Music Videos | Directory | Search | Top Artists | Shows | Music Forums | Music Classifieds | Artist Signup 

Ruthie Foster
Americana / Blues / Soul

"Ruthie Foster"

AUSTIN, Texas
United States

Profile Views:  115066




Last Login:  7/6/2008
View My: Pics | Videos

   Contacting Ruthie Foster

 MySpace URL: 
  http://www.myspace.com/ruthiefosterband  

   Ruthie Foster: General Info
Member Since7/10/2006
Band Websiteruthiefoster.com
Band MembersRuthie Foster, Samantha Banks, Tanya Richardson (w/ occasional special guests..)
Sounds LikeYou can order our music online at http://cdbaby.com/cd/ruthiefoster5 !!!!!!!!!

PRESS QUOTES:
"Foster’s deeply soulful vocals dip into gospel and swing toward contemporary folk with R&B panache. When she sings a cappella, the heavens part.”
- Margaret Moser, Austin Chronicle

"Considering the Aretha Franklin comparisons getting tossed her way, it’s safe to assume the A&R folks at Atlantic are kicking themselves right about now. “Phenomenal” is no idle boast."
Christopher Blagg, Boston Herald

“The energy she brings with just voice and guitar is stunning. Ruthie’s drawn comparisons to Ella and Aretha, but musically neither is really close. What she does have in common with Fitzgerald and Franklin is the irresistible blaze – it’s impossible to look away, even close the eyes, for one second.
Philadelphia City Paper

"Her new CD...gutsily named "The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster," will convert those hungry for some real, hot soul."
Ann Powers, Los Angeles Times

“…clear-voiced affirmations…”
Jon Pareles, New York Times

"The album takes its name from ....Phenomenal Woman,'' a Maya Angelou poem set to music by Amy Sky and David Pickell, but Foster's voice would earn the superlative anyway."
Shay Quillen, The Mercury News

“She’s got a right to brag. Foster is a natural-born singer with a voice that is potent, unfussy, and, at times, deeply moving.”
-Renee Graham, Boston Globe

“Braggadocio titles were big back in the day. (Remember "The Genius of Ray Charles" and "The Fabulous Johnny Cash"?) And "The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster" is pretty fabulous. ... The arrangements are spare, but this is about Foster's rich, robust voice...”
-Jon Bream, Minneapolis Star Tribune

“The spiritual indestructibility is conveyed through the power of Foster's voice --a clear, sterling instrument sparkling with elements of a young Tina Turner and Joan Armatrading. ... a knockout album.”
-Rashod Ollison, Baltimore Sun

“her talent is universal with no pretense. ...she is a holy Anita Baker ... as bold as Nina Simone... The evocations go on and on...”
-Roberta Penn, Seattle Post Intelligencer

“a songwriter and singer as good as Foster doesn’t fit in genres- She creates her own.”
-James Porter, Time Out Chicago

“The disc serves up 57 varieties of soul... In Ms. Foster's wailing voice, "Fruits of My Labor" is the greatest tune Sam Cooke never recorded.”
-Thor Christensen, Dallas Morning News

“The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster is a fitting title.”
-Dave Gil de Rubio, Barnes and Noble.com

"Foster has a deep gritty voice with a little Janis and some Aretha that will please discerning soul and rock fans. Her cover of Lucinda Williams' 'Fruits of My Labor' tops the original."
-Dan Aquilante, NY Post "New Faces For '07"
Record Labelwww.bluecornmusic.com
Type of LabelIndie





