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Mollie
O’Brien sings. Does she ever. Jazz, R&B, blues, gospel, southern
mountain traditional — you name it. And she approaches each with an
ease that makes you think she was steeped in the style since the
first time a note left her throat.
Growing up in Wheeling, West Virginia, one of five children, Mollie
was exposed to music of every stripe, from performances by the
Wheeling Symphony to concerts by Count Basie, Ray Charles, and the
Beatles. She listened to singers — Joni Mitchell and Judy Collins,
Bonnie Raitt and Dinah Washington, Streisand, Sinatra, and Betty
Carter — and took voice lessons. Later, with her brother, Tim, she
performed in church and at coffeehouses. All the while she dreamed
of heading to New York to sing and act on Broadway and make a big
splash in show business. After her sophomore year of college, she
set out for the Big Apple, but the auditions were discouraging and
gigs were few. She stuck it out for four years — long enough to
discover the irresistible pull of swing music and the stylistic
stretches required for jazz. Eventually she moved to Colorado, where
brother Tim O’Brien had already staked out territory in the booming
music scene.
So there’s the story — at least the first part. Mollie moved to
Boulder in 1980, worked as a duo with Tim, and formed her own R&B
band. Now, a couple of decades later, she’s married with two
teen-aged daughters and a firmly established singing career. She has
been called one of roots music’s best interpreters and singers, and
her voice described as “smooth,” “smoky,” “powerful,” and “bright
and bold as sheet lightning.” Once you’ve heard it, you’re hooked.
Mollie’s recordings are a tribute to the variety of her taste and
the versatility of her performance. On her solo CDs — Every Night in
the Week and I Never Move Too Soon (on Resounding Records) and Tell
It True, Big Red Sun, and Things I Gave Away (on Sugar Hill) — she
moves without hesitation from style to style, dipping into the songs
of Lennon and McCartney, Percy Mayfield, Memphis Minnie, Chuck
Berry, and the Subdudes.
Showcasing her old-time, folk, blues, and gospel chops are three
albums with Tim O’Brien (Take Me Back, Remember Me, and Away Out on
the Mountain — all on the Sugar Hill label).
There have been any number of collaborations, most notably the
Grammy-winning True Life Blues: The Songs of Bill Monroe (Sugar
Hill) with a stellar bunch of bluegrass greats. For the past few
years, Mollie has worked with Garrison Keillor and Robin & Linda
Williams as the Hopeful Gospel Quartet, with her own five-piece
band, and as a duo with husband Rich Moore.
Mollie has earned rave notices at major festivals and venues
throughout the U.S. and in the United Kingdom, Europe, and South
America.
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Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from Mollie O'Brien
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