COPPER

A PS Audio Publication

Issue 119 • Free Online Magazine

Issue 119 OFF THE CHARTS

Patty Griffin: Finding True Purpose

Patty Griffin: Finding True Purpose

Sometimes it takes a while to find your true purpose in life. Patty Griffin had just been through a divorce when she decided to try singing professionally in 1994 at the age of 30. She’d been playing guitar and writing songs since she was 16, but it hadn’t seemed like a career option until the upheaval in her personal life. Since then, she’s become a two-time Grammy-winner whose songs have been performed by the likes of Emmylou Harris and Kelly Clarkson.

Once Griffin signed with A&M Records, she got to work on her first album, Living with Ghosts (1996), a simple, folky affair with just voice and guitar. All the songs were original – in the best sense of the word. They weren’t quite like anything else out there.

The debut opens with “Moses,” unusual enough for its aching meditation on the importance of self-care to heal a wounded heart. And then there’s Griffin’s voice: piercing, slightly pinched, not soothing and easy but demanding of the listener’s emotional engagement. The melody is also odd, repeating upward motions against the guitar’s chords like a desperate prayer. This is the work of somebody defying conventions for the sake of her art.

 

Griffin got more attention for her second album, Flaming Red (1998), which hit the No. 12 spot on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart for emerging artists. For these sessions, Griffin brought in a backing band to support her, and the results are satisfyingly rich.

Several of the songs were composed by Jay Joyce, who was also debuting as a record producer. Joyce’s tune “Big Daddy” starts in a weird, dissonant sound world that could reasonably be mistaken for Radiohead. Griffin digs into the melancholy with the breathy low end of her voice.

 

Although Griffin recorded one more album for A&M, Silver Bell, the company dropped her before the record could be released. She quickly signed with the ATO label, founded by Dave Matthews, and by 2002 had put out the album 1,000 Kisses.

“Nobody’s Crying” is by Griffin and demonstrates the stripped-down sound of this album. There are plenty of session musicians on hand, but you don’t get the sense that they’re all playing all the time. Griffin and her guitar are the feature, and her piercing voice goes right to the heart.

 

Her next album, Impossible Dream (2004) may be no less melancholy, but it does have a lusher sound. The rich orchestrations include several brass instruments and two types of organ. No arranger is credited on the otherwise detailed personnel list. Craig Ross, who specializes in working with country songwriters with an indie bent, produced the album.

Impossible Dream does, in fact, include Griffin singing the famous song from the musical Man of La Mancha. But its most remarkable song has to be “Mother of God,” originally recorded for Silver Bell. This seems to be a song about living with a loved one’s mental illness. What starts as a spare piano accompaniment thickens and grows verse by verse, both through the addition of other instruments and the use of reverb and other engineering tricks.

 

Griffin’s final album for ATO was Children Running Through (2007). As was also true of the past several albums, Emmylou Harris joined in on some vocals for a couple of tracks. This album seems to have been a particular inspiration to country superstar Kelly Clarkson, who performed both “Up to the Mountain (MLK Song)” – accompanied by Jeff Beck – and “No Bad News” on prime-time television shows.

Here’s Griffin’s album version of “No Bad News” in a bluegrass-influenced arrangement. Nashville session guitarist Doug Lancio provided the almost frantic autoharp strumming pattern. That bright, metallic sound is intriguingly contrasted by the mellow brass section before the last verse.

 

In 2009 Griffin was invited to join gospel legend Mavis Staples on a track for a compilation album. An executive for EMI’s Christian music branch heard the song and contacted Griffin about doing a gospel album. She agreed, bringing along bandmember Buddy Miller to produce. Downtown Church (2010), named after the Downtown Presbyterian Church in Nashville where it was recorded for the Credential label, won Griffin her first Grammy Award.

But it wasn’t any kind of conventional gospel album. Nestled among traditional spirituals are songs by Hank Williams and Big Mama Thornton. And then there’s “I Smell a Rat,” Leiber and Stoller’s bluesy rock and roll number. It might not be about religion, but Griffin applies her best gospel vocal chops to sell this snide warning to an unfaithful mate.

