Raised in the small Missouri town of Moscow Mills on a seven acre farm
- her dad’s dream come true in small measure - music and performing
seemed to be part of Jeanne’s life from the beginning. Seems music
was always on in the house, her dad was always singing (she vividly
remembers his versions of “I get a kick out of you,” and
“Oh what a beautiful morning” from Oklahoma! - long before
she knew the latter was from a musical), and her mom played a little
guitar (“Leavin’ on a Jet Plane” is a clear recollection)
and later a lot of piano and organ. Jeanne and her two book-end brothers
used to set up boxes and bang away on the “drums” to classic
rock, while Jeanne sang to any song on the radio, developing her harmonizing
skills. While her younger brother pursued guitar, Jeanne took some piano
lessons, played a little guitar now and then, and focused primarily
on singing in school choirs and acting in school plays. Acting became
the focus when she won a major theatre scholarship to Coe
College in Cedar Rapids, IA, and furthered her stage craft and technique,
while continuing to perform in choral groups.
Post-college, Jeanne decided she had better have a skill to fall back
on, so limited her theatre while gaining her M.Ed. in School Psychology
at Chicago’s Loyola
University. After spending a number of years as a full-time school
psychologist, Jeanne decided life was too short to spend all of her
time working at a job that was not feeding her creative needs, and she
began to pursue professional acting with more passion. She became a
self-employed (read, “took a cut in salary”) actor and school
psychologist, earning her keep by contracting with a number of area
high schools and working from home much of the time. This new flexibility
allowed Jeanne the time for auditions, shows, and the additional and
unexpected benefit of becoming reacquainted with her guitar (she had
bought her jumbo Taylor
615 about five years earlier - when she had money from working full
time; she has since added a second Taylor - a K22).
It was during this time that some significant personal reflection
and an obvious need for creative growth (launched in part by her discovery
of "The Artist's
Way") propelled Jeanne to begin writing her own songs. The connection
with music was strong - it was her roots and felt like home - and she
began putting most of her creative energies into songwriting and singing/playing
out, primarily at local open mics in Chicago. She won the first open
mic competition in which she competed, boosting her sense that this
was the right path. She has received some recognition through being
named a finalist in the 2003
Unisong contest, and being invited in 2004 to participate in a USA
Songwriting Competition's Borders Books & Music showcase.
Jeanne’s songs tend towards pop-folk, slice-of-life stories,
often set in open or alternate tunings, and her dynamic vocal quality
and range and strong percussive guitar style have earned her comparisons
to some major female artists, such as Joni Mitchell, Jonatha Brooke,
Shawn Colvin, and Ani DiFranco. Though rooted in the folk tradition
of storytelling, Jeanne's songs and performance style go beyond traditional
folk as she creates an organic, infectious relationship with her audience.
After a year and a half of recording, mixing, and producing, Jeanne
released her debut CD, "The Journey's about to begin..." on
her own label, Arrigoberry Records, in August 2005. She performs mostly
in and around Chicago, but with the new CD in hand, is looking towards
regional touring, and is especially interested in the traditional folk
venue of "house concerts."
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