Bonnie Bishop

Bonnie Elizabeth Bishop is a country rock singer-songwriter from Texas.

Singer-songwriter Bonnie Bishop.


Education and early life

Bishop graduated with a sociology degree from the University of Texas at Austin in 2001.[1]

Career

In 2012, Bishop's idol Bonnie Raitt recorded the song "Not Cause I Wanted To."[2] which she wrote with NRBQ guitarist "Big Al" Anderson. The song was selected as a New York Times Best Song of 2012[2] "Not Cause I Wanted To" and won a Grammy in 2013. Raitt later recorded Bishop's song "Undone."[3] Another song Bishop wrote entitled "The Best Songs Come From Broken Hearts" appeared on the 2013 TV show Nashville. [4][5]

After a decade of touring Bishop took a break and attended graduate school at Sewanee – University of the South for creative writing. She was contacted by David Cobb and he produced her album "Ain’t Who I Was" which was released in 2016 .[6]

Albums

  • Bonnie Bishop (2002)
  • Long Way Home (2004)
  • Soft to the Touch (2005)
  • Bonnie Bishop and Friends: Live at Magnolia Avenue (2006)
  • Things I Know (2009)
  • Free (2012)
  • Ain't Who I Was (2016)
  • House Sessions Vol. 1 (2019)
  • The Walk (2019)
gollark: Instead of having a system you can emulate in software, they just... solder in a reprogrammable hardware thing? Because that makes sense.
gollark: It's really stupid *too*!
gollark: I assumed you would like it, it's an authoritarian-government sort of thing.
gollark: SIM cards do waaaay too much.
gollark: Mobile networks apparently have !!FUN!! security issues.

References

  1. Guerra, Joey (November 10, 2005). "Living on the edge of country: Bonnie Bishop gets down, dirty on 'Soft to the Touch'", Houston Chronicle.
  2. "Bonnie Bishop - Free - Interview and Music - Americana Music Show". Americana Music Show Podcast. 2012-11-12. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
  3. "Grammys 2013: Winners List". Billboard. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
  4. "AllMusic Review".
  5. "Wall Street Journal - Speakeasy with Bonnie Bishop".
  6. "Hear Bonnie Bishop's Soul-Drenched 'Ain't Who I Was'". Rolling Stone. 2016-04-08. Retrieved 2016-05-04.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.