Cindy Church
Cindy Church | |
---|---|
Origin | Bible Hill, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Genres | Country, folk |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar |
Years active | 1987-present |
Labels | Stony Plain |
Associated acts |
Quartette Ian Tyson |
Website | www.cindychurch.com |
Cindy Church is a Canadian country and folk artist. Church released three studio albums on Stony Plain Records and was nominated for Best Country Female Vocalist at the Juno Awards in 1995 and 1996. She is also a member of the award winning group Quartette.
Biography
In 1984, Cindy Church, along with guitarist Nathan Tinkham, joined Ian Tyson's band, the Chinook Arch Raiders. Church sang background vocals on three of Tyson's albums.[1] In 1987, Church and Tinkham joined the traditional country music trio Great Western Orchestra originally founded by Neil Bentley, Dave Hamilton and mandolinist David Wilkie.[2] The group recorded an album for Sony Music Canada and received a 1990 Juno Award nomination for Best Country Group or Duo. Church launched a solo career in 1992 with the release of the single "The Road to Home."[3] Her second single, "A Song for Brent," was recorded in honour of Brent Berezay, who became a paraplegic following a rodeo accident.[4] Proceeds from the song went to the Song for Brent Society.
Church won Female Artist of the Year at the 1993 Alberta Country Music Awards.[5] That same year, she joined singer-songwriters Sylvia Tyson, Caitlin Hanford and Colleen Peterson to form the country and folk music group Quartette. Quartette won the Canadian Country Music Association's award for Vocal Collaboration of the Year in 1994 and received three consecutive Juno Award nominations for Best Country Group or Duo from 1995-1997. Peterson was forced to leave the group when she was diagnosed with cancer in 1996. She chose her friend Gwen Swick to fill in for her.
Church issued her debut solo album, Love on the Range, in 1994.[3] Included was the Top 20 single "Rockabilly Heart." She received a nomination from the Canadian Country Music Association for Female Artist of the Year, and was also nominated for Best Country Female Vocalist at the Juno Awards in 1995 and 1996.[3] Her second studio album, Just a Little Rain, was released in 1995.
Church's eponymous third album was released in 1996. The album featured a duet with Ian Tyson on a song written by Tyson, "What Does She See." The collaboration resulted in a 1998 Juno Award nomination for Best Country Group or Duo. Church continues to perform as a member of Quartete, who issued their sixth studio album, Down at the Fair, in 2007. She is also a member of the group Lunch At Allen's and performs in a tribute to Hoagy Carmichael, "The Nearness of You."[6]
During the summer of 2016, Church was performing with singers Marc Jordan, Murray McLauchlan and Ian Thomas in the group Lunch At Allen's, in a number of towns and small cities in Ontario, Canada.[7]
Discography
Albums
Year | Title |
---|---|
1994 | Love on the Range |
1995 | Just a Little Rain |
1996 | Cindy Church |
2012 | Sad Songs Make Me Happy |
Singles
Year | Single | CAN Country | Album | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1992 | "The Road to Home" | — | Love on the Range | ||||||
1993 | "A Song for Brent" | 19 | Non-album song | ||||||
1994 | "Rockabilly Heart" | 19 | Love on the Range | ||||||
"Love on the Range" | 43 | ||||||||
"This October Day" | 32 | ||||||||
1995 | "My Wishing Room" | — | |||||||
"Still a Fool" | 40 | Just a Little Rain | |||||||
"Trying to Rope the Wind" | 50 | ||||||||
1996 | "Never Got Over You" | 60 | |||||||
"Sleeping Alone" | 68 | ||||||||
"Sweet Dreams of You" | 72 | Cindy Church | |||||||
1997 | "My Baby" | 54 | |||||||
"Lover Please" | 44 | ||||||||
1998 | "Wichita" | — | |||||||
"Whispering Pines" | — | ||||||||
"—" denotes the single failed to chart or not released | |||||||||
References
- ↑ Cindy Church
- ↑ Great Western Orchestra
- 1 2 3 allmusic ((( Cindy Church > Biography )))
- ↑ Country song for Alberta teen helped build home for brain injured youths
- ↑ CANOE -- JAM! Music - Pop Encyclopedia - Church, Cindy
- ↑ Quartette - Cindy Church
- ↑ Doolan, Susan (June 10, 2016). "Lunch At Allen's brings talented musicians back to Barrie". Barrie Examiner. Barrie Examiner. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
Their approach to a concert is like a band, not as a singer-songwriter event. They all play on each others’ songs and sing and harmonize together.