|
Carlene
Carter has always straddled the line between country and rock. Beginning her
career as a rock singer in the mid-'70s, she became immersed in the new wave in
the late '70s, before emerging as a new country singer in the late '80s,
Throughout it all, her music has always infused roots music whether its
country or rock & roll with a nervy, edgy energy.
Carlene is
the daughter of June
Carter and Carl
Smith, who divorced when their daughter was just two. June
would frequently take her daughter on the Carter
Family tours, which meant that Carlene
developed a musical interest at an early age. When she was 12, her mother
married Johnny
Cash. Following the marriage, Carlene and
her stepsister Rosanne
Cash became backup singers in the Carter/Cash touring
show.
. |
|
At the age of 15 she married Joe
Simpkins and had a child; they were divorced within a few years. Carter
enrolled in college as a piano major in her late teens, but she never graduated.
At 19, she married Jack
Routh and had another child; they were divorced within two years.
In 1978, she decided to pursue a musical career, heading to Los Angeles where
she received a record contract with Warner Brothers. Her debut album, Carlene Carter, was a rock & roll record
recorded in London with Graham
Parker's backing band, the
Rumour. The following year, she released her second album, Two Sides to Every Woman, which featured support
from the Doobie
Brothers. That same year she married singer/songwriter/producer Nick
Lowe, who was currently the co-leader of the new wave rock & roll
revival band, Rockpile.
Lowe
helped Carter shape
her musical direction in the early '80s and her third album the new
wave-inflected country-rock record Musical Shapes (1980) showed the influence of
Lowe,
Rockpile,
and Dave
Edmunds. Although the album was critically acclaimed, it was a commercial
failure. She followed Musical Shapes in 1981 with Blue Nun, which continued to pursue a new-wave
country direction; like its predecessor, it was ignored.
During the early '80s, Carter was
shut off from the country community because she was living in England with Lowe.
After Blue Nun, she stopped recording, choosing to
perform solo shows instead; she also had a starring role in the theatrical
production Pump Boys and Dinettes. Carter and
Lowe's
marriage collapsed in the mid-'80s and she returned to the states, where she
became part of the touring Carter
Family.
In 1989, she began working on a comeback record with Howie
Epstein, the bassist for Tom Petty
& the Heartbreakers. That same year, she dueted with Southern
Comfort on the Top 40 hit, "Time's Up." Reprise signed Carter in
1990 and she released her overdue fifth album, I Fell in Love, later that year. I Fell In Love still had rock influences, but it
was a more straightforward country record than her previous albums, and country
radio paid attention. The album became a hit and two singles, "I Fell In Love"
and "Come On Back," climbed all the way to number three. Little Love Letters, her 1993 follow-up (which
was released on Giant Records), was equally successful; its first single, "Every
Little Thing," was another number three hit. Little Acts of Treason, her 1995 album, wasn't
as big a hit as its two predecessors, but it still enjoyed moderate success on
the country charts. A hits collection, Hindsight 20/20, appeared in the fall of 1996.
Stephen Thomas Erlewine |