Audrey Auld

Genre: Americana
Secondary Genre: Folk Nashville, Tennessee USA Contact

Acoustic Folk, Roots & Country songs and Aussie stories. Songs that make you laugh, move your heart and get you thinking. "A singer- songwriter with smarts and a distinct vision who's capable of heartfelt sorrow or off-kilter humor''. ~ Austin Chronicle

Artist Information

Biography

"It's one thing for singers to write beautifully and sing beautifully, but when they're also funny, as in stand-up-comic funny, it makes going to their shows not only pleasurable but also memorable, well beyond the exit ramp headed back home. How many times do you leave a concert and finding yourself quoting lines the singer says in between the songs? Such is the case with Tasmanian native Audrey Auld." ~ Dallas Morning News, August, 2011

"Sweet-voiced but tart-tongued and no-nonsense, Auld, from California and East Nashville by way of Australia, is a singer, songwriter and storyteller deluxe. She’s touring with a new CD, “Come Find Me." One of the best country singers anywhere, Auld is a troubadour who takes no guff while singing songs such as “You Wish” and “Nails,” but she can be tender as well as “Beautiful Garden” proves, and “The Butterfly Effect” is about as good as a common sense anthem gets." ~ MySanAntonio.com, August 2011

Don’t mistake the title of Audrey Auld’s Come Find Me as any kind of shy retreat. Call it what she does: an “invitation.” “Come find me, come find me, I want to be found,” she offers on the album’s winsome opening waltz, then seals the deal with an offer hard to refuse: “You’re welcome to glorious me.”

She sings it sweetly, but with a flirty flash of unmistakable, cocky cheek — almost a dare, really, as befits a fiercely independent artist who’s been self-releasing albums for more than a decade now under the tell-all banner of “Reckless Records.” Simply put, Audrey Auld does not do coy. Songwriter’s songwriter Fred Eaglesmith calls the native Tasmanian “one of the most honest original artists I know,” and, true to form, Auld is candidly forthright in her pride over Come Find Me, her fifth full-length solo album and ninth release over all. “I’m really keen to show it off,” she enthuses.

From the 5-star review in the UK’s Country Music People magazine: “Audrey Auld is an amazing talent. Like a special flower in your garden. Her songs are a kind of beacon of hope, from a woman who cares, in this deeply cynical world we are all stranded in. You need to relax more, play this album.” ~ Paul Riley
 
Auld recorded Come Find Me with producer Mark Hallman (Tom Russell, Eliza Gilkyson, Hot Club of Cowtown) at the storied Congress House Studio in Austin, Texas. Although she’s lived mostly in East Nashville (after a 3-year stint in California) since moving to the U.S. back in 2003, Auld has had a thing for the Lone Star State for years — even naming one of her albums Texas. Not surprisingly, she calls working with Hallman — long on her list of dream producers — “a dream come true.”

“It was the happiest time I’ve ever had recording,” Auld continues. “No stress, no problems. I wanted to focus on the performance and work with someone who would get the best out of me, and we wanted to make the best record I’ve ever made. I think we succeeded on both counts.”
 
The end result is an album that’s equally appealing both as an introduction to Auld for newcomers and, for veteran fans, as the latest and greatest in a long line of acclaimed releases going back to 1999’s Looking Back to See, the country duets album she cut with Australian songwriter/guitarist/producer Bill Chambers. Auld made an auspicious solo debut with the following year’s The Fallen, which nabbed her a “Best Country Album” nomination in the Land Down Under, while subsequent releases like 2003’s Losing Faith, 2005’s Texas and 2006’s Lost Men & Angry Girls secured her status on the Americana music map right alongside such notables as the aforementioned Eaglesmith, Kevin Welch and Kasey Chambers. Her dozen new songs on Come Find Me find her confidently moving from folk and country to swinging jazz, rock and even an intriguing bit of talking-blues-style rap (on “Petals”). That it all holds together as a seamless whole is testament to both her impressive artistic range and seasoned, devil-may-care confidence. “For me, it’s more about the song than the genre,” she says matter of factly.
 
Subject wise, the songs are equally diverse, ranging from the surprisingly tender (for Auld!) “Just Love,” which she co-wrote with her husband, former Navy sailor-turned-“romantic”-plumber Mez Mezera, to the conversely snarling rocker, “You Wish.” It’s also chock-full of sincere, heartfelt tributes, with loving shout outs to her peers (Jon Dee Graham in “Petals” and Mary Gauthier in “Orphan Song”), civil rights icons Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King (“The Butterfly Effect”), her beloved homeland (“Tasmania”) and even, with “Bread and Roses,” the inmates of San Quentin Prison, where Auld has performed and teaches songwriting workshops. And what would an Audrey Auld album be without a Texas- (if not Australia!)-sized helping of her sassy humor? In “Forty,” the wickedly funny portrait of the artist as a hard-traveled and hardened middle-aged survivor, Auld observes with patented self-deprecating snark, “I got a little snow on my roof, I’ve learned to speak half the truth / The good die young, here’s the proof — I’m forty.”
 
