Jenn Bostic
  • Jealous of the Angels
  • Change
  • Let's Get Ahead of Ourselves
  • Wait for Me
  • Missin' a Man
  • Snowstorm (Acoustic)
  • Kiss My Rainy Day Away
  • Keep Lookin' For Love
  • Good In Goodbye
  • Mess It Up With Love
  • Dance Like Nobody's Watchin'
  • Saturday With You
  • Jealous of the Angels
    Genre: Pop
    MP3 (04:05) [9.34 MB]
  • Change
    Genre: Pop
    MP3 (03:06) [7.08 MB]
  • Let's Get Ahead of Ourselves
    Genre: Pop
    MP3 (03:34) [8.35 MB]
  • Wait for Me
    Genre: Pop
    MP3 (03:15) [7.61 MB]
  • Missin' a Man
    Genre: Adult Contemporary
    MP3 (03:48) [8.89 MB]
  • Snowstorm (Acoustic)
    Genre: Pop
    MP3 (02:52) [6.74 MB]
  • Kiss My Rainy Day Away
    Genre: Country
    MP3 (04:48) [10.98 MB]
  • Keep Lookin' For Love
    Genre: Country
    MP3 (03:35) [8.19 MB]
  • Good In Goodbye
    Genre: Country
    MP3 (04:31) [10.33 MB]
  • Mess It Up With Love
    Genre: Country
    MP3 (03:20) [7.65 MB]
  • Dance Like Nobody's Watchin'
    Genre: Country
    MP3 (03:57) [9.04 MB]
  • Saturday With You
    Genre: Country
    MP3 (02:22) [5.41 MB]
Biography
“Love me, hate me/Leave or take me/Just don’t make me change”

Jenn Bostic’s career as a singer and songwriter began when she was 10 years old, in the back seat of her father’s car with her older brother on the way to school. A horrific crash that killed her dad, a hobby musician who taught her folk songs like “Sunny Side of the Street,” and turned her on to Emmylou Harris and Bonnie Raitt, changed the 25-year-old’s life forever.

“God must need another angel/Around the throne tonight,” she sings on “Jealous of the Angels,” a song on her second album, the follow-up to her promising debut, Keep Lookin for Love. “Your love lives on inside of me/And I will hold on tight.”

Born in Philadelphia, but raised in Waconia, Minnesota, a small town 30 miles west of Minneapolis, Jenn grew up singing with her family around the piano. Her father, a CEO of NordicTrack, played a variety of instruments, including accordion, while his daughter picked up a love of folk, blues, R&B, soul, show tunes and, eventually, country. Seeing her father die in front of her made her angry with God at first, but she later found an outlet for her sorrow in music and writing songs.

“The first time I was able to sit down at the piano and play, I shut my eyes and honestly felt a presence next to me,” she explains. “I poured my heart into those first few songs. The only way I could connect and be with my dad was when I played music. And I still feel that way.”

Jenn went on to perform wherever she could, taking voice, piano and acting lessons, singing in choirs and school musicals. She would sit in with a local roots band, Traveled Ground, that consisted of teachers from her middle and high school, and once included her father on accordion.

She went east to attend the famed Berklee School of Music, where she honed her performance skills while studying music education, a field still vitally important to her.

“One day, I’d love to open up a ‘School of Rock’ type institution,” she says. “Just really give back by working with people who are as passionate as I am about music.” She also discovered country music, singing for a cover band called DiggerDawg, which opened for a variety of performers, including Alan Jackson, Josh Turner, Brad Paisley, Reba McEntire and Gretchen Wilson, as well as traveling to Iraq and Kuwait on an Armed Forces Entertainment Tour to entertain the U.S. troops.

On graduation, she relocated to Nashville, where she fell in with the local community, taking part in writers’ rounds and performing on a regular basis. “Change,” another song on the new album, expresses her frustration at being told she was “too pop for country and too country for pop.” “Everybody’s so quick with advice/About who I’m supposed to be,” she sings, stating defiantly, while quoting Judy Garland, “Never be a second-rate version of somebody else.”

“It’s a challenge,” she says. “The biggest thing I’ve learned as an artist is to stop worrying about what I think everybody else wants and to write music that I love. When I stopped worrying about impressing people and started to focus on touching lives, that’s when things started happening, and that’s what makes me happy.”

Take Sheryl Crow’s bluesy approach, Sarah McLachlan’s purity of voice and Sara Bareilles’ funkiness and you get an idea of Jenn Bostic.

Working with producer Barrett Yeretsian (“Jar of Hearts”) in Los Angeles and fellow Berklee grad Charlie Hutto at Nashville’s legendary Starstruck Studios, Bostic’s sophomore album is a superb showcase for her talents as both a singer and writer.

The album’s centerpiece, “Jealous of the Angels,” came out of a songwriting session. “It started with the phrase, ‘around the throne tonight,’” she explains. “I just began writing down pages of my feelings about my dad, read them to the others and they started picking out pieces. We just mapped out all these emotions and placed them in the song.”

“I’m a big dreamer,” she admits. “Winning a Grammy is the ultimate goal. I’ve visualized it happening; next step is making that dream a reality.”

With a little help from someone who continues watching over her shoulder.

“When I play ‘Angels,’ and people come up to me and tell me a story about losing a loved one, how the song touched them and helped them heal, that means more to me than anything.”
17
  • Members:
  • Sounds Like:
    A CD
  • Influences:
    Bonnie Raitt, Sara Bareilles, Sarah McLachlan & Missy Higgins
  • AirPlay Direct Member Since:
    05/07/10
  • Profile Last Updated:
    03/31/24 16:16:41

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