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Alice Peacock

Alice Peacock

Alice Peacock

14 SONGS • 59 MINUTES • SEP 03 2002

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Alabama Boy (Album Version)
04:33
2
Leading With My Heart (Album Version)
03:25
3
Bliss (Album Version)
03:50
4
I'll Start With Me (Album Version)
04:36
5
I Hear You Say (Album Version)
03:44
6
I'll Be The One (Album Version)
04:15
7
Imagination (Album Version)
04:30
8
Some Things Get Lost (Album Version)
04:28
9
Parallel Life (Album Version)
03:59
10
Into The Light (Album Version)
04:09
11
All Consuming Love (Album Version)
05:39
12
Boy In The Backseat (Album Version)
04:19
13
Send My Heart Back Home (Album Version)
03:12
14
Northern Star (Album Version)
04:35
(P) 2002 Sony Music Entertainment, Inc. WARNING: All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws.

Artist bios

Chicago singer/songwriter Alice Peacock was immersed in performing at an early age. Her grandfather Fritz Gnass was an actor in Germany, appearing in many films including Fritz Lang's M; her grandmother was a cabaret composer; her father acted in repertory theater in the 1960s; and her mother acted in film and television. Growing up in a big family, Peacock was exposed to diverse musical styles; she listened to one sister's '70s hard rock and another sister's country-rock, as well as her mother's Burl Ives and Johnny Cash records. While attending college at Lawrence University in Appleton, WI, she joined the university jazz band and also performed with a cover band and did some jingle work. It was during this period that Alice discovered a passion for classic jazz, blues, and standards; she also found herself interested in folk and bluegrass. After college, she moved to San Francisco and sang backup vocals with an R&B band called E.C. Scott and Smoke; however, she felt musically stifled and moved to Chicago. After several failed attempts to put a band together, Peacock started playing by herself and composing her own highly personal material, drawing inspiration from Joni Mitchell and Carole King. It's difficult to label Peacock a folk, rock, or country performer, since she is really a bit of everything. She released her debut CD, Real Day, on her own label, Peacock Music, in early 1999; strong word-of-mouth and favorable press led to the album being picked up for wider distribution in 2000 by Aware/Columbia. She made her major-label debut in 2002 with a self-titled effort that found John Gorka, John Mayer, and Indigo Girl Emily Saliers making guest appearances. In 2006, the ambitious album Who I Am found her back on Peacock Music, but this time in cooperation with the major label Universal. ~ Kristen Sohacki

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