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“For women in the independent music industry”

Featured Artist ~ October 2007

Vicki Blankenship

Listen to Vicki's Song Clip ~ Never Let Go

Bio

Vicki Blankenship joined Indiegrrl in 2003 and embraced the networking group wholeheartedly. She worked with Holly Figueroa the founder of Indiegrrl to build more showcases and her company, Spotted Kiva Productions, took over the maintenance of the Indiegrrl website and started offering discounts to Indiegrrls on their CD duplicating and web design services. In 2005 Vicki started approaching other businesses to start offering the Indiegrrl Members discounts on their products and services. When Holly needed a much needed rest she had no problems passing the torch to Vicki to take over and to build the organization into the non profit Holly had always envisioned the group to be. Already the Founder/President of the Indie Music For Life non profit, Vicki met with Holly face to face at Rockrgrl 2005 and discussed Indiegrrl becoming a part of Indie Music For Life. Indiegrrl as well as Laughs For Life the division working with comedians are now two new entities of the Indie Music For Life non profit. Indiegrrl is now more than just a networking group of women in the music industry. It is an organization that supports women in music, comedy and spoken word and is ever growing in its sponsorship programs and building larger events for the members. Three years ago Vicki set her sites on Indiegrrl having its own conferences to set up workshops and panel discussions to help it members with their music careers and to bring much needed exposure for women in the industry to raise them to a level playing field with male performers. That vision is closer as Indiegrrl will hold its first annual conference in August 2008.

Vicki Blankenship the singer songwriter is that rare artist that comes along from the shadows of nowhere and blows away everybody that hears her perform. Her voice can hit a high pure pitch and then growl into the depths of rock and roll and blues in the next breath. It is that great diversity that has many people comparing her to the great Janis Joplin or the haunting and poetic images of Stevie Nicks. But sometimes that country girl that grew up in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia shines through in comparison to the spunk of Mary Chapin Carpenter and the pure vocals of Patsy Cline and Alison Krauss. She is a writer of great depth not only in songs but poetry, short stories and blogs. She gets right to the heart of things with an insightful mind that examines truth and presents it in a simple, honest, touching, direct, and a most poignant manner. Vicki's songs move people and her determination and compassion inspires people. Meeting her in person is an energy charge. Hearing her perform live will glue you to the edge of your seat, hanging on to every lyric. She is a true story teller in her songs. By the end of the night you will have reached every emotion possible from laughter to tears to a tugging heart full of memories. Her songs will hit you dead in the heart and stick to your mind.

Vicki the person is complex and has a deep inner drive with a mind that hardly ever sleeps and plans months and months and even years ahead of what is taking place in the present. She envisions large goals and chips away at them methodically to complete things most people only dare to dream. Thus the goals and growth of Indiegrrl and the ever growing visions of Indie Music For Life. She is a self confessed workaholic in need of more play time but also confesses that when you love and feel compassion for something it is not work. It is that inner drive and compassionate mind set that has earned her the nick name "Super Woman" by many of the Indiegrrl members, friends, and other music industry professionals. Many people have encouraged her to write an autobiography because of the past jobs and life experiences she previously endured before hitting the road as an Indie artist, but she laughs and states "I have to sleep every now and then but one day you never know." Vicki has been a police officer, a District Manager for both Mikasa and Toys R Us, a restaurant and catering business owner and a Utility Engineer where she was co-owner of a utility trenching business in Charlotte, NC.

The workaholic mode was prevalent even as a young girl when she worked in her father's printing shop and in the tobacco fields of local farmers where she grew up. As a teenager and young adult she worked three jobs at once while attending college to help pay for her tuition and expenses. She worked 3rd shift in a knitting mill, was a convenience store assistant manager, and a security guard on weekends for the Frito Lay and AMP plants in Greensboro, NC. She also managed to play three sports while attending Elon University was named to the All Conference and All State NCAIAW Division 1 Softball picks and become the first female Sports Editor of the college paper. If that wasn't enough she also was a DJ at the college radio station WSOE and wrote news releases, along with performing live music every chance she got around local pubs, bars, and coffeehouses. She won several Elon University talent shows. When asked how she accomplished all of this her reply was "I slept about 3 to 4 hours in the afternoon or sometimes on the bus going to games."

In 1998 three months after turning 40, Vicki was hit with news that shook up her life as she knew it. After several months of antibiotics and visits to the doctor for a pesky bladder infection that would not go away, more tests were run and cancer was found in her bladder. For 5 years she fought the reoccurring cancer with chemo and radiation. She moved to the coast of NC to write, play music which had always been the love of her life, and to live out what she thought would be her last days next to the ocean that she so loved. Fighting a form of cancer that only 1 out of 8 women survive, her determination to never give up while being treated with heavy doses of chemo and radiation helped her overcome the bladder cancer but weakened her body tremendously. She retired from many of the sports she so loved and turned back to her music and writing as her every day hobbies. She began recorded her debut CD called "Don't Forget To Breathe" in 2003 with the help of Producer/Engineer Karen Kane while still undergoing her last cancer treatments. The CD project was completed in late September and in January 2004, a very short haired Vicki hit the road touring as an Independent artist at the age of 46. An age when most touring Indie artists have retired from their music careers. At the end of 2004 she started production on her second CD, "Horizons", and in February 2005 she hit the road touring again and passionately began to put the Indie Music For Life non profit into gear and started bringing in awareness for the cause. "That first year we did coffeehouse tip shows, theaters, acoustic venues, bars, churches, anyone that would let us hold an event. It didn't pull in a lot of money but I knew the first several years were going to be public relations work anyway." Vicki stated. "Building awareness is the key to greatness. I talk about Indie Music For Life everywhere I go and also Indiegrrl and my closest friends sometimes probably feel like they are hearing a broken record but if I stay passionate about it, then the passion will flow into others. And when the roots spread, the vine can grow out in every direction. I vision Indie Music For Life to one day be a household name just like Relay For Life and I envision Indiegrrl to be a great organization that helps a lot of women and young girls wanting to pursue a career in music, comedy, or spoken word. I don't know if I will live to see it but I am working hard at getting that root system into place."

