Allison Moorer

Musician

Birthday June 21, 1972

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Mobile, Alabama, U.S.

Age 51 years old

Nationality United States

#59557 Most Popular

1972

Allison Moorer (born June 21, 1972) is an American country singer-songwriter.

Moorer was born in Mobile, Alabama on June 21, 1972.

She was raised in Frankville, Alabama, and later Monroeville, Alabama, after the deaths of her parents.

Growing up, Moorer and her sister also lived in Jackson, Alabama at various times.

Music was an important part of the Moorer family.

Moorer's father was a heavy drinker who abused his wife.

1985

In 1985, her mother fled with the two girls to nearby Mobile, but her father soon discovered their whereabouts.

1986

In 1986, when Moorer was 14 and her older sister Shelby (now Shelby Lynne) was 17, he shot and killed his wife before taking his own life.

1993

Moorer graduated from the University of South Alabama in Mobile in June 1993 and then moved to Nashville, Tennessee, without even collecting her diploma to join her sister, singer/songwriter Shelby Lynne, who lived there and had already released three albums.

Moorer began singing backgrounds in Lynne's band full time and toured extensively with her.

1996

In June 1996, Moorer took part in a tribute to her songwriter friend, the late Walter Hyatt, singing his "Tell Me Baby" at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium.

Nashville agent Bobby Cudd was in attendance and subsequently introduced her to renowned producer and MCA Nashville president Tony Brown.

After a few meetings, Brown asked her to cut some demos for the label.

Two tracks—"Pardon Me" and "Call My Name"— from that session were included on her first MCA album, Alabama Song.

When Brown moved from MCA Records to sister label Universal South, Moorer followed.

1997

She signed with MCA Nashville in 1997 and made her debut on the U.S. Billboard Country Chart with the release of her debut single, "A Soft Place to Fall", which she co-wrote with Gwil Owen.

1999

The song was featured in Robert Redford's The Horse Whisperer and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song in 1999.

Moorer performed at the Oscars ceremony the same year.

She has made ten albums and has had songs recorded by Trisha Yearwood, Kenny Chesney, Miranda Lambert, Steve Earle, and Hayes Carll.

2002

Her 2002 album, Miss Fortune, earned more raves, but didn't meet sales expectations.

It contained the ballad "Tumbling Down," which was featured on the soundtrack of the popular 2002 film The Rookie.

2004

With a slightly rougher edge than past efforts, The Duel was released in April 2004.

Moorer's first husband, Doyle Lee Primm, was featured as a songwriter on her first four albums.

2005

They divorced in 2005.

After serving as his opening act on a European tour, Moorer married fellow singer/songwriter Steve Earle.

2006

Earle produced her 2006 album, Getting Somewhere.

Moorer wrote all the songs, with the exception of one co-written with Earle.

2008

They were both nominated for the Best Country Collaboration with Vocals Grammy, for the song "Days Aren't Long Enough" from Earle's Washington Square Serenade in 2008.

The song was also nominated for an Americana Music Association award.

Moorer released the Buddy Miller-produced Mockingbird in February 2008;[4] an album mainly of covers of songs by female singer/songwriters including her sister, Shelby Lynne.

2009

In 2009, Moorer performed in The People Speak, a documentary feature film that uses dramatic and musical performances of the letters, diaries, and speeches of everyday Americans, based on historian Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States.[5] She appeared in the off-Broadway Rebel Voices, a dramatization of Howard Zinn and Anthony Arnove's Voices of a People's History of the United States in late 2007.

Also, in 2009, she appeared on the BBC series Transatlantic Sessions, Series 4, Episodes 4 and 5, performing a version of the Irish folk song, "Carrickfergus".

2010

Moorer gave birth to the couple's first child, John Henry Earle, on April 5, 2010, but they separated in 2012 and divorced in 2015.

2011

She toured with the Jerry Douglas and Ally Bain led Transatlantic Sessions band in early 2011.

2012

Her live album Show was recorded in one night at 12th and Porter in Nashville.

It features the first recorded collaboration between Moorer and Lynne.

After releasing Show and a DVD on Universal South, Moorer moved to independent label Sugar Hill Records.

2015

In 2015, Moorer released her ninth album, Down to Believing, which marked a return to collaborating with Kenny Greenberg.

2017

In August 2017, Moorer released her tenth album, Not Dark Yet, in collaboration with her sister.

Produced by British folk singer Teddy Thompson, it featured covers of songs by Merle Haggard, Bob Dylan, Nirvana and The Killers as well as one original song written by Moorer and Lynne, "Is It Too Much."