 

During this period, Griffin was in both a musical and personal relationship with British rock star Robert Plant. They lived together, toured together, and even cut a few tracks together. Meanwhile, Griffin continued her solo career. She released American Kid in 2013 on the label New West. This album was dedicated to her father, who had recently died.

Rather than record only new works about her father, Griffin blended in some interesting old material. One venerable choice is “Mom and Dad’s Waltz,” a bittersweet classic by Lefty Frizzell (1928 – 1975). Griffin doesn’t try to turn it into anything but what it is: a wonderful trip back in time to the formative days of country music.

 

In the past five years, Griffin has self-released two albums, marketed by a distribution service called Thirty Tigers. Her lack of an industry label has not lessened either her writing or the sonic integrity of her studio output, although her voice is coarser than it used to be. The first of these efforts was Servant of Love (2015), which includes the thunderous, chugging “Gunpowder.” Ephraim Owens tears it up on the trumpet.

 

Sidelined for a few years by breast cancer, Griffin not only survived but seems to be flourishing. Maybe the title of her 2019 release, Patty Griffin, is a sign of her sense of renewal. She’s digging into her folk influences here, channeling Appalachia in this beautiful new ballad called “Bluebeard.” The illness took her voice away completely, but she’s built it back, now rough-edged with experience.

 

Before COVID-19 shut everything down, Patty Griffin was out touring. She told an interviewer last year that she’d been looking back at her career, listening to her old recordings, and was not at all displeased with what she heard. It was “something kind of magical,” she admitted. Her fans could have told her that.

Header image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/d&e, cropped to fit format.

