| SIERRA HULL Bio
A good chunk of popular music’s real estate has been carved up along
lines of age these last half-dozen decades, and we’re used to seeing
young musicians aim exclusively for young audiences then flounder as
they outgrow teenaged listeners’ tastes and concerns. Pan-generational
mentoring and mingling has done much to insulate bluegrass from this
coming-of-age quandary. Still, Sierra Hull is the rare soul to
make it through these years entirely unscathed.
Secrets -- the debut album she recorded at 15, and released at
16 -- struck the ear with sensibilities that seemed both seasoned and
fresh; kids’ stuff this was not. Three years and a move from her
family’s home in tiny Byrdstown, Ten. to Boston’s Berklee College of
Music later, she’s followed with one of the most surefooted transitions
into early adulthood put to record. Thirty seconds into the opening
track, she sings a line that puts a fine point on it: “I’m not a child
anymore.”
Of course, the evidence of Sierra’s uncommon maturity -- musical and
personal (one might say she embodies the perfect balance of humility and
capability) -- has been there all along, and won her formidable fans: by
age 11, Alison Krauss had called with an invitation to the Opry stage;
by 12, Rounder was expressing interest; first Ron Block and now Barry
Bales have served as co-producers, and her studio bands have featured
the cream of the contemporary bluegrass crop -- Stuart Duncan, Randy
Kohrs and Bryan Sutton this time, alongside members of Sierra’s own
crack band Highway 111. Then there’s the fact that Berklee gave her the
school’s most prestigious award, the Presidential Scholarship, a first
for a bluegrass musician; her choice to accept it, to delay her dream of
hitting the road full-time after high school in favor of expanding her
musical worldview, was hardly a light one.
If ever the “child prodigy” label did Sierra justice, its usefulness
has completely fallen away and a distinctive new identity emerged. What
you hear on Daybreak is one of bluegrass’s few full-fledged
virtuosic instrumentalist/singer/songwriters, and one who’s gracefully
grown into her gifts. While her mandolin playing has always possessed
clarity and fleet-fingered precision, here she attacks her solos with
newfound spontaneity and depth of feeling; she calls it “playing with a
point to prove.” Her singing -- always straight and true -- has more
heartfelt power behind it, to results Bales describes, simply, as “doing
the songs justice.”
As for the songs, Sierra’s first album held just a few originals, but
she wrote seven of these twelve, a collection that stands up quite well
next to the outside material. There’s a pair of sprightly instrumentals,
her first-ever western swing number and several that show her emotional
sophistication: in songs that fall squarely in the bluegrass tradition,
feelings are out in the open; during country-leaning compositions, she
ponders relationships from more introspective angles; and the title
track -- a breathtaking pop ballad -- is the most ruminative moment of
all.
Boundaries—age, genre or otherwise -- don’t hamper an artist like
Sierra. She’s already earned considerable respect in the bluegrass
world, the IBMA’s voting members having nominated her for no fewer than
five awards over three years -- there’s a good chance she’ll be the
first woman to win the mandolin category. But as a player, a singer and
a songwriter, she also has remarkable range, the potential to win over
ears unfamiliar with Bill Monroe and give performances of broad cultural
importance, as she’s done at Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center and the
National Prayer Breakfast. Matt Glaser -- head of Berklee’s American
Roots Music Program -- put it this way: “She has no limitations as a
musician.” Daybreak is certainly a noteworthy arrival; you can’t
help but feel it’s also just the beginning.
- Jewly Hight, Nashville, Tennessee, January 2011
website:
www.SierraHull.com |


Sierra Hull "Daybreak":
|