Moira Lambert

Moira Lambert is a British singer and recording artist.

She has collaborated with Saint Etienne on the Neil Young cover "Only Love Can Break Your Heart"[1] (which went Top 40 in the UK and to No 1 in the US Hot Dance charts).

Moira began singing, playing acoustic guitar and song-writing as a child in Africa, largely influenced by the Celtic folk songs her parents taught her. While at school in the UK she became a fan of the British indie scene, enjoying acts like The Smiths and The Cure, later exploring vintage records by artists like Sandy Denny, Neil Young and Joni Mitchell.

Lambert has studied at the Conservatory of Music, playing in coffee bars and worked with Spanish cellist, pianist and composer Dan Anies, who co-wrote two of the songs on Moira’s first solo album 'Coming Up Roses' (released October 2006).

Polygram gave her a publishing deal and UK independent label Big Cat Records signed Moira as a teenager. She stayed there, touring the UK with Lush and Slowdive and Europe with label mates Jeff Buckley and Heather Nova (whose first recording Moira contributed backing vocals to) until the label was bought out by V2 records in 1996.

After co-writing the top 20 UK chart hit, "Skin on Skin", with Paul Oakenfold for his Grace project, Moira formed Ova, releasing a 3 track single, Universal Audio on UK independent label Global Warming. Since Ova broke up in January 2000, Moira has collaborated with Freeloader and Data, both UK electronica acts in the vein of trip hop, and contributed backing vocals to Tram’s album, A Kind of Closure, released on UK’s Jet Set Records.

Moira Lambert relocated to Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, in 2002.[2] Following the release of her first solo album in 2006, Moira wrote and performed the theme music for a Chum Television documentary 'Survival of the Fittest: Stories from the West Coast Trail' with Fox.She released the album 'Climbing Mountains In The Night' in 2008.

She then collaborated on an album of club mixes with composer Luke Parkin, also produced by Fox. Moira’s music is eclectic ranging from folky to stylized pop.

Discography

References

  1. Strong, Martin Charles; Peel, John (25 October 2004). The great rock discography. Canongate U.S. p. 1322. ISBN 978-1-84195-615-2. Retrieved 6 June 2010.
  2. Biography on Moira Lambert's Website

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.