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Its music that runs through my veins, says Stephanie,
speaking on the life-blood role of music in her life. And its quite
literally the case since a passion for singing and performing was handed
down to her through her musical family. There was hardly a moment,
let alone a day, where music couldnt be heard in my familys
house when I was growing up in small-town western Pennsylvania.
Im really lucky that my family has always supported me. Pursuing
music was just natural. Ive basically been doing it all my life.
Starting in the church then to lots and lots of musical theatre,
Stephanie ended up with a lot of experiences as a performer that ended
up serving her after a traumatic turn of events while Stephanie was in
college in Texas when vocal nodes from allergies disabled her singing
voice completely. For quite a while, there were lots of people
who didnt even know I sang. I could hardly let myself think about
it a lot of the time. Singing is such a personal experience - you are
the instrument. There was a huge void in my life without it.
Acting and modeling filled in the gap for a few years when Stephanie moved
to New York City. A slow, successful recovery from two vocal surgeries
opened the door to getting back in touch with music, and then there was
no turning back. Sold-out performances and award nominations for her successful
Off-Broadway review containing her own arrangements of obscure standards
and pop songs, produced with musical director Scott Barnes (manager of
the late Nancy LaMott), led Stephanie to Nashville to focus on recording
and writing.
Stephanie spent time building her songwriting catalog while continuing
to work as a singer for demos and commercials. I didnt realize
until I got to Nashville, but I guess I had been writing songs in my head
for a long time. Things just started coming out when I finally put pen
to paper. Co-writing songs for the upcoming film Angola Blue with
legendary songwriter/producer, Gary Nicholson, led to recording and writing
appointments in Los Angeles for film, commercials, and other new artists.
Reconnecting with L.A.-based composer/producer Brian
Arbuckle, who first hired Stephanie as a singer for a television commercial,
has created a partnership that has led to the self-titled debut CD, available
at CDBaby.com where it was "editor's pick" in both the rock
and pop categories, (a full list of online retail and download sites can
be found at Stephanie's website, www.stephanierichards.com). The CD is
also among the first independents available at iTunes. In the fall of
2003, the single "Get Used To It" made it all the way to #40
on R&R's CHR/Pop Top 50 Indicator Chart - a notable feat for an indie
release.
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