Lang, K.D.

views updated May 11 2018

K.D. Lang

Singer, songwriter

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

Her music has been called cow-punk or new wave country. With her spiked short hair and cut-off cowboy boots, she looks like a cross between Dale Evans and Johnny Rotten. Canadian singer K.D. Lang transcends easy labelling but one thing is certainher expressive voice and wild stage shows are bringing a whole new generation of listeners back to country music. With the release of her third album, Shadowland, Lang joined young singers like Dwight Yoakam and Randy Travis as new stars in the country music firmament. But unlike Yoakam, a country purist who rejects Nashville schmaltz, Lang embraces both the old and the new. While some have called her unusual renderings of classic tunes campy or even sarcastic, Lang insists her music is sincere.

Kathy Dawn Lang, who likes to go by K.D., seems to have a broad appeal. She has garnered standing ovations everywhere from Vancouver punk clubs to the Grand Ole Opry. The Nashville Banner called her one of the most exciting new artists to come around in a while. At the same time, Rolling Stone applauded her already legendary live performances. Among her many influences, Lang lists Patsy Cline and Boy George. This eclecticism has its drawbacks. She has yet to have a major hit record because radio programmers have a difficult time slotting her in their playlists. Edmonton, Alberta, music director Larry Donohue summed up the problem in Western Report, A lot of her stuff isnt country enough to go country, and it isnt pop enough to go pop. And Robert K. Oermann, music critic for the Tennessean, explained, She is in some kind of weird place between artsy new wave and country.

Langs focus, however, seems to be narrowing as her music matures. She has discarded some of her props, like the Elvis Costello horn-rimmed glasses and the rhinestone-studded cowboy skirts. She says she doesnt want to become known simply as an act like Bette Midlers Divine Miss M. Her concern may be warranted. The Nashville Banner once referred to her as a singer with Patsy Clines sublime power... inside Pee Wee Hermans mind.

K.D. Lang has country roots. She was born Katherine Dawn Lang in 1961 in the tiny town of Consort (pop. 672), Alberta, Canada. Her father ran the local drugstore and her mother was the second grade schoolteacher. As a teenager, K.D. earned summer money driving a three-ton grain truck for local farmers. But despite her rural surroundings, Langs early musical influences were not country. She trained on classical piano and listened to her older sisters rock music collection. I grew up not liking country music, she told Jay Scott in Chatelaine. I was brought up in a family that studied classical music, at the piano. We also

For the Record

Full name, Katherine Dawn Lang; born 1961, in Consort, Alberta, Canada; daughter of Adam (a pharmacist) and Audrey (a schoolteacher) Lang. Education: Graduated from Red Deer College, Red Deer, Alberta.

Began singing and tap dancing at age five; played guitar and sang at weddings and other functions; as a teenager, drove a grain truck during summer vacations; while in college, belonged to a performance art group; member of a Texas swing fiddle band, beginning 1982; formed band the Reclines; has performed throughout Canada, the United States, and Europe; has appeared on numerous television programs, including The Tonight Show, Late Night With David Letterman, The Grand Ole Opry, and Hee Haw; featured performer in closing ceremonies of 1988 Summer Olympics in Calgary, Alberta.

Awards: Juno Award for best country singer, 1987; named Woman of the Year by Chatelaine magazine, 1988.

Addresses: Home Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Record company Sire Records, 75 Rockefeller Plaza, 20th Floor, New York, NY 10019.

listened to Broadway shows. And I listened to Janis Joplin and the Allman Brothers. Besides music, young Kathy Dawn was interested in athletics. She was able on the volleyball court, and she claims her first professional ambition was to be a roller derby queen. Later, in college, she dabbled in performance art. She played in productions that ranged from a seven hour re-enactment of Barney Clarks plastic heart transplant to filling up an art gallery with garbage.

But music remained her first love. As a teenager, she was a would-be professional, doing numbers like Midnight Blue and the Circle Game on her acoustic guitar at weddings and other functions. At college, she discovered the music of Patsy Cline, whose emotional approach drew Lang back to the golden age of country, when singers like Johnny Horton and Hank Williams sang simple tributes to the everyday life of ordinary people.

