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Maia Sharp

NPR

Muddy Bottom Blues

Program #252 (July 16 at 8:00pm and July 17 at 3:00pm)

Singer and songwriter Maia Sharp has a talent for passionate, emotionally honest songs about life and love that have won her a loyal fan following as a performer as well as the ultimate show of respect from her peers -- her songs have been covered by a wide variety of musicians, including Bonnie Raitt, the Dixie Chicks, Cher, Tricia Yearwood, Lisa Loeb, and Keb' Mo'.

Maia Sharp was born in California's Central Valley in 1971; her father, Randy Sharp, was a songwriter and recording artist, while her mother, Sharon Bays, was a college professor who taught anthropology and had performed as a singer in her younger days. When Maia was four, her family moved to Los Angeles, and a year later the precocious youngster wrote her first song, "Ghosts."

Maia became proficient on a number of instruments, including keyboards, guitar, oboe, and saxophone, and later studied music theory at California State University at Northridge, where she began to explore her love of songwriting. In 1992 her father invited Maia to play horns and keyboards on That's Another Story, an album he cut in collaboration with Karen Brooks, and by 1993 Sharp began performing her own music in Los Angeles clubs.

Sharp was discovered by Miles Copeland, who managed the Police and ran I.R.S. Records in the '70s and '80s, and signed Sharp to his Ark 21 label. In 1997 Sharp released her debut album, Hardly Glamour, but Ark 21 was not destined to last long in the marketplace and she didn't cut another album until 2002, when she released the self-titled Maia Sharp for Concord Records. That same year, Sharp served as a backing vocalist and session musician on Art Garfunkel's album Everything Waits to be Noticed, as well as helping the famed singer set two of his poems to music. Three of Sharp's songs would appear on Bonnie Raitt's 2005 release Souls Alike, and Sharp was invited to play sax on the sessions.

Also in 2005, Sharp released her third solo album, Fine Upstanding Citizen, through Koch, co-producing the album with Brad Jones as well as playing many of the instruments. In 2006 Sharp was back with album number four, Eve and the Red Delicious, recorded with Darren Embry, and in 2009 she released Echo, which was produced by Don Was; the album also featured a guest appearance from Bonnie Raitt.

By this time, Sharp had become more deeply involved in studio work, producing Edwin McCain's 2011 album Mercy Bound and producing two new tracks for the 2012 release The Singer: The Very Best of Art Garfunkel. Sharp would also produce sessions for Donny Anderson, Jenifer Freebairn, and Crystal Bowersox. In 2012, Sharp joined her parents, Randy Sharp and Sharon Bays, as well as songwriter Jack Wesley Routh, for a Western-themed collaboration, Dreams of the San Joaquin; she also completed and released an album of her own, Change the Ending, released on Blix Street.

In 2015, Sharp signed a new recording deal with Entertainment One Music and released The Dash Between the Dates, which included performances from Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart.

(provided by Allmusic)

Paul Hitchcock earned his Masters in Communications from Morehead State University and Bachelors in Radio-TV/Psychology from Georgetown College. A veteran broadcaster for more than 40 years and an avid fan of blues, jazz and American roots music. Hitchcock has been with WMKY since 1986 and was named General Manager in 2003. He currently hosts "Muddy Bottom Blues" (Fri., 8pm-9pm), "Nothin' But The Blues" (Sat., 8pm-12am), "Sunday Night Jazz Showcase" and "Live From The Jazz Lounge" (Sun., 8pm-9pm) and "The Golden Age of Radio" (Sun., 2pm-3pm). He also serves as producer for "A Time For Tales" and "The Reader's Notebook."