electric Guitar, Lap Steel | ![]() |
Eli Wolf is a producer, executive producer, A&R person, and music executive. Eli began his careerat Blue Note Records, where he was mentored by Bruce Lundvall. In his 20-plus years in themusic business, Eli has A&R-ed and produced a wide array of artists spanning diverse genres,including singer-songwriter, alternative, country, Americana, R&B, pop, hip-hop, indie rock, jazz,world, classical, andfilm soundtrack. Career milestones include working closely with Grammy-winning artist Norah Jones since the beginning of her career; conceptualizing, executiveproducing, and A&R-ing Al Green’s Grammy-winning albumLay it Down; signing and producingGrammy-winning hip-hop/jazz crossover artist Robert Glasper; and signing and A&R-ing singer-songwriter Amos Lee. Eli produced Norah Jones’s album,Day Breaks, which charted at #2 onthe Billboard Top 200 and has, to date, sold over one million albums worldwide. Additionalcareer highlights include projects with Grammy-winning artists Willie Nelson, Elvis Costello, TheRoots, Anita Baker, Wynton Marsalis, Angelique Kidjo, & Brittany Howard.
The project was supported by a Grassroots Grant from the with funding from the a division of the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources.
Learn more about Western Carolina Universitiy's Campus Theme by visiting go.wcu.edu/campustheme.
We look forward to seeing you at Trailblazing Women of Country - A Tribute to Patsy, Loretta, and Dolly on Thursday, April 18, 2024, at 7:30 pm. Doors will open to the performance 30 min before the show is set to start.
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