   Upcoming Shows ( view all )
Jun 20 2008 8:00P
Riverfront Blues and American Music Festival Fort Smith, Arkansas
Jun 21 2008 8:00P
Granada Theater with Seth Walker Dallas, Texas
Jun 29 2008 8:00P
Kate Wolf Memorial Music Festival Laytonville, California
Jul 1 2008 8:00P
Antone’s Austin, Texas
Jul 3 2008 8:00P
Cityfolk Dayton, Ohio
Jul 5 2008 8:00P
Waterfront Blues Festival Portland, Oregon
Jul 6 2008 8:00P
Waterfront Blues Festival Portland, Oregon
Jul 10 2008 8:00P
Antibes Juan-les-Pins Jazz Festival (FRANCE) with JAMES BLUNT Juan-les-Pins
Jul 12 2008 8:00P
North Atlantic Blues Festival Rockland, Maine
Jul 13 2008 8:00P
Long’s Park Amphitheatre Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Jul 14 2008 8:00P
The Living Room New York, New York
Jul 16 2008 8:00P
Eddie’s Attic Decatur, Georgia
Jul 17 2008 8:00P
Merrimack Hall Performing Arts Center Huntsville, Alabama
Jul 18 2008 8:00P
Nightfall Concert Series Chattanooga, Tennessee
Jul 19 2008 8:00P
Grey Eagle Music Hall with Darrell Scott Asheville, North Carolina
Jul 24 2008 8:00P
Jazz Aspen Snowmass Snowmass Village, Colorado
Jul 25 2008 8:00P
Strings Music Festival Steamboat Springs, Colorado
Jul 26 2008 8:00P
The Soiled Dove Underground Denver, Colorado
Jul 31 2008 8:00P
Water Street Oyster Bar San Antonio, Texas
Aug 2 2008 8:00P
Snowbird Rock and Blues Festival Snowbird, Utah
Aug 6 2008 8:00P
Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival Walhalla, Michigan
Aug 7 2008 8:00P
The Ark Ann Arbor, Michigan
Aug 8 2008 8:00P
Bayfront Blues Festival Duluth, Minnesota
Aug 9 2008 8:00P
Minneapolis Zoo Amphitheatre with Booker T and the MG’s Apple Valley, Minnesota
Aug 28 2008 8:00P
Culver City Summer Concert Series Culver City, California
Aug 30 2008 8:00P
Blues By The Bay Eureka, California
Aug 31 2008 8:00P
Big Muddy Blues Festival St. Louis, Missouri
Sep 11 2008 8:00P
Tower Hill Botanic Garden Boylston, Massachusetts
Sep 13 2008 8:00P
Connecticut Folk Festival and Green Expo New Haven, Connecticut
Sep 18 2008 8:00P
Kelowna Fringe Folk Club Kelowna, British Columbia
Sep 20 2008 8:00P
Flare N’ Derrick Turner Valley, Alberta
Sep 27 2008 8:00P
San Francisco Blues Festival San Francisco, California
Oct 3 2008 8:00P
Roots, Blues & BBQ Festival Columbia, Missouri
Oct 4 2008 8:00P
Old Town School of Folk Music with Catie Curtis Chicago, Illinois
Oct 9 2008 8:00P
Blue Rock Studios Wimberley, Texas
Oct 11 2008 8:00P
Blasted Church Vinyards Okanagan Falls, British Columbia
Oct 19 2008 8:00P
36th Annual Kentuck Festival of Arts Northport, Alabama
Nov 8 2008 8:00P
Vagabond Blues with Eric Bibb Palmer, Alaska
Nov 9 2008 8:00P
Sydney Lawrence Theatre with Eric Bibb Anchorage, Alaska
Nov 12 2008 8:00P
The ARC Washington DC, Washington DC
Nov 14 2008 8:00P
North Carolina State University - Stewart Theater Raleigh, North Carolina
Nov 15 2008 8:00P
University of North Carolina - Kenan Auditorium Wilmington, North Carolina
Nov 22 2008 8:00P
Carnegie Hall Lewisburg, West Virginia

Ruthie Foster's Latest Blog Entry  [Subscribe to this Blog]

Read This!!!!!  (view more)

My Bio...  (view more)

[View All Blog Entries]

   About Ruthie Foster



"...'The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster,' will convert those hungry for some real, hot soul."

-Ann Powers, Los Angeles Times

“a songwriter and singer as good as Foster doesn’t fit in genres - She creates her own."

-James Porter, Time Out Chicago


Ruthie Foster

“The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster”


Superlatives are rare in album titles, and for good reason: unless you’re a living legend or a legend-in-the-making like the Man in Black (1958’s The Fabulous Johnny Cash) or the Queen of Soul (1962’s The Electrifying Aretha Franklin), you’re all but begging for a crash course in humility. So if you’re going to stick a word like “phenomenal” in front of your name on a record cover, you damn well better have the goods to back it up.

“Those are some big shoes!” laughs Ruthie Foster, who, just for the record, is really one of the most humble and down-to-earth artists you could ever meet, phenomenal or otherwise. She admits to initially having “quite a few reservations” about calling her fifth album The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster, crediting both her producer, noted Austin-based “swamp music” guitarist Malcolm “Papa Mali” Welbourne, and her label, Houston’s Blue Corn Records, for making that particular gutsy call. As for how they came up with it, well … just give it a listen, and you’ll understand. The big shoes just fit — so much so, that calling this particular record by this particular woman at this particular time in her life and career anything but “phenomenal” would be akin to false advertising.

