Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Carpenter entered the 2000s with her seventh studio album Time* Sex* Love* (2001), debuting at No. 6 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. The release was nominated by the Grammy Awards in 2002 for Best-Engineered Album. Her second compilation album, The Essential Mary Chapin Carpenter, was released in 2003.

  2. Background. Carpenter recorded The Things That We Are Made Of at Dave Cobb's Low Country Sound studio in Nashville, Tennessee; production was helmed by Cobb.She began writing the material for the album about four years prior, and described the writing process as similar to those of her previous works in an interview with Diane Rehm: "[W]henever I've started a record, I haven't really had, like ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Feb 2, 2013 · Watch Mary Chapin Carpenter perform her hit song "He Thinks He'll Keep Her" in 1993, a catchy and empowering anthem for women who want more than a traditional role. See how she rocks the stage ...

    • 4 min
    • 362K
    • countryback
  5. Musical artist. Mary Chapin Carpenter [a] (born February 21, 1958) is an American country and folk music singer-songwriter. Carpenter spent several years singing in Washington, D.C. -area clubs before signing in the late 1980s with Columbia Records. Carpenter's first album, 1987's Hometown Girl, did not produce any charting singles.

  6. Mary Chapin Carpenter was born on February 21, 1958. Mary Chapin Carpenter hails from the city of Princeton, New Jersey. This complete Mary Chapin Carpenter discography also includes every single Mary Chapin Carpenter live album. All these spectacular Mary Chapin Carpenter albums have been presented below in chronological order. We have also ...

    • Brian Kachejian
  7. Recorded live at the september 1993 CMA Awards in Nashville; featuring Patty Loveless, Trisha Yearwood, Kathy Mattea and Suzy Bogguss.@vanlommelmusic

    • 4 min
    • 1.3M
    • Van's Old Skool Music
  8. Sep 1, 2010 · Carpenter, 52, was born in Princeton and moved to Tokyo in 1969 when her father, Chapin Carpenter, a Life executive, was sent to the Asia bureau. The family relocated to Washington when she was 15, and she returned here after graduating from Brown in 1981. In the mid-1980s, after becoming a fixture on the local music scene, she signed with ...

  1. People also search for