Shelley King (musician)

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Shelley King
Shelley King 2+28.png
King at Antone's in Austin, TX
Background information
Birth nameShelley King
BornAugust 30, 1966 (1966-08-30) (age 58)
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Genres
  • blues
  • roots-rock
  • folk music
  • country music
  • soul music
  • rock music
  • gospel music
Instrument guitar
Years active1992–present
LabelsLemonade Records
Website www.shelleyking.com

Shelley King (born August 30, 1966) is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist. She is known for the 10 albums she has released since 1998, touring and recording collaborations with Carolyn Wonderland, Marcia Ball, Cindy Cashdollar, and members of The Subdudes, as a songwriter for artists such as Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood, and Toni Price, [1] and for becoming the first female artist and youngest artist to be recognized as the Official State Musician of Texas.

Contents

Career

Born in Arkansas, [2] [3] she began singing in her grandmother's church choir at age four. [4] Raised in both Arkansas and Texas, she attended Sam Houston State University. [3] She began her music career in Houston, but moved to Austin in 1992 [4] and has been based there ever since.

After playing in bands such as Riverchild and releasing several demos, King formed the Shelley King Band in the mid-1990s. She released her debut album Call of My Heart in 1998, and began gaining recognition as a songwriter when Toni Price recorded two songs from the album a few years later. [1] In the early- to mid-2000s she won Austin Music Awards both for songwriting and for the Shelley King Band. [5] [6]

In 2008 King became the youngest musician and first female musician to be recognized by the Texas Legislature as Official State Musician of Texas. [7]

In 2010 her album Welcome Home charted in the Top 40 on the Billboard Americana Album chart and was one of the Americana Music Association's Top 100 Americana albums of the year. [8]

Her touring and festival appearances over the years have included Robert Earl Keen’s Texas Uprising tour, Redwood Ramble, [9] Rhythm and Roots, New York Rhythm and Blues Festival, Old Settler's Fest, [10] Iowa Women’s Festival, Japan tours in 2009 and 2010, a 2022 Europe tour, coast-to-coast US tours billed as Carolyn Wonderland with Shelley King, [11] and a 2024 tour co-billed with Dave Alvin, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, and Carolyn Wonderland.

Three cuts from her ninth album, 2019's Kick Up Your Heels, reached the Top 5 on Roots Music Reports's Top Country Blues Song Chart. [12] Rolling Stone described the album as "deep gritty blues [with] fiery guitar and roof-rattling vocals." This album, [13] and her tenth, 2023's Madam Mystic, included collaborations with artists including Marcia Ball, Delbert McClinton, Carolyn Wonderland, Cindy Cashdollar, and The Subdudes' John Magnie and Steve Amedée, and co-writes with Shawn Camp and others.

In the 2020s she toured with Carolyn Wonderland [14] and Cindy Cashdollar and appears frequently on stage with both Wonderland and Marcia Ball. [15] TheAustin Chronicle wrote that "when Shelley King and Carolyn Wonderland combine forces, magic seems to follow." [11]

Songwriter

King's songs have been recorded by Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood, [16] Toni Price, Marcia Ball and others. She has co-written with Sara Hickman, Shawn Camp, Marcia Ball, John Magnie and Tim Cook of The Subdudes, Floramay Holliday and others.

Charity work

In 2012 King teamed with Ball, Wonderland and others to form Housing Opportunities for Musicians and Entertainers (HOME), a nonprofit that raises funds to help Austin music community elders with housing costs. HOME announced in 2024 it was growing from an all-volunteer organization to a staffed one with expanded activities. [17]

Awards and recognitions

Personal life

King lives in Austin, Texas with her husband, drummer Perry Drake. They have one son. [3]

Discography

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References

  1. 1 2 Margarat Moser (14 September 2001), There's Something About Shelley, Austin Chronicle, retrieved 18 November 2024
  2. Andrew Dansby (20 January 2020), Texas vocalist Shelley King delivers a powerful tribute to Levon Helm, Houston Chronicle, retrieved 15 November 2024
  3. 1 2 3 Rob Patterson (1 October 2014), IN PROFILE: SHELLEY KING, Lone Star Music Magazine, retrieved 18 November 2024
  4. 1 2 Nate Cavalieri (17 July 2003), Queen of the Road, Dallas Observer, retrieved 15 November 2024
  5. Song of the Year: Shelley King for "Call of My Heart," Toni Price, Austin Chronicle, retrieved 15 November 2024
  6. Best Roots Rock: Shelley King Band, Austin Chronicle, retrieved 15 November 2024
  7. Margie Goldsmith (26 May 2020), Austin Singer/Songwriter Shelley King Sings Through Covid-19, Forbes, retrieved 15 November 2024
  8. Kim Ruehl (14 December 2010), Americana Music Association announces Top 100 Americana Albums of 2010, No Depression, retrieved 20 November 2024
  9. Events Guide, The Press Democrat, retrieved 20 November 2024
  10. Old Settler's Fest Announces 2021 Lineup, Saving Country Music, 15 September 2021, retrieved 20 November 2024
  11. 1 2 Doug Freeman (5 July 2024), Caleb de Casper, Money Chicha, and More Crucial Concerts for the Week, Austin Chronicle, retrieved 18 November 2024
  12. GGM Staff (2 March 2020), Acclaimed Shelley King’s Album Dominates The Roots Music Report, Guitar Girl Magazine, retrieved 18 November 2024
  13. Stephen L. Betts (26 December 2019), AUSTIN SONGWRITER SHELLEY KING PAYS TRIBUTE TO LEVON HELM, IMAGINES HIS ‘NEW DRUM SET’, Rolling Stone, retrieved 15 November 2024
  14. Home for the Holidays w/ Marcia Ball, Carolyn Wonderland, & Shelley King, Austin Chronicle, retrieved 15 November 2024
  15. Peter Blackstock (2 November 2021), Carolyn Wonderland retakes the spotlight after tenure with blues master John Mayall, Austin American-Statesman, retrieved 15 November 2024
  16. "Texas Blue Moon" at AllMusic . Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  17. "Singer/Songwriter Shelley King's Co-Founded HOME Branches Out to Increase Aid To Elders of the Austin Music Community" (Press release). 5 September 2024. Retrieved 18 November 2024.
  18. State Artist Shelley King, Texas Commission on the Arts, retrieved 15 November 2024