Beth Bombara

Beth Bombara

Bombara in 2013
Background information
Born August 4, 1983
Origin Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States
Genres Americana, Singer-Songwriter, indie rock, Folk, Blues
Instruments Voice, Guitar, Piano, Bass Guitar, Drums
Years active 2007–present
Associated acts Samantha Crain
Website www.bethbombara.com

Beth Bombara (born August 4, 1983) is an independent American singer, songwriter and musician from Grand Rapids, Michigan. She currently resides in St. Louis, Missouri.

Early Life and Education

Bombara was born and raised in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Her first instrument was the piano, taking lessons from grades 3 through 8. Just before attending high school, she expressed interest in her mother’s electric guitar. Her mother gave her the instrument and a book of chords and she began to teach herself how to play. The guitar became her primary instrument from that point forward.[1]

While attending Jenison High School in Michigan, Bombara formed a punk rock band called Green Means Go.[2] After practicing and writing a few songs together, the band began to play local shows for audiences, gaining a small but loyal following. The band continued into her college years, performing from 1999 until 2005.[3]

After high school, Bombara attended Cornerstone University in Grand Rapids and Greenville College in Greenville, Illinois, earning an interdisciplinary major in Music & Culture.

A turning point in her education and life occurred in 2004, while attending a program at The Contemporary Music Center on Martha’s Vineyard. She was assigned to write and record music with a fellow student who would later become her primary collaborator and husband, Kit Hamon. Bombara and Hamon were married in 2009.[2]

Early career

After graduating from Greenville College in 2006, Bombara was invited back to The Contemporary Music Center for an Artist Residency in the spring of 2006. There, she met Samantha Crain, and in the summer of 2006, moved to Oklahoma to tour with Crain's band, Samantha Crain and the Midnight Shivers. She continued to tour with Crain until late 2007.

Solo career

Beth Bombara performing at the Missouri Botanical Garden

After moving to St. Louis in late 2007, Bombara began her solo career. She began performing at the Chippewa Chapel Open Mic Night at St. Louis music venue Off Broadway.[3] Later that year, she released her first solo EP, Abandon Ship. The EP was met with solid reviews. Music blog Wildy's World said, “Abandon Ship is a stunning EP that deserves a lot wider distribution and notice than it's already received.”.[4]

In 2009, Bombara joined with husband Kit Hamon, as well as musician and brother-in-law JJ Hamon to record indie-rock album Beth Bombara and The Robotic Foundation, briefly changing the name of the band to match the album title. This was short-lived, and future work was all released under her solo name. This album, too, received critical acclaim with critics praising the album's darker tone.

Bombara was an early adopter of the crowdfunding website Kickstarter to fund the creation of her first full-length album in 2010, Wish I Were You, which she released on CD as well as a vinyl LP. To promote the album, Bombara toured the American Midwest and Southwest. Reviews at the time singled out the growing power of her vocals, with one critic saying, “It also helps that Bombara's ever-strengthening vocals — which rarely falter across registers or emotional nuances — are pushed to the front, allowing her well-placed hiccups and proclamations to land with clarity.”.[5]

After an appearance on the Chevy Music Showcase, The Mid-America Chevy Dealers in St. Louis provided a new Suburban for the band as they began their next tour.[6]

In July 2013, Bombara released the EP Raise Your Flag. It proved to be her greatest critical success to date, called “Soulful and unsettling in the best sort of way, "Raise Your Flag" gets under your skin, inside your spirit and makes you stare your sins straight in the eye.”.[7]

On the success of this release, Bombara was invited to play to an audience of over 10,000 at the Whitaker Music Festival in the Missouri Botanical Garden in St. Louis, MO, was featured on Living St. Louis on PBS-affiliated KETC-TV, and was the subject of a local-interest news story on KSDK-TV in St. Louis.

Three songs from Raise Your Flag were released as music videos in January, 2014: Long Dark Hallelujah, Mountain Sun and Right My Wrongs. These videos were filmed and directed by Joshua Black Wilkins with assistance from Nate Burrell, and edited by Kyle Jones. Mountain Sun and Long Dark Hallelujah featured Bombara and Kit Hamon in solo performance, while Right My Wrongs added bandmates JJ Hamon and Karl Eggers.

Other Projects

In addition to her solo career, Bombara has also played and performed vocals with Cassie Morgan and the Lonely Pine, and Old Lights.[8]

Awards and Recognition

Discography

Beth Bombara

Title Details
Abandon Ship EP Released 30 October 2007 (Eyeteeth Records)
Beth Bombara and The Robotic Foundation Released 21 April 2009 (Eyeteeth Records)
Wish I Were You Released 23 November 2010 (Self released)
Raise Your Flag EP Released 2 July 2013 (Self released)
Beth Bombara Released 23 June 2015 (Self released)

with Samantha Crain and the Midnight Shivers

Title Details
The Confiscation EP Released 2007 (Self released)

with Cassie Morgan and the Lonely Pine

Title Details
Weathered Hands, Weary Eyes Released 27 April 2010 (Self released)

with Old Lights

Title Details
Like Strangers EP Released 9 August 2011 (Self released)

Other Appearances

References

  1. Curtright, Lauren. "Beth Bombara – Wish I Were You". Musicofthehour.com. musicofthehour.com. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Ezell, Ruth (October 29, 2013). "Living St. Louis-Beth Bombara". Living St. Louis. KETC. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Kapper, Kyle. "The Reigning Royals of Musical Myriad". KyleKapperwritings.com. kylekapperwritings.com. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  4. "Review: Beth Bombara Abandon Ship". wildysworld. wildysworld.blogspot.com. September 21, 2009. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  5. Schaeffer, Christian (November 18, 2010). "Homespun: Beth Bombara". Riverfront Times. riverfronttimes.com. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  6. "Chevy Gives Vehicle to Independent Musicians for Touring". Indie Artists Radio. indieartistsradio.net. May 16, 2012. Retrieved July 15, 2014. |first1= missing |last1= in Authors list (help)
  7. Danielsen, Aarik (June 16, 2013). "St. Louis’ Beth Bombara crafts modern spirituals". Columbia Daily Tribune. Columbia Daily Tribune. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  8. Pickard, Joshua (March 10, 2014). "Watch This: Beth Bombara shares new video for "Right My Wrongs". Nooga.com. Nooga.com. Retrieved July 15, 2014.

External links