“These songs represent where I am in my life and where I am on the Earth,” Auld explains. “This collection of songs reflects the people I’ve met in my travels, the awareness of life passing, and my reflections of being in America. And I think it’s also about the state of my heart, as a happily married woman. I’m very content with where I’m at right now - troubador, gardener, chicken farmer.”
 
That’s the Audrey Auld you’ll find on Come Find Me. Who can fault the satisfied Tassie girl for feeling so, well, glorious?

Career highlights:
* "Hole In My Life" included on "The Good Guys" FX TV show soundtrack. (2010)
* "I'd Leave Me Too" featured on episode 2 of "Justified" on FX TV. (2010)
* San Quentin Prison - performance and songwriting workshops (BreadandRoses.org)
* Winner Chris Austin Song Contest, MerleFest, NC 2006 ("Losing Faith")
* Performing at the Carter Family Fold, Hiltons, VA.
* Singing harmony with Buddy Miller and band in Australia.
* Touring with Fred Eaglesmith.
* International Songwriter Series (Australia) - with Jim Lauderdale, Kim Richey, Fred Eaglesmith, Jason McCoy.
* 2 ARIA Nominations (Australian Recording Industry Association). for self-produced and self-released albums on her own Reckless Records label.
* 5 cuts by other artists (including Sunny Sweeney, Big Machine Records).
* 2 Golden Guitar nominations (Australia).

"Whether you’re a star in a long black car
or a songwriter on an all-nighter
it all comes down to the music
- the beautiful connection of art, science and maths
creating a transcendent moment
for whomever is tuned in."
Audrey Auld

Instrumentation

Acoustic - solo, duo or trio depending on location and budget

Discography

* COME FIND ME (2011)
* WRITE OUT LOUD Songbook (2010)
* BILLABONG SONG EP (2009)
* LOST MEN AND ANGRY GIRLS (2007) #1 on FAR Chart Feb/Mar '07
* IN THE HOUSE with NINA GERBER (2006) dbl live CD
* TEXAS (2005) - ARIA nominee Best Country album
* LOSING FAITH (2003) - Top 100 A.M.A. chart 2003
* RECKLESS RECORDS GARAGE SALE : 1997-2003
* THE FALLEN (2000) - ARIA nominee Best Country album
* LOOKING BACK TO SEE - with BILL CHAMBERS (1999) Winner Best Independent Australian Country album

Videography:

* LOVE YOU LIKE THE EARTH (2005)
* I’D LEAVE ME TOO (2000)
* MORE VIDEOS ON YOUTUBE AND MYSPACE

Official Website

http://audreyauld.com

Links

Audio

Lyrics

Video

NAILS.mp4

Photo Gallery

Press

  • ELIZA GILKYSON [+ Show ]

    “I just finished listening to “Losing Faith” and it levelled me - I had to crawl to the computer to ...

  • Promoter Quotes [+ Show ]

    "I have hosted over 700 live music shows on KPIG radio, and, if asked to give the top 10 performers ...

  • 'In The House' Live album review [+ Show ]

    “She writes and sings songs with a worldly truth... She not only sounds like she grew up on Music Ro...

  • FRED EAGLESMITH [+ Show ]

    She holds a unique place in contemporary Americana/Roots music. I believe that this uniqueness is la...

  • 'Lost Men and Angry Girls' Album Review [+ Show ]

    “a superb vocalist and songwriter in the roots tradition... excellent collection... an artist who de...

  • KIERAN KANE [+ Show ]

    Whether it be in a traditional country setting or on the more edgy tracks her voice stays honest and...

  • 'Lost Men and Angry Girls' Album Review [+ Show ]

    “A sharp-eyed storyteller... She also can flash some sly social satire or a powerful sense of moral ...

  • The Fallen Album Review

    "If there was much meritocracy in the country music world, Audrey Auld might be a star."

  • Bread and Roses Live Review [+ Show ]

    "... The range of her songs and the beauty of her voice transformed the facility immediately. Sever...

  • Various Quotes [+ Show ]

    “Do believe the hype” ~ Matt Kramer, Pacific Sun, Ca. “heartfelt and authentic” ~ LA Dail...

  • Audrey Auld's Tasmanian Wit and Wonder [+ Show ]

    It's one thing for singers to write beautifully and sing beautifully, but when they're also funny, a...

  • Night After Night - Music Picks [+ Show ]

    Sweet-voiced but tart-tongued and no-nonsense, Auld, from California and East Nashville by way of Au...

Setlist

Predominantly original songs.
Occasionally a few covers by Fred Eaglesmith, Patty Griffin, Mary Gauthier and Australian folk songs.
Music CDs available on request.

Basic Requirements


Calendar

There are no upcoming dates at this time.