In 1982 she answered an ad in an Edmonton newspaper for a singer for a Texas swing fiddle band. Her future manager, Larry Wanagas, was at the audition. He knew immediately that a unique talent was ready to be developed. The first show she did, he told Perry Stem in Canadian Musician magazine, surprised herself as well as me. I knew she could sing, but what she brought to the stage was this undeniable presence.

For the next two years, Lang and her band, the Reclines, toured throughout Canada. They played country, college, and rock bars. K.D. would stomp out wearing ugly, rhinestone-studded glasses (without lenses) and cowboy boots with the tops sawn off. She would fling herself to the stage in the middle of her version of the 1960s girl-pop classic Johnny Get Angry. But no matter how contorted her hijinks, her voice rang deep and melodious. She was clearly capable of vocal gymnastics, tumbling from a full-throated alto line one moment to a yelping yodel the next. It didnt take long for the word to spreadthis weird-looking woman from the plains of Alberta was singing country tunes like they had never been sung before.

Her first album, A Truly Western Experience, was recorded during this period on an independent Edmonton label. It showed that her voice could be transposed successfully to vinyl, but it didnt sell well. Then, in the spring of 1985, after playing a gig at New Yorks Bottom Line club, the head of Sire Records signed her to his label. Seymour Stein was already recording the Talking Heads, Madonna, the Pretenders, and the Ramones. After witnessing her Bottom Line show, he decided she was ready for big-time exposure. You are what should have happened to country music 30 years ago, he told her at the time.

Her star was on the rise. In November, she was named Canadas most promising female vocalist. But in 1986, Lang disappeared from the concert circuit. When she reappeared, she had abandoned the persona that had won her headlines. A restrained, new Kathy Dawn Lang emerged, without the cat glasses and the studied attempts to make herself ugly. The reason Ive tempered my style is because Im taking my music more seriously, Lang told Western Report. Im tired of being written about as some zany, crazy kid. I think the gap between K.D. and Kathy has lessened to the point where Im almost completely Kathy on stage now. Lang clearly sought to defy the critics who doubted her artistic commitment.

Langs second album, but first major release, Angel With a Lariat, was the product of K.D.s new devotion to her music. It was a complex collection of Langs own pieces and country classics, like Patsy Clines heartbreaker Three Cigarettes in an Ashtray. Produced in England by rocker Dave Edmunds, it featured the spontaneity of a live performance. And at the same time, it strove to recapture the honesty and purity that Lang found lacking in contemporary country music. The reviews were generous. The Toronto Globe and Mail, for example, called the production a breathlessly paced, musically adventurous album thats unlike anything in contemporary or rock music.

With the release of her first major commercial effort, K.D. began to look south of the Canadian border. In May, 1987, she made her television debut on The Tonight Show. Johnny Carson was so impressed that he invited her back three times. She quickly became a television regular, appearing on the Smothers Brothers program, Late Night with David Letterman, Hee Haw, and on pay-TV alongside Bruce Springsteen and Elvis Costello. She also teamed up with music legend Roy Orbison to record a stirring version of the rock veterans classic ballad Crying. Their co-production sold more than 50,000 copies in the United States. Nonetheless, major radio airplay still seemed to elude Lang.

In the summer of 1988, Lang released the album that was to feature her vocal talents in a way that Angel With a Lariat never did. Shadowland was produced by country legend Owen Bradley, the man who developed Patsy Clines talent. Indeed, Shadowland seemed to be a coming-to-terms of Langs long-time obsession with her mentor and role model. None of the songs on the album are her own. Instead, they are nostalgic, sincere interpretations of emotional ballads known in the country music business as weepers. There is no wacky sarcasm in these songs; one track, Honky Tonk Angels Medley, features country stars who are former Bradley protegees and contemporaries of Cline.

The album has done well, garnering respectable sales and laudatory reviews. Rolling Stone called it a celebration of country music, and Macleans suggested the collection of Nashville classics was richly nostalgic and a major turning point. A single from the album, Patsy Clines Im Down to My Last Cigarette, climbed both the country and pop charts. And it has been credited with sparking a revival of interest in Clines work. Her label, MCA Records, has re-released Clines greatest-hits collection and has issued two previously unreleased recordings.

