Abby Parks

Genre: Singer/Songwriter
Secondary Genre: Folk Oxford, Alabama USA Contact

Abby Parks's music features imaginative instrumentation accompanying her unique finger-style guitar playing, creating an evocative atmosphere for Parks to spin reflective tales and narratives in song.

Artist Information

Biography

There were undoubtedly many factors that led Alabama folk singer Abby Parks into the craft of songwriting. One was her Southern heritage, born to a mother whose native Georgia roots made for a rich story-telling tradition that fueled Abby’s imagination from a young age and gave her a back-door appreciation for the art of oral tradition. Add to this an inborn passion for music, originally sparked by listening to popular radio of the seventies and old vinyl LP’s of great artists such as Joni Mitchell, The Beatles, CSNY, Fleetwood Mac, and Judy Collins. Top that off with a life spent moving with her family from the age of ten onwards to live in a vast array of locations including Maryland, Colorado, Germany, and even England—and you have the necessary ingredients to create a colorful variety of story songs drawing on family, culture, and music tradition.

Born in Durham, North Carolina, Abby Parks first developed an ear for music (believe it or not) as a baby, rocking in her car seat every time she heard “Maggie May” by Rod Stewart come on the radio. That was just the beginning. Her love of music grew the more she heard it, resulting in her parents giving her a guitar for her 12th birthday while living in Germany. She began lessons as a teen while living in Maryland and turned her attention to classical guitar after hearing the music of Christian singer and classical guitarist John Michael Talbot. Having been involved in school and church choirs that developed her voice, Parks began singing Talbot songs solo with her guitar in church and then majored in classical guitar at Colorado Christian University in Denver. She also studied piano, voice, and music composition and performed in the 6-part harmony group Profile. Another of her passions—creative writing—was explored in college as she studied literature as a second major and wrote poetry, short stories, plays, and even a novel that was published in 2002. After a hiatus from college studies while living in the U.K., she achieved Bachelor’s degrees in music performance and English at Jacksonville State University in Alabama.

There were many paths she could have taken with the musical knowledge she had gained, but Abby Parks had developed a great affection for songs she’d heard that were in the folk and songwriting traditions, particularly by artists like Joni Mitchell and Judy Collins. Lyrics that told stories and delved deeper into the human psyche than typical pop songs gave her a desire to take her music in that direction. By the time she had moved to the U.K. with her family in 1995, Parks had enough songs under her belt to begin performing live and she ventured onto Danny Kyle’s stage in 2000 at the Celtic Connections Festival in Glasgow, Scotland. Finally settling back in the southeast in Alabama, Parks released her debut CD Moving On and performed throughout the southeast in venues ranging from coffeehouses and churches to theaters, clubs, and festivals.

As her songwriting matured, Abby Parks turned her attention to the rich southern heritage she can lay claim to, having reacquainted herself with the South as an Alabama resident. Stories told to her throughout her life about her family’s background became the source for many of her songs off her latest CD The Homeplace, including the title track “The Homeplace,” “Lambert Road,” and “Wild Dogs.” Recorded at Huntsville’s Sound Cell Studio, The Homeplace was produced with the help of Doug Jansen Smith (Take 6, Brian McKnight, Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt, Phil Collins). The CD features imaginative instrumentation accompanying her unique finger-style guitar playing, creating an evocative atmosphere for Parks to spin reflective narratives in song.

Beyond her songwriting and performing career, Abby Parks is a private guitar teacher at the Donoho School and the Cheaha Creative Arts Center. She is a member of both the Folk Alliance and the Roots Music Association, and over the years has taken up the mandolin, banjo, and bass. She has also delved into theater roles in legendary musicals including Fiddler on the Roof, The Fantastiks, Little Shop of Horrors, and Oklahoma.

Instrumentation

Abby Parks: guitar, mandolin, banjo, harmonica

Discography

LP: Moving On (2005)
LP: The Homeplace (2009)

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Audio

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Press

  • Review in SONGWRITER'S MONTHLY [+ Show ]

    "THE HOMEPLACE is a marvelous gem, each song a facet that sparkles brilliantly on its own, but as a ...

  • Review in ATHENS BLUR MAGAZINE, Issue 11 [+ Show ]

    "Give it up for Abby Parks, an artful writer and guitarist with a voice that could very well part th...

  • Review of "The Homeplace" [+ Show ]

    "Abby Parks mixes secular and religious themes on The Homeplace, blending them with strong songw...

  • Review of "The Homeplace" [+ Show ]

    "What marks a musical project as authentic is its degree of humanity--- and a new disc by Abby Parks...

  • Five Stars--Impressive Debut. [+ Show ]

    Reviewer: Jason Bennett "This is a very impressive debut from an obviously gifted songwriter and...

  • Review from European Radio [+ Show ]

    Reviewer: Gerald Van Waes, host of "Psyche Van Het Folk", Radio Centraal, Antwerp, Belgium "(Abby...

Setlist

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