Vanessa Carlton | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Vanessa Lee Carlton |
Born | August 16, 1980 Milford, Pennsylvania, United States |
Genres | Soft rock Piano pop Pop rock |
Occupations | Singer-songwriter Pianist Producer |
Instruments | Piano Vocals |
Years active | 1998–present |
Labels | A&M The Inc. |
Website | vanessacarlton.com |
Vanessa Lee Carlton (born August 16, 1980) is an American singer-songwriter and pianist. She is best known for the single "A Thousand Miles" from her debut album, Be Not Nobody.
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Carlton was born in Milford, Pennsylvania to Ed Carlton, a pilot, and Heidi, a pianist and school music teacher. She has two younger siblings, a sister, Gwen and a brother, Edmund. Her uncle, Larry Carlton, is a famous jazz guitarist. She is half Scandinavian and half Russian. Her interest in music began at an early age; after returning from Disneyland at the age[1] of two, she played "It's a Small World" on the piano. Her mother then began to tutor her on the piano.[2]
She developed an interest in ballet at the age of nine and was accepted at the School of American Ballet at age fourteen while attending high school at the Professional Children's School. At age eighteen, she decided to devote her time to piano-playing and songwriting, choosing not to become a dancer on graduation. Instead, she attended Columbia University and performed in bars and clubs in Manhattan, New York while waitressing[2] in Hell's Kitchen.[3]
Carlton met her friend Peter Zizzo at a singer-songwriter circle. A few months later, Zizzo invited Carlton to his studio to record a demo.[4] Three months after recording the demo, Carlton was signed by Jimmy Iovine and began to record the album, Rinse.[5] It was never released, but a few tracks were reworked for Be Not Nobody. One song, "Carnival", was re-recorded as "Dark Carnival" for the Spy Hunter 2 video game. Other tracks included in Rinse are "Interlude" (later known as A Thousand Miles), "Rinse", "Ordinary Days" (later known as Ordinary Day), "Twilight," "Pretty Baby," "All I Ask" and "Superhero." Of these, only the first five are included in her first album, Be Not Nobody. Other unreleased tracks from her early demo tapes include "Faces," "Meggy Sue," "Little Mary," "Burden," "Wonder," "Devil Dance" and "Last Fall."
With her previous unsuccessful recording efforts, Carlton felt there was a lack of direction at her label.[6] However, A&M president Ron Fair upon hearing her demo to "A Thousand Miles," began organizing recording sessions for the song, producing and arranging the song himself.[7] It became a hit, peaking inside the top five on the Billboard Hot 100 and went on to become the sixth-most-played song of the year, as well as garnering Grammy Award nominations for "Record of the Year," "Song of the Year," and "Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s)."[8]
Fair would produce the rest of the album. Be Not Nobody was subsequently released in April 2002 and debuted at number five on the Billboard 200 albums chart with 102,000 units sold. It went on to sell more than two million copies worldwide.[9] Two more singles, "Ordinary Day" and "Pretty Baby" were released. Carlton began touring in support of her debut album, opening for the Goo Goo Dolls and Third Eye Blind, before headlining her own tour at the end of 2002. She later toured Europe in 2003.[10]
Carlton had collaborated with other artists before the release of her sophomore album. She provided the descant vocals for the Counting Crows song "Big Yellow Taxi", played piano for Italian singer Zucchero, along with Haylie Ecker on violin, for the song "Indaco Dagli Occhi Del Cielo"[11] and provided backing vocals for "Moving On" by Kimya Dawson for her album Hidden Vagenda.