Her 1989 release, Absolute Torch and Twang, splits the difference between the unbridled high spirits of Angel With a Lariat and the more studied, Patsy Cline-influenced studioscapes crafted by legendary country producer Owen Bradley on Shadowland, noted Holly Gleason in a Rolling Stone review. There are more obvious records Lang could have made, Gleason continued, ones designed to make her a country queen. Instead, she opted for songs that challenge her abilities and make a case for artistic vision. This album isnt gonna win her any points with the Nashville Network or country-radio programmers, but it shows what country music, when intelligently done, can be.

Lang continues to defy the easy labels. Even without her spiked hair, K.D. Lang stands in stark contrast to the pronounced femininity of Nashvilles female country artists. She may mimic country musics golden years, but her mannish looks do not fit in with the bouffant hairstyles of earlier times. When Chatelaine magazine chose Lang as its 1988 Woman of the Year, she defiantly posed for the magazine cover without makeup. I am a woman of the 1980s and have been influenced by punk and Boy George, she explained to Macleans magazine.

Selected discography

A Truly Western Experience, independently produced in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, c.1984.

Angel With a Lariat, Sire, 1987.

Shadowland (includes Im Down to My Last Cigarette, Honky Tonk Angels Medley, and Busy Being Blue), Sire Records, 1988.

Absolute Torch and Twang (includes Full Moon Full of Love, Three Days, Trail of Broken Hearts, Big Boned Gal, Luck in My Eyes, Nowhere to Stand, Didnt I, and Big Love), Sire, 1989.

Sources

Calgary Herald, February 14, 1987.

Canadian Composer, December 1985; November 1987.

Canadian Musician, April 1987.

Chatelaine, January 1988.

Macleans, July 6, 1987; August 3, 1987; May 30, 1988.

People, July 4, 1988.

Rolling Stone, June 16, 1988; July 13, 1989.

Vancouver Sun, March 15, 1986.

Western Report, March 2, 1987; September 28, 1987.

Winnipeg Free Press, April 12, 1986.

Ingeborg Boyens

Lang, kd

views updated May 08 2018

kd Lang

Singer, songwriter

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

Trying to maintain a creative existence on the edge of what was considered socially acceptable was never easy. Excelling and successfully thriving on the periphery of the popular music frontier was almost unheard of at all. For the critically acclaimed and award winning Canadian chanteuse kd Lang, the aforementioned scenario was just her modus operandi.

She was born Katherine Dawn Lang on November 2, 1961, in the tiny prairie town of Consort, Alberta, Canada. Lang was the youngest of the four children born to Audrey and Fred Lang. She grew up in a musical family, where her mother would drive the children to music lessons which were located in a town over an hour away, regardless of the weather. Desiring to study music and art, Lang left Consort in order to attend school at Red Deer College, which was located some 90 miles south of the provinces capital of Edmonton. While there, Lang dabbled in performance art while increasingly growing disenchanted with her studies. She eventually dropped out of school in order to concentrate more fully on her musical performances.

Musically, Lang was drawn to country, she even claimed to be the modern day embodiment of Patsy Cline, the famous country crooner who had died in the early 1960s, at the height of her popularity. Stylistically, however, Lang defied categorization and conventions. Her costumes and stage appearances were an eclectic mix of punk and country with her short closely cropped hair, long square dance skirts, chunky boots, and bulky socks.

Lang got a job as the singer of an Edmonton based country swing band, in 1982. The group disbanded shortly thereafter. Undaunted, Lang decided to form her own band and called them the Reclines, in honor of Patsy Cline. In 1984, Lang and the Reclines released their debut effort, A Truly Western Experience, on the Canadian independent label Bumstead. She toured across Canada and managed to find a spiritual home in Toronto where audiences there loved her eclectic and quirky style of mixing rockabilly and country. Her appearance did not bother them at all. Langs avante garde nature even managed to impress Seymour Stein of Sire Records who signed her and the band to a recording contract. Her first major label album, Angel With a Lariat, was released in 1986. It netted her a Canadian Juno Award for the Best Country Vocalist the very next year. Her sophomore effort, Shadowland was released in 1988. Both of the albums featured Lang and the Reclines funky cowpunk melodies and vocals that highlighted Langs impassioned croonings and torch song stylings.

