
Los Angeles native Beth Hart is a blues-influenced rock singer and former street performer made her debut in 1995 with Immortal The album, which gained her acclaim for her raw, outspoken nature as well as her gifted musicianship, heart-warming live shows, and a voice compared to those of Janis Joplin. Chuck Taylor wrote that Hart was "the epitome for natural females" in the October 2nd, 1999 issue of Billboard magazine. Hart is "bawdy hilarious, charming, jovial and free-spirited with her preference to use a spicy language. But that's not much as compared to her presence on stage that is where the tall, elegant singer/songwriter strides and screams out songs with the energy that is Mick Jagger .... At other times, she takes her seat on the piano or in the center of the stage, where she sits without pretense, her legs draped across the sides of a chair, her voice that is so soft and aching that you're wondering whether she's about to break down, or do you think you'll cry. Hart has experienced similar reactions since the moment she took to the stage in amateur competitions as a teenager. But Hart had doubts about the music business when it finally became a success. Hart ended her performance after she was unsuccessful in touring all over the world. Hart then spent nearly four years soul-searching and resolving problems with music writing. In 1999, Hart returned to her professional work with the critically highly acclaimed Screamin' for My Supper. The album witnessed Hart's songwriting capabilities expand with vulnerable and honest songs about facing life's difficulties.
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