If you haven’t yet been introduced to the music of this prodigiously gifted singer and songwriter from Texas, you’re in for a major epiphany. And if you’ve been following Foster’s career ever since her self-released, 1997 debut, Full Circle, or even since her 2002 breakthrough, Runaway Soul, you’re in for an even bigger surprise, because you really haven’t ever heard Foster until you hear her now. Simply put, mama’s gotta brand new bag.

“Change is kind of scary for a lot of people when it comes to music,” says Foster. “But I’ve had a lot of changes in my life the last couple of years here, both personally and musically, and it was just time to step out. Running across Papa Mali when I did was great for me, because he’d been showing up to a lot of my shows here in Austin, and he mentioned that he heard so much more in me than what was coming across. That really got my attention, because I knew that there was more, too. I’d been wanting to stretch out for quite some time. And he had a way of just saying, ‘It’s time to fly, Ruth.’”

By pretty much anyone else’s standards, Foster had already been soaring for years. Since returning to her native Texas in the mid-’90s after a period of walkabout that found her touring with the U.S. Navy band Pride (“We were bad ass!”) and even spending a few years in New York City under contract to Atlantic Records (“I think they were looking for Anita Baker meets Tracy Chapman,” she muses. “I sent a headshot to my dad, and he said, ‘Who is this white woman with my baby’s nose?”), Foster quickly established herself as one of the acoustic music world’s brightest stars. From the Kerrville Folk Festival to Austin City Limits to stages all across North America and Europe, she was winning thousands of new fans a night and selling a staggering average of 100 CDs per show. At a festival in Canada, she even broke Ani DiFranco’s record by selling 1,000 CDs in a single day. (“I love Canada,” laughs Foster.) All those records carried considerable critical acclaim, too, especially her last two, the Lloyd Maines-produced Runaway Soul and the live Stages. Both live and on disc, Foster mixed contemporary folk with old-school gospel and blues with dazzling efficiency, showcasing a powerhouse voice that drew more favorable comparisons to the likes of Ella Fitzgerald and Aretha Franklin than the poor girl knew what to do with.

You can still hear traces of that Foster on her new album — most notably in the rootsy fun of “Beaver Creek Blues,” the gospel revival spirit of “Mama Said” and the dark, stomping a cappella thunder of the Son House cover “People Grinnin’ In your Face.” But Papa Mali had an entirely different kind of Ruthie Foster sound in mind when recording commenced at Austin’s Congress House Studio, and Foster was delighted to discover that his vision tapped deep into her own roots as a music lover. Together with a crack band including drummer George Sluppick (Mofro), bassist Glenn Fukunaga (Dixie Chicks, Terri Hendrix) and Hammond B3 player Anthony Farrell (Greyhounds), they set out to make an honest to goodness classic soul album. The kind that, in a different era, with a different singer, could just as easily have been called The Phenomenal Sam Cooke.

“A lot of folks don’t know this, but that really is my background,” says Foster. “I come from a deep background of old soul and blues and even R&B. Early on, long before I ever got into the folk thing, I was doing more soul on acoustic guitar than anything else. And that’s always been a part of the sound that I have.”

The difference, she says, is all in the instrumentation — and more importantly, the groove. That became apparent early in the sessions, when Foster blew the dust off an old song of hers called “Heal Yourself” that she had recorded a decade earlier for her first album. In the wake of recent events in her personal life and her continual evolution as an artist, the lyrics — a tough-love kick in her own pants — seemed timelier than ever. But when she started playing it on acoustic guitar again — the instrument she wrote it on — Papa Mali gently inquired if she’d ever tried it on piano.

“He kind of tricked me, really,” she says. “But I went over to the piano in the room, and a groove comes out of nowhere on this thing. We’re all looking at each other, and George picks up his sticks, Glenn picks up his bass, and we just go. We’re rolling.”

In addition to piano, Foster also found herself playing a lot of Wurlitzer throughout the sessions, having the time of her life. “There’s just something about getting on that Wurli, and letting the keys pop up and down wherever they wanted to go,” she enthuses. “Woo! That was fun. I found my Ray Charles when I got on that thing!”

“This CD,” she says, “is what happens when all the elements come together and you just get out of the way and let the groove go, you know? I learned a lot about just getting out of my own way.”

That goes for the subject matter, too, with Foster originals like “Harder Than the Fall” and “I Don’t Know What to Do With My Heart” revealing a level of personal vulnerability that she’d previously shied away from sharing.

