Ann Vriend

Ann Vriend is a Canadian singer-songwriter and pianist based in Edmonton, Alberta.

Ann Vriend
Vriend in November 2010
Background information
BornVancouver, British Columbia, Canada
OriginEdmonton, Alberta, Canada
GenresSoul, pop, indie, Americana
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter
InstrumentsPiano
Years active2003  present
Websiteannvriend.com

Vriend has played festivals and venues around the world.[1]

Recording career

Vriend released a popular demo in 2000 which received immediate radio play on stations across western Canada and earned her a spot at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival. A year later she won a songwriting contest which took her to Nashville, Tennessee and helped fund her debut album, Soul Unravelling (2003), which was well received by critics and sold well for an independent release. The album is now in its fifth pressing.[2]

Vriend's second album, Modes of Transport, was released two years later. "Feelin' Fine", the album's first single, was put on heavy rotation by a local adult contemporary/jazz radio station. A third album, When We Were Spies, was released on 11 March 2008. Produced by Juno-nominated Douglas Romanow, it contains fuller production, drawing on modern pop sounds. A single, "St. Paul", received heavy rotation in her hometown of Edmonton and hit the Top 30 on radio stations in Toronto and Cologne (Germany). Vriend's first music video, for "(If We Are Not) Spies", was released in mid-2008.

Love & Other Messes, Vriend's first studio album in almost three years, was released in early 2011. The album features a seven piece band, including vocalists Coco Love Alcorn and Chloe Albert, and includes a duet with Matt Epp. The recording, produced by Vriend herself, was influenced by Nashville, Muscle Shoals, classic R&B and Motown sounds.[3][4] Vriend released a video for "Graffiti on my Heart". Love & Other Messes was number 1 on the CKUA album charts for two weeks[5] and received a 3.5 star review in the Toronto Star.[6]

In 2011, Vriend provided vocals for a topical single called "William and Kate".[7]

Live performances

Vriend has toured Canada, Australia and Europe extensively, both solo and backed by a band.[8] Live recordings from 2008 and 2009 shows, along with new songs recorded live "off-the-floor", were released in late 2009 as Closer Encounters. She released videos for "A Dollar and a Suitcase" and "On Your Street", the two new songs on the album, in 2010.

Vriend is also the curator and host of the Bluebird North performance series in Edmonton.[9] She also performs with the popular 1980s cover band Valiant Thieves.

Television

In August 2010, Vriend appeared on the Australian music and comedy show Spicks and Specks.[10][11] She has also been featured on a regional news program in the Netherlands and has performed on network television in Canada and Australia.[12]

Musical style

Vriend's literary writing style reveals the influence of 1970s singer-songwriters such as Paul Simon, Leonard Cohen, and Cat Stevens. Her distinctive voice has been compared to the clear and vulnerable Nashville sound of Dolly Parton, the playfulness of Cyndi Lauper, and the raw power of Aretha Franklin and Etta James.[13]

Career highlights: 2015 – present

  • Winner of the 2017 Maple Blues Award "Cobalt Music Prize" for recording and composition "All That I Can"
  • May 2017 release (EP) reached No. 1 on CJSR chart (Edmonton), No. 5 on Soundslike Café (Australia), No. 19 on CKUA chart (Canada), No. 90 on North American overall campus charts
  • Winner of nation-wide "She's The One" contest at the Ottawa Bluesfest
  • Nominated for "Female Artist of the Year" at 2017 Edmonton Music Awards
  • Semifinalist at the International Songwriting Competition, pop category
  • Selected to showcase at the Reeperbahn Festival, Big Sound, MIDEM, SXSW, Popkomm, NXNE, Contact East, Junofest, Breakout West
  • Featured in Songwriter's Association of Canada magazine and Elle magazine
  • Appeared on TV talk shows in Germany ("Arte TV"), Australia ("Spicks and Specks, Mornings With Keri Anne"), Canada (CBC National)
  • Songs placed on DVD release of Party of 5, Russian film Kitchen In Paris, YouTube online banking ad, short "Toonlife Dating"
  • Backing band The Rooster Davis Group semi finalists in the 2016 Memphis Blues Challenge, and winner of the Best Self-Produced Blues Album in Northern Alberta, 2015

Performance highlights

  • Kitchener Blues Festival
  • Calgary Bluesfest
  • Ottawa Bluesfest
  • Burlington Sound Of Music Festival
  • Edmonton and Calgary Folk Music Festivals
  • Woodford Folk Music Festival (Australia)
  • Port Fairy Music Festival (Australia)
  • Australia Blues Festival
  • Lethbridge Jazz and Blues Festival
  • Medicine Hat Jazz Festival
  • Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris, France
  • Vinyl Cafe with Stuart MacClean, CBC Radio
  • Radio National (Australia), "The Inside Sleeve"
  • Alainait Arts Festival (Iqaluit)
  • Neukolner Oper (Berlin)
  • Radio Bremen (Germany)
  • Canadian Tourism Events (Sydney, London, Melbourne, St. Louis, Washington D.C., Frankfurt)
  • The Basement (Sydney)
  • Commonwealth Games (Melbourne)
  • New York City: Bitter End, CBGB's, Fez, Arlene's Grocery, Rockwood Music Hall
  • Koerner Hall (Toronto)
  • Canadian Embassy in Brussels for Canada Day celebrations

Discography

  • 2003: Soul Unravelling
  • 2005: Modes of Transport
  • 2007: The Clandestine (EP)
  • 2008: When We Were Spies
  • 2009: Closer Encounters
  • 2011: Love & Other Messes
  • 2014: For The People In The Mean Time
  • 2017: Everybody's different (EP)

References

  1. Sperounes, Sandra. "Edmonton singer Ann Vriend kicks up her heels with new CD". Edmonton Journal. Archived from the original on 7 April 2011. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  2. "Music Break – Ann Vriend". ABC News. 12 October 2005. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  3. Murray, Tom (26 January 2011). "Cleaning up the Messes". Vue Weekly. Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
  4. Mastronardi, Lori; Coutts, Anna; Wong, Brian (30 September 2010). "Vriend brings sultry sound to city Thursday". The London Free Press. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  5. "January 9–22, 2010 CKUA Top 50". CKUA Radio Network. Archived from the original on 25 May 2014. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  6. Terauds, John (26 April 2011). "Vriend's a sweet songbird, Pangman shows off new lungs". Toronto Star. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  7. Wilson, MacKenzie (22 February 2011). "Canadian Musicians Pen 'William and Kate' Song". Anglophenia blog. BBC America. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  8. Cuthbertson, Ian (15 March 2010). "Plucky Canadian vocalist sings an independent tune". The Australian. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  9. "Bluebird North: where writers sing and tell". Edmonton Journal. 1 September 2010. Archived from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 23 February 2011.
  10. Spicks and Specks – Unseen Bits – Bon Jovi Question – Ep 30, 2010. YouTube. 2010. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  11. "Spicks and Specks – Episode Thirty". ABC Television. Archived from the original on 29 June 2013.
  12. Canadese bekendheid zoekt Groningse roots [Canadian notoriety looking for Groningen roots] (in Dutch). YouTube, RTV Noord. 2009.
  13. "Ann Vriend". Elle. August 2006.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.