Caroline Trettine
Caroline Trettine | |
---|---|
Born |
1958 London, England |
Genres | folk-rock, poetry-guitar, classical |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, Musician |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar |
Years active | 1983–present |
Labels | Utility, Oporto Records, Tuition, Evensong, Generous |
Associated acts | The Blue Aeroplanes, Winnebago Orchestra, Mirabeau |
Website |
carolinetrettine |
Caroline Trettine (born 1958) is an English musician.
Biography
Caroline Trettine was born in London and spent the early years of her life in Nigeria. She began composing songs seriously while still at school. After gaining a degree in English at Bristol University, she joined a folk-rock band and was discovered by Gerard Langley in 1983 who invited her to join The Blue Aeroplanes.
Music career
Caroline Trettine sang and played guitar with the Blue Aeroplanes who comprised at that time: Gerard Langley, Nick Jacobs (Exploding Seagulls), John Langley (Strangelove), Angelo Bruschini (Massive Attack) and Dave Chapman. She then left the Aeroplanes to pursue a solo career in London. Securing a contract with Billy Bragg and Pete Jenner's Utility label, she recorded the Be A Devil album in 1990 at the Cathouse studios of Grant Showbiz (producer of Billy Bragg, The Smiths and The Fall). Successful tours with Bragg and Christy Moore, and appearances on regional and national BBC radio were met with critical acclaim. 'Like [Sandy] Denny, Trettine hovers over great melancholy with an almost detached air that only cuts closer to the quick. To be worthy of such a comparison this early on is no mean feat.' In the intervening years Trettine continued to record material, experimenting with different styles and working with a range of collaborators. Though an acoustic artist, she worked closely with hip hop in the early 1990s. In 2001, she released her second album, Ten Light Years. It was recorded and produced by Richard Bell (Blue Aeroplanes) at Evensong's studio. The main musicians on the album were multi-instrumentalist Ian Kearey (Oyster Band, and Blue Aeroplanes); bass player Dave Chapman and guitarist Nick Jacobs (both ex Blue Aeroplanes); her father Laurence Halcrow on concertina; and her brother Ian Halcrow on vocals; plus featured producer - Gerard Langley (Blue Aeroplanes). In 2005, Trettine released her third album, Trail in the sky on Oporto Records run by Spencer Roberts. Caroline was then invited by Spencer Roberts to join The Winnebago Orchestra with whom she made two CDs - Fifteen and Born in the sun - on the German label, Tuition, in 2006 and 2008. At the same time, she started up her own poetry band Mirabeau with Richard Price (a novelist and poet) and Ian Kearey. They played two introductory gigs at the Edinburgh Festival and The Centre for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow, before releasing their first album Golden Key in May 2011. They are currently working on a follow-up album to develop their guitar-poetry sound. Since 2004 Caroline has written a number of solo chamber musicals, two of which - The Silver machine, Learning to walk - she performed at the London fringe theatre, The Rosemary Branch, in 2007 and 2009. Trettine has also begun writing classical pieces: a string quartet - My mother's war - in 2010 and a guitar quartet - The Love bridge. In December 2011 her new album - Tears - was released.
Works
Albums
- Be a Devil, Utility, 1990
- Ten Light Years, Evensong, 2000
- Trail in the Sky, Oporto, 2006
- Fifteen, The Winnebago Orchestra, Tuition, 2006
- Born in the sun, The Winnebago Orchestra, Tuition, 2008
- Golden Key, Mirabeau, Generous, 2011
- Tears, Generous, 2011
External links
- Official website
- Myspace site
- Soundcloud page
- Last FM entry
- Videos by Caroline Trettine
- Mirabeau Website
- The Winnebago Orchestra website
- Blue Aeroplanes website