Born
and raised into a musical family in Wisconsin, guitarist and singer Liz
Mandeville grew up in an arts-filled environment. Her father played
guitar and sang folk songs while taking classes at the Art Institute of
Chicago on the GI bill. He taught his daughter to paint and sing, and
Liz often accompanied her father to art museums, gardens and art
galleries, wherever his work took him. Her mother was an actress and she
saw to it that her daughter had a proper education in the theater arts
as well, something which came in handy many years later when Mandeville
decided to pursue a career as a blues singer.Musicians
and artists were frequent guests in the Mandeville's home, and the
young Mandeville was encouraged to write songs, poetry and short
stories. Family vacations around the south exposed young Liz to blues,
bluegrass, traditional country and folk music and New Orleans jazz and
funk.Her first professional gigs were in coffee
houses around Wisconsin, playing songs her father had taught her. She
cited as influences on her earliest attempts at music people like James
Brown, Muddy Waters and Lightnin' Hopkins.Known
previously as Liz Mandeville-Greeson, Mandeville played the bars in and
around Chicago for most of the '90s and 2000s, and she made occasional
tours to points east — New York City — and West, to California, as well
as many cities and towns in between. She spent much of the late '80
touring across the U.S. and Canada by van with her then-band, theSupernaturals. During the 2000s, she worked with a band called the Blue
Points.In 1994, she met Chicago bassist Aron
Burton and subsequently performed with him at the 1994 Chicago Blues
Festival. She recorded two tracks with him on his 1996 album, Aron
Burton Live, and that led to her being signed to Michael Frank's Earwig
Music Company.Between 1994 and 1999, Mandeville was
a frequent sight on stage at the Blue Chicago nightclubs, where she had
the chance to work with a short who's-who of Chicago-area musicians,
including Willie Kent, Maurice John Vaughn and Michael Coleman. She
recorded her first two albums with musicians from that scene,including
Burton on bass, Allan Batts, keyboards, and drummer Dave Jefferson.Among
her awards and distinctions: she was nominated for Blues songwriter of
the year in 2008 by the American Roots Music Association, was named
semi-finalist in the 2006 International Songwriting Competition for her
composition, "Life Sentence of the Blues," and she received an award in
2005 for Best Songwriter in the USA Songwriting Competition, for her
humorous tune, "He Left It in His Other Pants."Her
albums, showcasing her spry, sometimes humorous original songs, all for
the Chicago-based Earwig Music label, include 2008's Red Top, Back in
Love Again (2002), Ready to Cheat (1999) and Look at Me (1996). She has
performed on a slew of other albums by Chicago-based blues performers,
including Johnny Drummer's 2000 release, Unleaded Blues, Aron Burton's
Live from Buddy Guy's Legends and a compilation of Chicago-area women
blues singers, Red Hot Mamas for the Blue Chicago label. LIZ MANDEVILLE
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