Sarah Masen

Sarah Masen is an American singer-songwriter originally from the suburbs of Detroit, Michigan. For several years she has lived in Nashville, Tennessee, with her husband, the author David Dark, and their three children. Initially signed to Charlie Peacock's re:think label, and subsequently to Word Records, she is now independent. As a songwriter, she has collaborated with Béla Fleck, Julie Lee and Sam Ashworth.

Sarah Masen
Born (1975-01-12) January 12, 1975[1]
Royal Oak, Michigan, United States
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist
InstrumentsSinging, multiple instruments
Years active1995–present
Labelsre:think[2]
Websitesarahmasen.com

Background

In 1998 she released Carry Us Through, and in 1999 BEC Recordings reissued The Holding as a Sarah Masen solo album. After the release of The Dreamlife of Angels in 2001, Masen did not release her own new material for six years, although in 2004 she did contribute two tracks to the album Stars and Sirens by Pristina, a collective of female artists teamed with the producer Joey B. of The Echoing Green.[3]

Jon Foreman, of the band Switchfoot, is Masen's brother-in-law (Foreman is married to her sister Emily).[4]

Discography

Albums

  • The Holding (1995, independent)
  • Sarah Masen (1996, re:think)
  • Carry Us Through (1998, re:think)
  • The Holding (1999, re-issue, REX)
  • The Dreamlife of Angels (2001, Word)

EPs

  • Women's Work Is Alchemy (2007 EP, independent)
  • A History of Light and Shadow (2007 EP, independent)
  • Magic That Works (2007 EP, independent)
gollark: We had that idea yesterday. Keep up.
gollark: It uses some incredibly bizarre mix of bad OOP and just plain imperative programming a lot.
gollark: So actually lots of them are sensible but some of them are just really bad.
gollark: `collections` is okayish maybe, right?
gollark: Suuuuuuure it is.

References

  1. "Sarah Masen - Jesusfreakhideout.com". jesusfreakhideout.com. Retrieved August 31, 2015.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20091027155904/http://geocities.com/patmil007/6662.jpg
  3. "Voices". Pristina Music. Archived from the original on September 6, 2012. Retrieved January 11, 2012.
  4. "Jon Foreman". IMDb. Retrieved August 31, 2015.
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