Cat Power

Singer-songwriter

Popular As Chan Marshall Cat Power

Birthday January 21, 1972

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.

Age 52 years old

Nationality United States

#9749 Most Popular

1950

Marshall's first instrument was a 1950s Silvertone guitar, which she taught herself to play.

1972

Charlyn Marie "Chan" Marshall (born January 21, 1972), better known by her stage name Cat Power, is an American singer-songwriter.

Cat Power was originally the name of her first band, but has become her stage name as a solo artist.

Charlyn Marie Marshall was born January 21, 1972, in Atlanta, Georgia, the second child of Charlie Marshall, a blues musician and pianist, and Myra Lee Marshall ( Russell).

She has one older sister, Miranda ("Mandy").

Her maternal grandfather was of Native American ancestry.

1979

Her parents divorced in 1979 and remarried shortly thereafter.

Her mother remarried and had a son, Lenny, and the family traveled around often because of her stepfather's profession.

Marshall attended ten different schools throughout the Southern U.S. in Greensboro; Bartlett and Memphis and throughout Georgia and South Carolina.

At times she was left in the care of her grandmother.

She was not allowed to buy records when she was growing up, but she listened to her stepfather's record collection, which included artists Otis Redding, Creedence Clearwater Revival and The Rolling Stones, as well as her parents' records, which included Black Flag, Sister Sledge, and Barry White.

In sixth grade, she adopted the nickname Chan (pronounced "Shawn"), which she would later use professionally.

When she was 13, she listened to the Smiths, the Cure and Siouxsie and the Banshees.

She had to save up to buy cassettes and the first one she got was a record by the Misfits.

At age 16, Marshall dropped out of high school and became estranged from her mother, having no further contact with her until she was 24.

Religion was a large part of Marshall's upbringing; her father was a Jehovah's Witness, though she attended Southern Baptist churches with her grandmother, where she began singing while learning hymns.

1980

While working in a pizzeria, she began playing music in Atlanta in the late-1980s with Glen Thrasher, Marc Moore, Damon Moore and Fletcher Liegerot, who would get together for jam sessions in a basement.

The group were booked for a show and had to come up with a name quickly; after seeing a man wearing a Caterpillar trucker cap that read: "Cat Diesel Power", Marshall chose Cat Power as the name of the band.

While in Atlanta, Marshall played her first live shows as support to her friends' bands, including Magic Bone and Opal Foxx Quartet.

1990

Born in Atlanta, Marshall was raised throughout the southern United States, and began performing in local bands in Atlanta in the early 1990s.

1992

After the death of her boyfriend, and the subsequent loss of her best friend to AIDS, Marshall relocated to New York City in 1992 with Glen Thrasher.

A new boyfriend helped her get a job in a restaurant.

Thrasher introduced her to New York's free jazz and experimental music scene.

After attending a concert by Anthony Braxton, she gave her first New York show of improvisational music at a warehouse in Brooklyn.

One of her shows during this period was as the support act to Man or Astro-man? and consisted of her playing a two-string guitar and singing the word "no" for 15 minutes.

Around this time, she met the band God Is My Co-Pilot, who assisted with the release of her first single, "Headlights", in a limited run of 500 copies on their Making of Americans label.

1993

After opening for Liz Phair in 1993, she worked with Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth and Tim Foljahn of Two Dollar Guitar, with whom she recorded her first two albums, Dear Sir (1995) and Myra Lee (1996), on the same day in 1994.

1994

Marshall recorded simultaneously her first two albums Dear Sir and Myra Lee in December 1994 in a small basement studio near Mott Street in New York City, with guitarist Tim Foljahn and Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley; Marshall and Shelley had initially met after she played a show opening for Liz Phair in 1993.

1995

A total of 20 songs were recorded in a single day by the trio, all of which were split into two records, making up Dear Sir and Myra Lee, released respectively in October 1995 and March 1996.

Although Dear Sir is considered Marshall's debut album, it is more the length of an EP.

1996

In 1996, she signed with Matador Records, and released a third album of new material with Shelley and Foljahn, What Would the Community Think.

In 1996, Marshall signed to Matador Records and in September released her third album, What Would the Community Think, which she recorded in Memphis, Tennessee, in February 1996.

The album was produced by Shelley and again featured Shelley and Foljahn as backing musicians, and spawned a single and music video, "Nude as the News" about the abortion she had at the age of 20.

1998

Following this, she released the critically acclaimed Moon Pix (1998), recorded with members of Dirty Three, and The Covers Record (2000), a collection of sparsely arranged cover songs.

2003

After a brief hiatus she released You Are Free (2003), featuring guest musicians Dave Grohl and Eddie Vedder, followed by the soul-influenced The Greatest (2006), recorded with numerous Memphis studio musicians.

2007

In a 2007 interview, she explained that the music itself was more experimental and that playing shows was often an opportunity for her and her friends "to get drunk and take drugs".

A number of her local peers became entrenched in heroin use.

2008

A second album of cover tracks, Jukebox, was released in 2008.

2012

In 2012 she released the self-produced Sun, which debuted at number 10 on the Billboard 200, the highest-charting album of her career to date.

Critics have noted the constant evolution of Cat Power's sound, with a mix of punk, folk and blues on her earliest albums, and elements of soul and other genres more prevalent in her later material.