Increasingly, Lang began to amass a large fan base and win over critics. She won her first Grammy in 1988 for

For the Record

Born Katherine Dawn Lang, November 2, 1961 in Consort, Alberta, Canada; Education: attended Red Deer College.

Formed kd Lang and the Reclines c. 1983; signed to Bumstead and released A Truly Western Experience, 1984; signed to Sire and released Angel With a Lariat, 1986; released Shadowland, 1988; released Absolute Torch and Twang, 1989; went solo and released Ingenue, 1992; released Even Cowgirls Get the Blues,(soundtrack), 1993; released All You Can Eat, 1995; released Drag, 1997.

Awards: Juno Award (Canada) for Best Country Female Vocalist, 1987; Grammy Award for Best Country Vocal Collaboration for Crying, 1988; Juno Award for Canadian Country Music Entertainer of the Year 1989; Grammy Award for Best Country Female Vocal for Absolute Torch and Twang, 1990; Gold certification for Absolute Torch and Twang, 1990; Gold certification for Shadow-land, 1992; American Music Award for Favorite New Artist Adult Contemporary, 1993; Platinum certification for Ingenue, 1993; Grammy Award for Best Pop Female Vocal for Constant Craving, 1993; Juno Award for Album of the Year for Ingenue, 1993; Juno Award for Songwriter of the Year, 1993; Juno Award for Producer of the Year, 1993; MTV Video Music Award for Best Female Video for Constant Craving, 1993; BRIT Award (England) for Best International Female Artist, 1995; received the Officer of the Order of Canada, 1997.

Addresses: Record company Sire Records, 75 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10019.

the Best Country Vocal Collaboration for her duet with Roy Orbison on the song Crying. She won her second Juno Award in 1989 for the Country Music Entertainer of the Year. Despite all of the critical accolades, Lang was ostracized by the country music establishment in Nashville. Commenting on this, she told the London Observers Alan Jackson that, I guess they dont think a girl should look or act they way I do. Nashville is very much a white male Christian society, and if you dont play by its rules, you dont really exist.

Her third album, Absolute Torch and Twang was released in the summer of 1989. The following year, Lang won a Grammy for Best Country Female Vocal Performance for Absolute Torch and Twang. Later that same year, 1990, Absolute Torch and Twang was a certified gold selling album in America.

Despite all of the additional critical success Lang garnered for her music, the Nashville country music establishment continued to ignore her. As a result, Lang started to focus her attention and musical skills in other areas, most notably pop jazz and torch song crooning. Commenting on her change in focus, Lang told the New York Times Michael Specter that, country music was a part of my life. Now it isnt. We had a good relationship, really, but we wanted each other at arms length. The people in Nashville didnt want to be responsible for my looks or my actions. But they sure did like the listeners I brought.

1992 saw Shadow land certfi ed gold in America. It also marked the release of the first non-country influenced album by Lang. Ingenue was the first album wholly credited to Lang, not Lang and the Reclines. It was a lounge-tinged collection of torch songs and sweeping ballads. The pop cabaret stylings of Ingenuewon Lang new legions of fans, especially among the adult contemporary music aficionados. Critics as well were fond of the album and the new incarnation of Lang.

Her new approach to music was amply rewarded in 1993 as Lang won the Favorite New Adult Contemporary Artist prize at the American Music Awards. She also landed her third Grammy for the Best Pop Female Vocal for the top ten adult contemporary smash hit single, Constant Craving. Ingenue was certified platinum in America, in March of 1993. Lang also won Juno Awards for Album of the Year for Ingenue, Songwriter of the Year, and Producer of the Year. The video for Constant Craving earned Lang the 1993 MTV Video Music Award for Best Female Video. Toward the end of that award winning year, Lang released the soundtrack for the film Even Cowgirls Get the Blues.

Lang kept her profile relatively low key until early 1995 when she was named the Best International Artist at the BRIT Awards in London. In the autumn of that same year, she released her next album All You Can Eat. It was another two years before she released another album, the lounge and jazz inspired Drag. In 1997, Lang was bestowed with the honor of the Office of the Order of Canada.