More from Issue 119

View All Articles in Issue 119

Search Copper Magazine

#231 Piano Prodigy Jude Kofie Releases His Debut Album On Octave Records by Frank Doris Jun 01, 2026 #231 Underappreciated Artists, Part Two: City Boy by Rich Isaacs Jun 01, 2026 #231 Music and the Art of Creation: Talking With Saxophonist Rob Scheps by Joe Caplan Jun 01, 2026 #231 How to Play in a Rock Band, 24: Further Adventures at the 2026 Montauk Music Festival by Frank Doris Jun 01, 2026 #231 Courtney Barnett: Creature of Habit by Wayne Robins Jun 01, 2026 #231 Angine de Poitrine: Interstellar Guitar Rock Saviors Headed for Late-Night TV Pop Stardom? by Mark Lepage Jun 01, 2026 #231 My Impressions of AXPONA 2026, Part One by Frank Doris Jun 01, 2026 #231 2026 La Jolla Concours d'Elegance: Another Aesthetic Feast by B. Jan Montana Jun 01, 2026 #231 Country Music Icon Jo Dee Messina’s Bridges: A New Beginning by Ray Chelstowski Jun 01, 2026 #231 The Luxury Dispatch Hosts a Video Podcast With Ken Kessler by Ken Kessler Jun 01, 2026 #231 The Vinyl Beat: Tracking in the Motor City by Rudy Radelic Jun 01, 2026 #231 Lots of Fun With DSP: The Ferrum Audio WANDLA DAC and Its Tube Mode by Frank Doris Jun 01, 2026 #231 From The Audiophile's Guide: Digital Source Components and Streaming Audio by Paul McGowan Jun 01, 2026 #231 Onkyo’s Monster M-510 power amplifier by The Staff at Just Audio Jun 01, 2026 #231 PS Audio in the News by PS Audio Staff Jun 01, 2026 #231 Naming Convention by Peter Xeni Jun 01, 2026 #231 Les Invisibles by Frank Doris Jun 01, 2026 #231 Wildlife Scene by James Schrimpf Jun 01, 2026 #230 Camaraderie by B. Jan Montana May 04, 2026 #230 AXPONA 2026: A Family Gathering by Paul McGowan May 04, 2026 #230 Pianist Ryan Benthall Explores Jazz Realms and Far Beyond With Divine Sky by Frank Doris May 04, 2026 #230 The Vinyl Beat in AXPONA-Land by Rudy Radelic May 04, 2026 #230 Teddy Thompson’s Musical Growth Deepens With Never Be the Same by Ray Chelstowski May 04, 2026 #230 More Fun in the Sun: Florida Audio Expo, Part Two by Frank Doris May 04, 2026 #230 CanJam NYC 2026 Show Report: Heady Sound, Part Two by Frank Doris and Harris Fogel May 04, 2026 #230 Sonic Youth On Murray Street by Wayne Robins May 04, 2026 #230 Graffeo Coffee: A Symphony of Sensory Experience by Joe Caplan May 04, 2026 #230 The Saul Authority: The Story of Hi-Fi Pioneer Saul Marantz by Olivier Meunier-Plante May 04, 2026 #230 How to Play in a Rock Band, 23: Encounters With Famous Musicians, Part Two by Frank Doris May 04, 2026 #230 An Outlier in the Rack: A Vintage BIC Beam Box by The Staff at Just Audio May 04, 2026 #230 PS Audio in the News by PS Audio Staff May 04, 2026 #230 A Cautionary Tale by Rich Isaacs May 04, 2026 #230 Reel-to-Reel Roots, Part 33 (Revised): Ken Kessler Reports On the 2026 (British) AudioJumble by Ken Kessler May 04, 2026 #230 Text Messaging by Frank Doris May 04, 2026 #230 The Audiophile Rat Race by Peter Xeni May 04, 2026 #230 On the Rocks by Rich Isaacs May 04, 2026 #229 The Earliest Stars of Country Music, Part Three by Jeff Weiner Apr 06, 2026 #229 The Healing Power of Music and Sound at the Omega Institute by Joe Caplan Apr 06, 2026 #229 CanJam NYC 2026 Show Report: Heady Sound, Part One by Frank Doris Apr 06, 2026 #229 Florida Audio Expo 2026: Warming Up to High-End Audio, Part One by Frank Doris Apr 06, 2026 #229 Quick Takes: Anne Bisson, Sam Morrison, The Velvet Underground, and the Stooges by Frank Doris Apr 06, 2026 #229 The Vinyl Beat: New Arrivals, and Old Audio Show Demo Scores to Settle by Rudy Radelic Apr 06, 2026 #229 Harvard Gets a High-End Audio Education by Frank Doris Apr 06, 2026 #229 No Country for Old Knees by B. Jan Montana Apr 06, 2026 #229 How To Play in A Rock Band, 22: Encounters With Famous Musicians, Part 1 by Frank Doris Apr 06, 2026 #229 The Soulful Grooves of Guinea-Bissau by Steve Kindig Apr 06, 2026 #229 Four-Hand Piano Performance at Its Finest by Stephan Haberthür Apr 06, 2026

Patty Griffin: Finding True Purpose

Patty Griffin: Finding True Purpose

Sometimes it takes a while to find your true purpose in life. Patty Griffin had just been through a divorce when she decided to try singing professionally in 1994 at the age of 30. She’d been playing guitar and writing songs since she was 16, but it hadn’t seemed like a career option until the upheaval in her personal life. Since then, she’s become a two-time Grammy-winner whose songs have been performed by the likes of Emmylou Harris and Kelly Clarkson.

Once Griffin signed with A&M Records, she got to work on her first album, Living with Ghosts (1996), a simple, folky affair with just voice and guitar. All the songs were original – in the best sense of the word. They weren’t quite like anything else out there.

The debut opens with “Moses,” unusual enough for its aching meditation on the importance of self-care to heal a wounded heart. And then there’s Griffin’s voice: piercing, slightly pinched, not soothing and easy but demanding of the listener’s emotional engagement. The melody is also odd, repeating upward motions against the guitar’s chords like a desperate prayer. This is the work of somebody defying conventions for the sake of her art.

 

Griffin got more attention for her second album, Flaming Red (1998), which hit the No. 12 spot on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart for emerging artists. For these sessions, Griffin brought in a backing band to support her, and the results are satisfyingly rich.

Several of the songs were composed by Jay Joyce, who was also debuting as a record producer. Joyce’s tune “Big Daddy” starts in a weird, dissonant sound world that could reasonably be mistaken for Radiohead. Griffin digs into the melancholy with the breathy low end of her voice.

