Bio
Short
Wren’s Celtic-inspired folk music evokes the lands and waters of the many places she has called home. Celebrated for her pure and original vocals and the “naturalness and philosophical bent" of her song-writing, Wren's atmospheric and intimate folk music speaks to dreams, the cycles of nature, archetypes & myths, and the dance of solitude and intimacy. Her albums are largely place-based, inspired by her lifetime love of the Salish Sea, her year in Galicia, Spain and, most recently, by her journey to recover from chronic illness, which has taken her from a small cabin in the woods in Washington's Methow Valley to Arizona's Sonora Desert in pursuit of healing. Her third album, released in February 2021, is a musical exploration of four seasons in the Methow Valley and the heroine’s journey.
Pink Stone Press Release
~ February 20, 2021 ~
Wren sits on the banks of the Methow River, feet submerged, her fingers smoothing a stone. Western tanagers make final, looping flights across the water, yellow bellies bright in the twilight. She opens her hand to show me the salmon-hued stone, musing about her new album’s namesake. “This river, and these stones, gave me something to hold onto, to flow into, when it felt like my life and my health as I knew them were disintegrating.”
It’s summer now, but the story of Pink Stone begins in late fall a few years prior when friends invited her to house-sit their cabin in Washington’s Methow Valley, a place of epic mountain peaks and wild rivers in the traditional territory of the mətxʷú people. Worn-down and out of songs after years of battling a mysterious health crisis, she accepted the invitation and left her old life behind to stay for a time at their remote cabin the woods, lovingly called Moose Lodge.
Over the wintry weeks that followed, she wandered the banks of the river and the hills of sagebrush and brittlebush aimlessly, asking the land around her for answers. What was the purpose of the illness? What new way was being revealed? In the evenings, hunkered down by the wood stove and plucking at her neglected guitar, she discovered an unexpected freedom in the solitude from other humans and a deepening relationship with the natural world. Little by little, the songs returned, and with them, the glimmer of a new path forward that would eventually carry her far from the valley and her home in Washington to a fresh chapter in Arizona’s high mountain deserts.
The body of music and writings that emerged from that first month, and grew over several years of extended returns to the valley, became Wren’s 3rd album, Pink Stone: Songs from Moose Lodge (coming 2020), produced at Airtime Studios in Bloomington, Indiana by David Weber (Moira Smiley, Carrie Newcomer, Straight No Chaser) and featuring Jason Wilber (John Prine band), Krista Detor, and world flutist Gary Stroutsos. At times both melancholic and joyous, the ten-song album showcases Wren’s emotive vocals and classical-guitar accompaniment, bolstered by roots/Americana instrumentation and soothing textures of electric guitars and harmony vocals.
To accompany the album, Wren is releasing a 98-page Companion Book of essay vignettes, journal entries, illustrations, photos, and lyrics born from her time in the Methow.
“Those were some of the loneliest years of my life, but they were also imbued with a palpable magic,” Wren says, “and I’ve spent the period since obsessed with how to capture that feeling in a song. How to transport the listener to the warm cocoon of a cabin where I felt free to move at my own pace for the first time.”
Here, Wren is referencing Bill Plotkin’s book, Nature and the Human Soul, which provided her with guidance and fuel for her creative work at Moose Lodge, alongside Maureen Murdock’s book, The Heroine’s Journey. She considers the finished project a rough portrayal of the life phase Plotkin calls “The Wanderer in the Cocoon.”
“I was often alone but I wasn’t unattached,” Wren says. “My human romances merged with this greater relational experience of place and resulted in a collection of songs about the paradoxes of love and intimacy, where the land and the river often become other characters in the story.”
The resulting music runs like water through the dark, offering warm arms for starless nights and messages of resilience for difficult times.
***
Pink Stone follows in the steps of Wren’s two earlier place-based albums. Her second album, Stitch an Ocean (2016), was a “love-letter” to Galicia, Spain, where she lived for a year in her early twenties. Featuring her interpretation of two traditional Galician folksongs in addition to originals, the album ranked in the top #40 albums in the Folk DJ Charts and two songs ranked #33 for plays. Her first album, Bone Nest (2013), deemed “a perfect soundtrack for our misty Pacific Northwest winters” by DJ Kitty (KSER), was deeply inspired by her coming of age with the plants, animals, and landscapes of the Pacific Northwest, where she grew up on traditional Duwamish territory.
Wren has shared the stage with artists such as Mandolin Orange, Bill Staines, and Pepper Proud, and has performed at venues such as the Virginia V Steamship, NW Folklife Festival, the Santiago de Compostela Congressional Palace, and the Tucson Folk Festival.
