Kim Barlow

Kim Barlow (born March 10, 1969) is a Canadian folk singer and musician.

Kim Barlow
Born (1969-03-10) March 10, 1969
Montreal, Quebec
GenresFolk
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter
InstrumentsCello, clawhammer banjo, guitar
Years active1999–present
LabelsCaribou, Jericho Beach
Associated actsChristine Fellows, Old Man Luedecke, Mathias Kom, Catherine MacLellan, Raghu Lokanathan, Heather Kelday, Kim Beggs
Websitekimbarlow.ca

Biography

Barlow was born in Montreal, Quebec,[1] and raised in rural Nova Scotia,[2] she studied classical guitar at Florida State University before moving to the Yukon in the 1990s. In 2013 she left the Yukon so she could move back to Nova Scotia.[3]

Music career

Kim Barlow has released on the independent record label Caribou Records in Whitehorse, Yukon and on Jericho Beach Music in Vancouver. Her album Saplings (2010) was produced with Jean Martin of Barnyard Records in Toronto and Bob Hamilton at Old Crow Recording in Whitehorse.[4]

She has toured across Canada and internationally as a solo artist and as part of the Pan Canadian New Folk Ensemble tour with Christine Fellows and Old Man Luedecke. She frequently collaborates with Mathias Kom of The Burning Hell in the side project Spring Breakup.

Her second album, Gingerbread, was a nominee for Roots and Traditional Album of the Year (Solo) at the Juno Awards of 2003.

In 2009, she recorded "Dawson City" for CBC Radio 2's Great Canadian Song Quest.

Discography

  • Humminah (Caribou, 1999)
  • Gingerbread (Caribou, 2001)
  • Luckyburden (Caribou, 2004)
  • Champ (Jericho Beach, 2007)
  • Saplings (2010)
gollark: Just use an onscreen keyboard and a mouse.
gollark: Why need you keyboard?
gollark: RGB is for RGB-LIKING PEOPLE.
gollark: Well, break a compact machine, it keeps its data. Obviously.
gollark: It CAN be moved.

References

  1. "Starpulse.com: Kim Barlow Biography". Retrieved March 14, 2011.
  2. "East Coast champ takes her bluesy folk beyond borders" Archived 2012-02-14 at the Wayback Machine, Beatroute, 2006.
  3. "Saying goodbye to Kim Barlow". Retrieved September 25, 2013.
  4. "Kim Barlow: Kim's News". Retrieved 14 March 2011.


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