“This record’s all about what I’ve been through these last couple of years here, and then some. There was a lot of emotional stuff left over from all that that I’d been carrying around with me, and I managed to write a few songs and find a few songs from other people that really say it all. But that kind of had me holding back on the whole project, because it’s hard to put your life into a record like that and really expose yourself. ‘Harder Than the Fall’ was about my last relationship, and ‘I Don’t Know What to Do With My Heart’ was about a relationship before that. You’re not so sure you want people to be able to see your vulnerability like that, but in the end it’s necessary, because that’s how you get past those things. And, by putting these songs on the record, it’s kind of a way of letting them go out and heal somebody else out there who may need to hear them.”

After the healing comes empowerment, which brings us to what is arguably The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster’s most powerful statement: “Phenomenal Woman,” a poem by Dr. Maya Angelou originally set to music by Canadian artist Amy Sky and David Pickell.

“I’m a big, big fan of Maya Angelou,” says Foster. “I grew up wanting to be a poet. So running across this poem in a song was just beautiful to me. I had to record that one, because to me, that’s the essence of where I’m at right now. I know God ain’t done with me yet, but I’m feeling pretty good. I’ve got a lot to say and a lot to share, and I’m going to keep doing it through music. And the message in ‘Phenomenal Woman’ — I think every woman should feel that.”

She pauses, then adds with a laugh, “I think every man should feel that, too!”

www.ruthiefoster.com
www.bluecornmusic.com

   Ruthie Foster's Friend Space (Top 16)
Ruthie Foster has 6339 friends.
 Mavis Staples 


 Etta James 


 Delta Blues Connection 


 Toshi Reagon and BIGLovely 


 Threadgill';s 


 Austin Music + Entertainment Magazine 


 Jessie Mae Hemphill Foundation 


 The Lee Boys 


 Vusa Mkhaya 


 Jimmy LaFave 


 Michfest Film Festival 


 Toni Morrison 


 Carrie Rodriguez 


 Hans Theessink 

Is Online
 Thad Beckman 


 Shelley King 





Ruthie Foster's Friends Comments
Displaying 50 of 108 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
Sekhmet and the Goddesses





Jun 22 2008 4:57 PM

Come back to Canmore;) we miss your soulful music/;D
PHENOMENAL WOMYN





Jun 22 2008 11:55 PM

Sexy Myspace Comments
Hot! Myspace Comments

AND YOUR MUSIQ REACHES MY SOUL...
Motown Mitch





Jun 24 2008 5:42 AM

Hey Ruthie!
Can't wait for your @ Eddie's Attic show. It's a great venue.
Happy Trails!

~mitch
River Front Blues Society





Jun 21 2008 7:11 AM

Thanks for a phenomenal show! You rocked the City of Fort Smith! We love you!!!!!!
MICHFEST





Jun 18 2008 9:03 AM

Photobucket
Gina Sicilia





Jun 12 2008 4:19 PM

AMAZING performance at the BMA's...
Jay Johnson





Jun 11 2008 9:38 AM

thanks for the add, ruthie...

peace,

jay
Lynne Jordan





Jun 6 2008 5:33 PM

Hey sista girl! Hope show biz is treating you well!
Anna





Jun 2 2008 2:00 PM

I saw you with Bo Diddley up in Burlington last year. I'm glad I got to see him before he died.
Thanks for playing with him!
Sunny





Jun 2 2008 3:09 PM

feeling the love with ya while remembering Bo Diddley...Peace and Love...Susie
Ruth





Jun 4 2008 5:29 PM

Thank you for sharing your voice with the world!
Papa Mali





May 28 2008 9:42 AM

had so much fun playing with y'all at jazz fest - the band sounds so great! you blew A LOT of seasoned music fans out of their seats and out of their minds that day - lady tambourine was the icing on the soul-shake-cake!

I know we are both busy as can be, but let's hang out sometime soon...I miss you!
Pascal





May 28 2008 10:05 AM

Bonjour Ruthie
thanks for the friendly add
great voice !!!
great sound too
best wishes from France
Pascal
*Sugar*





May 28 2008 5:29 PM

Hi Ruthie,
Thanks for the add. Here's a picture of you that I just love from the January cruise...it's your smile!
Ruthie Foster
~k
Bongo





May 24 2008 7:02 AM

Ruthie,

Having never heard your name before, my wife and I crowded into the JazzFest Blues tent on a recommendation from several fellow music fans. We didn't know what to expect, but it's JazzFest. No stage ever disappoints.

We loved what you sang, but our jaws dropped because of how you sang it.

Your voice is an amazing gift. Please share it as much as you can. It didn't just please us, it inspired us.

Bongo
Delray Beach, Florida
Karen Lovely