Guest Credits:
“She” on The Last Picture Show by Jonathan Root
“The Last Picture Show” on The Last Picture Show by Jonathan Root
“Turquoise Sky” on The Last Picture Show by Jonathan Root
"Inside Affairs" on Dreamer’s Whip by Dykeritz
"Call the Mountain," on Our Past and Present Futures by Devin Sinha
Words from Listeners
“Part woodland sprite songstress and champion of all things living and part activist for the world …cast in warm melodic tones and poetic lyrics.” – Char
“I think the core of what I enjoy most about [Wren’s] music has to do with retelling the story that we have this amazing friendship with nature, and that most people in our culture are hungry to experience this feeling of belonging through music or other forms of art.” – Brian
“Soothing, melodic, metaphoric songstress.” – Rob
Press Reviews
“The stirring third album from nomadic singer-songwriter Wren glows with an irrepressible hope… full of rivers, mountains, otters, fish, cedars and corn stalks, the record is an ecosystem all its own.” - Review of Pink Stone
“A gentle gem of beautifully performed reflective songs, burnished by a little studio polish like a carefully balanced Andy Goldsworthy sculpture or an Annie Dillard poem.” - Marc Higgins review of Pink Stone
“Wren has a voice that drifts over your critical senses. Pink Stone…[is] the kind of album that will always welcome you back.” - Review of Pink Stone
“The songs are all a joy in their own way, taking the sounds of traditional music and keeping them moving with just the right dose of optimism and perseverance.” - Review of Stitch an Ocean
“Wren is just as much poet as musician. Her dreamy, nature-filled lyrics take you on adventures, bring you to tears, and make you smile. Wren’s warm soprano and lilting guitar make Bone Nest a perfect soundtrack for our misty Pacific Northwest winters.” -DJ Kitty, KSER 90.7 FM, Everett, WA
“An evocative strong set of arousing songs…[with] dazzlingly original lyrics. It makes one hunger for the next album.” -John Apice, No Depression (full review of Stitch an Ocean)
“Seattle singer-songwriter’s heartfelt love letter to Galicia. Easy-on-the-ear arrangements feature cello, piano, violin, mandolin, hammered dulcimer, and her own classical guitar…”
–Review of Stitch an Ocean
“A colorful wickerwork of original compositions, elaborately arranged with dulcimer, mandolin, violin and American Indian flutes.” - Review of Stitch an Ocean
+ More Press Reviews
"A sumptuous ten-track journey through Americana-infused, Celtic-inspired folk." - Darren's Music Blog review of Pink Stone
"The most beautiful song on this record: “Kite Out On The Ocean” ... brings back fond memories of the songs of Irish singer Mary Black." (translated from Dutch) - Rootstime review of Pink Stone
"Pink Stone: Songs from Moose Lodge has certainly become as beautiful as its predecessor, perhaps even more beautiful, only time will tell." - Theo Volk, Music that Needs Attention
"Listening to it should certainly leave you in the, ahem, pink." - Folking.com review of Pink Stone
“The title and cover are derived from the catchy “Hand-Sewn Ocean.” I can’t get the chorus of that song out of my head already for a long time. But the album is full of beautiful music. My favorites change frequently, I think the characteristic of an outstanding album.”
— Theo Volk, Johnny’s Garden, The Netherlands
“It’s so easy during laid-back shows where a majority of your audience is sitting, drinking, and probably with a group, to start your own conversations and forget you’re actually at a show, but that did not seem to be the case during Wren. Once you tuned in, you were captured.”
— No Cover Seattle
The “messages of the lyrics are deep and leave a lot to the imagination.”
— Ana Lete Journalism, Review of “The Road You Thought You Knew”
“[Bone Nest is] a refreshing change from the commercial material we hear on the radio. The songs are very well arranged and the album very well put together. Not only is the music good as well as the performance, but the production is good as well. The story telling and atmosphere that is created makes it a really nice listening album. Wren is a beautiful musical artist and has a very sincere passion for her music and a good feel for her minstrel style of singing and guitar playing.”
— Greg Bennet, The Victory Review
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Highlighted Past Performances
NW Folklife Festival - 2019, 2015, 2014
Tucson Folk Festival - 2019
Congressional Palace, Santiago de Compostela, Spain - 2017
International Wilderness Guides Council, Konigsdorf, Germany - 2017
The Virginia V Steamship, Sold-out Stitch an Ocean Release Show, Seattle, WA - 2016
Seattle Acoustic Music Festival - 2015, 2014
Northwind Arts Center, Port Townsend, WA - 2014
The Rendezvous, Seattle, w/Mandolin Orange - 2014
De Catro a Catro, Vigo, Spain - 2014
Concerts in the Woods, Coyle, WA - 2014