Discussing her success with the Chicago Tribunes Jack Hurst, Lang said, Im a living example of success via the media. Ive never had radio airplay. Im a media thing.

Selected discography

(with The Reclines) A Truly Western Experience, Bumstead, 1984.

(with The Reclines) Angel With a Lariat, Sire, 1986.

(with The Reclines) Shadowland, Sire, 1988.

(with The Reclines) Absolute Torch and Twang, Sire, 1989.

Ingenue, Sire, 1992.

Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (soundtrack), Sire, 1993.

All You Can Eat, Sire, 1995. Drag, Sire, 1997.

Sources

Books

Magill, Frank, ed. Great Lives From History: American Women Series, volume 3, Salem Press, 1995.

Rees, Dayfdd, and Crampton, Luke, Encyclopedia of Rock Stars, DK, 1996.

Periodicals

Chicago Tribune, February 7, 1988.

Interview, September, 1997.

London Observer, May 27, 1990.

New York Times, July 23, 1992.

Mary Alice Adams

lang, kd

views updated May 18 2018

kd lang

Singer, songwriter

One of the finest vocal talents to emerge from Canada, k.d. lang—who was inspired by poet e.e. cummings to spell her name with lower case letters—has earned a large following among fans of both country and contemporary pop music. Lang's ability to transform songs such as Roy Orbison's "Crying" and Patsy Cline's "I'm Down to My Last Cigarette" into her own emotional vocal statement is the hallmark of a top-rank interpreter. Controversial in some quarters because of her sexual orientation, lang has nonetheless developed a fervent following of fans and has garnered numerous awards in the United States and Canada.

She was born Katherine Dawn Lang on November 2, 1961, in the tiny prairie town of Consort, Alberta, Canada. Lang was the youngest of four children born to Audrey and Fred Lang. She grew up in a musical family, where her mother would drive the children to music lessons that were located in a town over an hour away, regardless of the weather. Desiring to study music and art, lang left Consort in order to attend school at Red Deer College, which was located some 90 miles south of the province's capital of Edmonton. While there, lang dabbled in performance art while increasingly growing disenchanted with her studies. She eventually dropped out of school in order to concentrate more fully on her musical performances.

Musically, lang was drawn to country, and even claimed to be the modern-day embodiment of Patsy Cline, the famous country crooner who died in a 1963 plane crash at the height of her popularity. Stylistically, however, lang defied categorization and conventions. Her costumes and stage appearances were an eclectic mix of punk and country, as seen in her short, closely cropped hair, long square dance skirts, chunky boots, and bulky socks.

Lang got a job as a singer with an Edmonton-based country swing band in 1982, but the group disbanded shortly thereafter. Undaunted, she decided to form her own group, calling them the Reclines, in honor of Patsy Cline. In 1983 lang and the Reclines released their debut effort, Friday Dance Promenade, on the Canadian independent label Bumstead, followed the next year by A Truly Western Experience. She toured across Canada and managed to find a spiritual home in Toronto, where audiences there loved her eclectic mix of rockabilly and country. Lang's avant garde nature impressed Seymour Stein of Sire Records, who signed her and the band to a recording contract. Her first major label album, Angel With a Lariat, was released in 1986, and netted her a Canadian Juno Award for Best Country Vocalist. Her sophomore effort, Shadowland, was released in 1988. Both albums featured lang and the Reclines' funky cowpunk melodies and vocals and highlighted lang's impassioned crooning and torch song stylings.

Lang began to amass a large fan base and win over critics. She won her first Grammy Award in 1988 for Best Country Vocal Collaboration, for her duet with Roy Orbison on the remake of the latter's 1962 hit "Crying." She won her second Juno Award in 1989, for Country Music Entertainer of the Year. Despite all the critical accolades, lang was ignored by the country music establishment in Nashville. She commented to the London Observer's Alan Jackson, "I guess they don't think a girl should look or act the way I do. Nashville is very much a white male Christian society, and if you don't play by its rules, you don't really exist."

Her third album, Absolute Torch and Twang, was released in the summer of 1989, earning lang a Grammy for Best Country Female Vocal Performance. Later in 1990 Absolute Torch and Twang achieved gold record status in America.