 

Although Griffin recorded one more album for A&M, Silver Bell, the company dropped her before the record could be released. She quickly signed with the ATO label, founded by Dave Matthews, and by 2002 had put out the album 1,000 Kisses.

“Nobody’s Crying” is by Griffin and demonstrates the stripped-down sound of this album. There are plenty of session musicians on hand, but you don’t get the sense that they’re all playing all the time. Griffin and her guitar are the feature, and her piercing voice goes right to the heart.

 

Her next album, Impossible Dream (2004) may be no less melancholy, but it does have a lusher sound. The rich orchestrations include several brass instruments and two types of organ. No arranger is credited on the otherwise detailed personnel list. Craig Ross, who specializes in working with country songwriters with an indie bent, produced the album.

Impossible Dream does, in fact, include Griffin singing the famous song from the musical Man of La Mancha. But its most remarkable song has to be “Mother of God,” originally recorded for Silver Bell. This seems to be a song about living with a loved one’s mental illness. What starts as a spare piano accompaniment thickens and grows verse by verse, both through the addition of other instruments and the use of reverb and other engineering tricks.

 

Griffin’s final album for ATO was Children Running Through (2007). As was also true of the past several albums, Emmylou Harris joined in on some vocals for a couple of tracks. This album seems to have been a particular inspiration to country superstar Kelly Clarkson, who performed both “Up to the Mountain (MLK Song)” – accompanied by Jeff Beck – and “No Bad News” on prime-time television shows.

Here’s Griffin’s album version of “No Bad News” in a bluegrass-influenced arrangement. Nashville session guitarist Doug Lancio provided the almost frantic autoharp strumming pattern. That bright, metallic sound is intriguingly contrasted by the mellow brass section before the last verse.

 

In 2009 Griffin was invited to join gospel legend Mavis Staples on a track for a compilation album. An executive for EMI’s Christian music branch heard the song and contacted Griffin about doing a gospel album. She agreed, bringing along bandmember Buddy Miller to produce. Downtown Church (2010), named after the Downtown Presbyterian Church in Nashville where it was recorded for the Credential label, won Griffin her first Grammy Award.

But it wasn’t any kind of conventional gospel album. Nestled among traditional spirituals are songs by Hank Williams and Big Mama Thornton. And then there’s “I Smell a Rat,” Leiber and Stoller’s bluesy rock and roll number. It might not be about religion, but Griffin applies her best gospel vocal chops to sell this snide warning to an unfaithful mate.

 

During this period, Griffin was in both a musical and personal relationship with British rock star Robert Plant. They lived together, toured together, and even cut a few tracks together. Meanwhile, Griffin continued her solo career. She released American Kid in 2013 on the label New West. This album was dedicated to her father, who had recently died.

Rather than record only new works about her father, Griffin blended in some interesting old material. One venerable choice is “Mom and Dad’s Waltz,” a bittersweet classic by Lefty Frizzell (1928 – 1975). Griffin doesn’t try to turn it into anything but what it is: a wonderful trip back in time to the formative days of country music.

 

In the past five years, Griffin has self-released two albums, marketed by a distribution service called Thirty Tigers. Her lack of an industry label has not lessened either her writing or the sonic integrity of her studio output, although her voice is coarser than it used to be. The first of these efforts was Servant of Love (2015), which includes the thunderous, chugging “Gunpowder.” Ephraim Owens tears it up on the trumpet.

 

Sidelined for a few years by breast cancer, Griffin not only survived but seems to be flourishing. Maybe the title of her 2019 release, Patty Griffin, is a sign of her sense of renewal. She’s digging into her folk influences here, channeling Appalachia in this beautiful new ballad called “Bluebeard.” The illness took her voice away completely, but she’s built it back, now rough-edged with experience.

 

Before COVID-19 shut everything down, Patty Griffin was out touring. She told an interviewer last year that she’d been looking back at her career, listening to her old recordings, and was not at all displeased with what she heard. It was “something kind of magical,” she admitted. Her fans could have told her that.

Header image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/d&e, cropped to fit format.

0 comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

Your avatar

Loading comments...

🗑️ Delete Comment

Enter moderator password to delete this comment:

✏️ Edit Comment

Enter your email to verify ownership: