A singer-songwriter needs a story to share, and Sadie Jemmett has had more experiences
than all of the population born in her village in Cambridge, England.
Throughout her childhood, she was shuttled between her father, an actor, a
mother who also was an actor and became a priest, and a succession of families
with whom she boarded. By age 11, she’d already run away from half a dozen
homes. In yet another foster home at age 12, she discovered music and
subsequently taught herself guitar, her first anchor in life. At 16, she started life on her own and moved
to Edinburgh, from where she began a year on the road as a backing singer for a
reggae band. She became an au pair in Switzerland, enrolled in and dropped out
of a drama college in London, spent a year working with adults with learning
difficulties in Scotland, joined a band in London and another band in Berlin,
hitchhiked through Spain and sang in bars, wrote the music for a couple of
plays and wrote songs and poetry in various cities in Ireland. Now 21, she
returned to Sussex, England, enrolled in a drama course and formed the band
Soil, then joined a touring theatre company, writing the music and performing
in the show around Europe as far as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. She settled
in Paris and collaborated on the music for Resonance,
which won a Moliere award. It led to more theatre work, including writing the
music for a production of Brecht’s Good
Woman of Setchuan. In the meantime, however, she had a child. Back in London,
living with her daughter Thalia in a two room flat in Camden, she began
performing as a solo artist. Jemmett's debut solo album, The Blacksmith's Girl, was the distillation of Sadie’s life story.
Mostly written over 2010, the confessional songs were about coming to terms
with her often traumatic past. These Days
is her 2014 follow-up album which tells about her maturation into the life as a
working mother playing and living in London, England.
In more recent times, Sadie Jemmett performed in a stage production
at the Ellen Stewart La Mama Theater
in Manhattan's East Village. Tonight she returned to the neighborhood to
perform at Annie O.'s invitation-only
music series at Chez Andre in the Standard Hotel. Performing solo on
acoustic guitar, many of the songs offered panoramic views of people and places
in northern London or evoked universally-shared sentiments of love and loss. The
songs were moving and beautiful, and her soft and soulful vocal delivery was
honest and compelling. At times, she sounded like a traditional balladeer, a poetic
troubadour from the 1960s Greenwich Village folk scene. Her lyrics revealed
someone who was sorting out her jagged life but who was also in the process of
coming to peaceful terms with it. Ironically, Jemmett's performance was less
confessional or cathartic than one might have expected from someone with such a
remarkably peripatetic journey. She barely scratched the surface of the unique
and wildly restless spirit that nurtured her to find expression in the arts.
This indicates that an even richer wealth of creativity is yet to come from the
talented and accomplished singer-songwriter.
Visit Sadie Jemmett at www.sadiejemmett.com.

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