For the Record …

Born Katherine Dawn Lang, November 2, 1961, in Consort, Alberta, Canada; daughter of Adam Frederick and Audrey Lang (a teacher). Education: Attended Red Deer College.

Formed KD Lang and the Reclines c. 1983; signed to Bumstead and released A Truly Western Experience, 1984; signed to Sire and released Angel With a Lariat, 1986; Shadowland, 1988; Absolute Torch and Twang, 1989; went solo and released Ingenue, 1992; Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (soundtrack), 1993; All You Can Eat, 1995; signed with Warner Bros. and released Drag, 1997; signed with the Nonesuch label, 2004; released retrospective Reintarnation on Rhino, 2006; has made numerous appearances on television talk and variety programs and worked as an actress in such films as Teresa's Tattoo, Eye of the Beholder, and The Black Dahlia, 1990-.

Awards: Juno Award (Canada), Best Country Female Vocalist, 1987; Grammy Award, Best Country Vocal Collaboration, for "Crying," 1988; Juno Award, Canadian Country Music Entertainer of the Year, 1989; Grammy Award, Best Country Female Vocal, for Absolute Torch and Twang, 1990; American Music Award, Favorite New Artist Adult Contemporary, 1993; Grammy Award, Best Pop Female Vocal, for "Constant Craving," 1993; Juno Award for Album of the Year for Ingenue, 1993; Juno Award, Songwriter of the Year, 1993; Juno Award, Producer of the Year, 1993; MTV Video Music Award, Best Female Video, for "Constant Craving," 1993; BRIT Award (England), Best International Female Artist, 1995; received the Officer of the Order of Canada, 1997; GLAAD Media Award, the Vito Russo Award, 1998; Grammy Award, Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, for A Wonderful World (with Tony Bennett), 2004; Gemini Award, Best Performance or Host in a Variety Program for Words to Music: The Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame, 2006.

Addresses: Record company—Nonesuch, 75 Rockerfeller Plaza, New York, NY 10019, Web site: http://www.nonesuch.com. Management—Direct Management Group, 947 N. La Cienega Blvd., Ste. G, Los Angeles, CA 90069, phone: 310-854-3535, fax: 310-854-0810. Web site—k.d. lang Official Web site: http://www.kdlang.com.

Lang began to focus her attention and musical skills in other areas, most notably pop, jazz, and torch song crooning. Commenting on her change in focus, lang told the New York Times's Michael Specter that "country music was a part of my life. Now it isn't. We had a good relationship, really, but we wanted each other at arm's length. The people in Nashville didn't want to be responsible for my looks or my actions. But they sure did like the listeners I brought."

The year 1992 saw Shadowland certified gold in America. It also marked the release of the first non-country-influenced album by lang. Ingenue was the first album wholly credited to lang, not lang and the Reclines. It was a lounge-tinged collection of torch songs and sweeping ballads. The pop cabaret stylings of Ingenue won lang new legions of fans, especially among adult contemporary music aficionados, and critics praised the album and lang's new incarnation.

Her new approach to music was amply rewarded in 1993 when Lang won the Favorite New Adult Contemporary Artist award at the American Music Awards. She also landed her third Grammy for Best Pop Female Vocal, for the top ten adult contemporary smash hit single "Constant Craving." Ingenue was certified platinum in America in 1993. Lang also won Juno Awards for Album of the Year for Ingenue, Songwriter of the Year, and Producer of the Year. The video for "Constant Craving" earned lang a 1993 MTV Video Music Award for Best Female Video. Toward the end of that award-winning year, lang released the soundtrack for the film Even Cowgirls Get the Blues.

Lang kept a relatively low-key profile until early 1995, when she was named Best International Artist at the BRIT Awards in London. In autumn of that year, she released All You Can Eat. It would be two years before she released another album, the jazz-inspired Drag. In 1997 lang received the honor of the Office of the Order of Canada. Discussing her success with the Chicago Tribune's Jack Hurst, lang commented, "I'm a living example of success via the media. I've never had radio airplay. I'm a media thing."

Lang switched over to Warner Bros. for 2000's Invincible Summer. The smooth eleven-song set featured ten lang compositions and co-creations, and reached the top ten in internet sales. Equally fine was her final disc for the label, an audio version of her A&E television special Live by Request, a greatest hits album that illustrated her professionalism and growth as an entertainer. Far more successful were her tours and recorded duets with famous pop crooner Tony Bennett. One of their best moments together came via the 2002 Bennett album for Columbia, A Wonderful World, which earned the two singers a Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album.

Once her Warner's/Sire contract ran its course, lang moved onto the Elektra subsidiary Nonesuch, where she was given full creative freedom. Her first project for the new imprint, Hymns of the 49th Parallel, featured her interpretations of tunes by such Canadian songsmiths as Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Jane Siberry, and Bruce Cockburn. Lang has earned a secure niche in show business despite the earlier outcry over her lesbian lifestyle. Constantly touring, making television appearances, and taking on an occasional bit acting role, she waited four years to release Watershed. On her Web site, lang described her album of original material this way: "Watershed is like a culmination of everything I've done—there's a little bit of jazz, a little country, a little of the Ingenue sound, a little Brazilian touch. It really feels like the way I hear music, this mash-up of genres, and I think it reflects all the styles that have preceded this in my catalogue."

Selected discography

With the Reclines

Friday Dance Promenade, Bumstead, 1983.

A Truly Western Experience, Bumstead, 1984.

Angel With a Lariat, Sire, 1986.

Shadowland, Sire, 1988.

Absolute Torch and Twang, Sire, 1989.

Solo

Ingenue, Sire, 1992.

Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (soundtrack), Sire, 1993.

All You Can Eat, Sire, 1995.

Drag, Sire, 1997.

Invincible, Warner Bros., 2000.

Live by Request, Warner Bros., 2001.

Hymns of the 49th Parallel, Nonesuch, 2004.

Reintarnation, Rhino, 2006.

Watershed, Nonesuch, 2008.

Sources

Books

Magill, Frank, ed., Great Lives From History: American Women Series, volume 3, Salem Press, 1995.

Rees, Dayfdd, and Luke Crampton, Encyclopedia of Rock Stars, DK, 1996.

Stambler, Irwin, and Grelun Landon, Country Music: The Encyclopedia, St. Martin's Griffin, 2000.

Periodicals

Chicago Tribune, February 7, 1988.

Interview, September 1997.

London Observer, May 27, 1990.

New York Times, July 23, 1992.

Online

"k.d. lang," All Music Guide,http://www.allmusic.com, (June 10, 2008).

"k.d. lang," Internet Movie Database,http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0485807/ (June 10, 2008).

k.d. lang Official Web site, http://www.kdlang.com (June 10, 2008).

"k.d. lang," Rolling Stone.com,http://www.rollingstone.com, (June 10, 2008).

—Mary Alice Adams and Ken Burke

Lang, K.D.

views updated May 17 2018

K.D. LANG

Born: Katherine Dawn Lang; Consort, Alberta, 2 November 1961

Genre: Pop

Best-selling album since 1990: Ingenue (1992)

Hit songs since 1990: "Constant Craving"


Singer k.d. lang left behind her country music aspirations in the early 1990s to make forays into a variety of adult contemporary pop music, including jazz. Despite recording and concert success, country music's establishment rejected lang for her atypical look, fringe politics, and upfront homosexuality. She is a unique artist who upholds a respect for music's traditional aspects, yet harbors a counterculturist's personification.

Katherine Dawn Lang (she uses the lowercase k.d. lang) grew up in Consort, Alberta (population 700), where her father ran the drugstore and her mother, a school-teacher, would drive more than an hour for lang's singing and dancing lessons. In high school, she excelled in volleyball and worked one summer driving a grain truck in the agriculturally based region. She attended Red Deer College and began a passionate interest in traditional country music, particularly the works of country legend Patsy Cline. She left college early and formed a band, the Reclines, named in homage to Cline.

As the Reclines toured Canada, they developed a reputation as an offbeat country band with a punk sensibility and a crazy female lead singer. Roaming the stage dressed cross-sexually, lang wore odd rhinestone glasses frames with no lenses, and belted country or rockabilly songs. In the band's beginnings, listeners thought lang was parodying country music, although it became apparent that she was sincere. After a dismal selling debut album, A Truly Western Experience (1984), lang dropped some of the stage histrionics in an effort to be taken more seriously and released Angel with a Lariat (1987), a mixture of country classics and her own songs. That year lang arrived on the Nashville scene after a much-heralded duet with the late Roy Orbison. They sang his hit "Crying," which earned lang a 1988 Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration. She and the Reclines followed with two more country albums, Shadowland (1988) and Absolute Torch and Twang (1989), both of which went gold. Absolute Torch and Twang garnered lang a 1990 Grammy Award for Best Country Female Vocal Performance, which should have put her on top of the country music saddle, but it was a rough ride. Nashville had little tolerance for lang's androgynous appearance or her fringe politics, such as the support she gave lobbyist group PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals). In 1992 lang ended what little speculation might have remained about her sexuality by announcing publicly that she was a lesbian.

She released her first non-country album, Ingenue (1992), a collection of ten thematically based songs written by lang and her guitarist, Ben Mink, that deal with introspection and personal longing. The album went platinum and produced the only hit single of lang's career, "Constant Craving," which gave lang a third Grammy for Best Pop Female Vocal. In addition, the song's video was honored with a 1993 MTV Video Music Award for Best Female Video.

The singer continued her androgyny mystique by dressing publicly in upscale male clothing and slicking her hair back in a tight masculine wave. However, lang's voice is unmistakably female with its pure tones and wide, expressive range. It is a fluid sound, tranquil, subtle and rich with emotion, possessing tremendous power when called upon. Ingenue amazed listeners by showing no trace of the country twang so evident in lang's previous recordings.

All You Can Eat (1995), lang's follow-up, was another journey into the arty pop sound that identified lang through the success of Ingenue. She and Mink wrote the album's material that is, once again, centered on a theme, this time love. Her next recording, Drag (1997), was lang's first foray into jazz styling. Drag features renditions of a variety of cabaret-styled torch songs in addition to some current pop. Curiously, all of the songs relate in some way to smoking. Under these guidelines, her dreamy versions of "Don't Smoke in Bed" and "My Last Cigarette" are quite apropos, as is her unique take on Steve Miller's chestnut, "The Joker." She purrs, "I'm a joker, I'm a smoker, I'm a midnight toker." In gallows humor, she added the Hollies hit, "The Air That I Breathe."

After Drag, lang went into a reclusive period, somewhat disillusioned by high-profile fame. She re-emerged with another album of unique pop styling, her first album of original material in five years, Invincible Summer (2000). She wrote all the songs except "The Consequences of Falling."

Her enigmatic career took another interesting twist in 2001 as lang toured throughout the year with crooner extraordinaire, Tony Bennett. Sometimes coined "the odd couple" because of their diverse backgrounds, musical eras, and styles, the duo became close friends and recorded A Wonderful World (2002). The album, a collection of twelve of Louis Armstrong's best-known love songs, went gold. It contains standards such as "What a Wonderful World" and "La Vie En Rose."

Among her most acclaimed efforts, lang performed the classic "Leavin' on Your Mind" for MCA Record's tribute album, Remembering Patsy Cline (2003). The album features various artists singing the songs of the ill-fated singer who died in a plane crash in 1963. Throughout her career, lang has identified with Cline's singing, and empathized with the boundaries Cline faced in the male-oriented world of country music. The brave steps lang has taken toward breaking boundaries have opened doors for other performersprofessionally, artistically, and personally.

SELECTIVE DISCOGRAPHY:

A Truly Western Experience (Bumstead, 1984); Angel with a Lariat (Warner Bros., 1987); Shadowland (Warner Bros., 1988); Absolute Torch and Twang (Warner Bros., 1989); Ingenue (Warner Bros., 1992); All You Can Eat (Warner Bros., 1995); Drag (Warner Bros., 1997); Invincible Summer (Warner Bros., 2000); A Wonderful World (Sony, 2002). Soundtrack: Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (Warner Bros., 1993).

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

W. Robertson, k.d. lang: Carrying the Torch (Toronto, 1993); R. Collis, k.d. lang (London, 1999).

donald lowe