Carlton began recording her second album, Harmonium, at Skywalker Ranch near San Francisco. It was produced by Stephan Jenkins from Third Eye Blind, and included darker themes than those on her debut.[12] Carlton stated that the album contained more of her own aesthetic as opposed to Be Not Nobody which was more influenced by Ron Fair.[13] Harmonium debuted at number thirty-three on the Billboard 200[8] and has sold 179,000 copies as of February 2006.[14]
A single, "White Houses," released to radio in late-August 2004, entered the Billboard Hot 100 in October, peaking at 86.[15] MTV censored and later banned the single's music video because of a controversial lyric in the song that refers to sexual intercourse. Carlton attributed the censoring of the song to the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy involving Janet Jackson which had occurred earlier that year.[16]
To support the album, Carlton embarked on a North American concert tour, which began on October 21, and concluded on November 21; her opening act was Low Millions. She also recorded a cover of "Time Is on My Side" for a Time Warner digital video recorders commercial. A second tour, with Cary Brothers and Ari Hest as supporting acts, ran from March 9 to April 30. Carlton left A&M Records in mid-2005[17] as she felt there was a lack of support for the album on the label's part because of her nonconformist attitude.[8]
As early as her Harmonium tour in 2005, Carlton had debuted three new songs — "Hands on Me," "This Time," and "The One".[17] When she supported Stevie Nicks on her Gold Dust U.S. tour,[18] Carlton premiered two more songs, "Best Behavior" and "All Is Well." In October 2006, Irv Gotti announced that he had signed Carlton to The Inc. Records.[8]
Heroes & Thieves was released and greeted with generally positive reviews.[19] It debuted at number 44 on the U.S. Billboard 200,[20] with "Nolita Fairytale" as the first single. As of December 2007, the album had sold 41,000 copies in the U.S.[21] To promote the album, Carlton embarked the Haunted Club Tour, from November 2 to November 24, 2007.[22] Second single, "Hands on Me", was sent out to radios on February 19, 2008. Carlton later went on a summer U.S. tour with Joshua Radin and Alexa Wilkinson in 2008. As of 2009, the album has sold over 540,000 copies.
In an interview in April 2009, Vanessa stated that she was half way done with a new album.[23] In some of the past shows she has done, she premiered three songs - "London," (the first song she wrote for the record) "Fair-Weather Friends" and the instrumental "Waltz". Via Twitter, Vanessa announced that a possible name for her upcoming album could be Tall Tales For Spring and mentioned she's been recording in KT Tunstall's studio in London. She also mentioned a children's choir based in London whom she featured in her incoming fourth record.
On May 9, 2010, Vanessa updated that the title of her upcoming record would be called Rabbits On The Run.[24] According to her, she chose the title for the symbolism often depicted by rabbits - 'time slipping, mind floating' - which is something she has been relating to for the past few years.[24] She also mentioned that the record is under the process of layering the songs with strings.[24] Vanessa later announced on her Twitter account two new songs titled "Moneymaker" and "I Don't Want to Be a Bride."[25][26]
On June 2010 at the Nashville Pride Festival, on which she headlined on and attracted more than 18,000 people, she announced to the crowd that she is "a proud bisexual woman" before she sang "Who's to Say" which she dedicates to her LGBT fans.[27] She also premiered her two new songs, titled "Tall Tales for Spring" (which was formerly titled "Waltz") and "I Don't Want to Be a Bride."
Carlton's mother exposed her to various classical composers such as Mozart and Erik Satie. Through her father, she was exposed to classic-rock artists such as Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin.[6] As a new artist, Carlton was compared to other female singer-songwriters, who played their own instruments like Laura Nyro, Joni Mitchell, Carole King,[28] Fiona Apple, Tori Amos, Sarah McLachlan, Norah Jones, Alicia Keys,[29] Michelle Branch, and Avril Lavigne.[30]
In 2005, Carlton completed the New York City Marathon and donated the pledge money she collected to Musicians on Call, a nonprofit organization that brings live and recorded music to patients' bedsides. She also contributed a stripped version of the song "More Than This" to Songs for Tibet, in support of Tibet to underline its human rights situation.[31] On September 25, 2008, Carlton and several other musicians and scientists, departed on a nine-day trip to the Arctic Circle. On behalf of the charity Cape Farewell, they worked alongside researchers for the purpose of studying climate change.[32] Carlton had also been a part for PETA's Animal Birth Control Campaign.[33]
In 2010, Carlton claimed to have been bitten by a dog while jogging in her Pennsylvania neighborhood. The dog also bit a 16-year-old boy nine days after the attack, and a judge ruled the animal would not be put to death if a fence was installed.[34]
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