Comedian Shelly Ryan and Director of the new Laughs For Life division has this to say about Vicki. "The emcee gig I had on November 4, 2006 forever changed my life. I'd talked to local musician, Vicki Blankenship, who was organizing a concert event at Blackstock Winery in Dahlonega, GA. I've always believed music and laughter are universal languages, and bringing them together in one place would ROCK! But this wasn't an ordinary concert. The musicians I met that night had gathered for a purpose -- to fight cancer one song at a time. I don't remember at what point in the evening it hit me, but I KNEW I had to get involved! Vicki's enthusiasm for this cause was contagious. The "Laughs for Life" concept was welcomed with open arms and enormous hugs. I've found not only a great business partnership, but I've met a friend for life."

Vicki confesses that the hardest part of Indie Music For Life is to be at the events and have people coming up to her to share their stories about their family members having cancer or the struggles that they themselves have had while fighting the disease or worst of all hearing the many stories of the loved ones that did not survive cancer. "I shed a lot of tears at these events. I don't care if I didn't know them personally. I just know what
each and every one of them is going through so it becomes personal. I've made more friends with that common bond because of the events. I have also lost a lot of those newly made friends and it is very sad." Vicki has lost many family members and close friends to the disease but it was after her grandfather Curtis Morgan Sr. passed away that it hit her the hardest. He was a big musical influence in her life, and he also loved to cook and the two shared a lot of moments together playing music and cooking in the kitchen. He passed away with prostate cancer that quickly spread to bone cancer. "That was a tough, tough year for me. I was undergoing treatments for cancer myself and trying to record my first CD and was trying to go home to Virginia as much as I could to see my grandfather and my grandmother who was also undergoing treatments for stomach cancer and leukemia. My grandfather didn't get to hear my finished CD project because we were finalizing the mixes the very week he passed away, but he did get to hear some demos that my mom and I played for him in the hospital. I did place a copy of the finished CD project in his casket. Along with a set of his drum sticks and a bottle of Texas Pete that he so loved to put on everything. All of his friends called him "Pete" because of his love for the spicy sauce. I know he is in heaven playing that down beat to the music and spicing everything up." The following year is when she decided to start a non profit that was music related to raise money specifically for cancer research fundraising and she tested the waters with three concert events in North Carolina with the help of three other Indiegrrl members, Allison Tartalia, Danielle Miraglia, and Patti Witten. The concept and the work for Indie Music For Life was underway.

It is the love of family that took Vicki home back to the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia at the end of 2006 when several family members were struggling with health issues. That winter Vicki also had increasing lupus attacks from a weakened body that was attacking itself and the rheumatoid arthritis was affecting her hands and other joints with extreme swelling, and also her lungs were becoming weakened with continuing attacks of pleurisy. The "workaholic" had days where she couldn't even crawl out of bed and she felt extremely tired all the time. More blood work and testing took place and in February she was hit with another hard blow. The diagnosis of leukemia. All of her plans and work for the non profit were put on hold as she began treatments once again for cancer and the advancing lupus stages but her dreams and visions stayed in place. "It has been an extremely hard year as each trip to the doctor my meds have been increased and this is also the longest duration of treatments I have had to take" states Vicki. "Most everything I wanted to do this year got put on hold, including putting together music for a third CD, the Indiegrrl song writing contest and conference plans, most of the events for Indie Music For Life, and no touring either. But I have learned the value of true friends that come to your side when you need them most, and I have learned how to sit quietly just to rest and take notice of life around me outside of music. But the wheels never stop spinning in my head with plans." she grins. It is quite possibly those wheels turning and the plans, dreams, and determination that keeps Vicki just beyond the grasp of a disease that claims so many where she can spread her enthusiasm for music, cancer research, and Dalmatians and she can touch countless lives.

Interview

1. How old were you when you started writing songs, playing instruments and how many years have you been performing?

I was 5 years old when I started playing guitar and drums with a little encouragement from my great grandfather who was a banjo player who lived to be 104 and I was lucky enough to know until I was 16, and also my grandfather who was a drummer in a jazz and big band orchestra. My mom has a beautiful voice and always encouraged me to sing at an early age in the church choir and other events. She also reminded me all the time to spit out my bubble gum before starting to sing.

2. Who were your major influences with your music and what made you decide to become a performer yourself?

My great grandfather and grandfather played a big role in getting me started with musical instruments but I fell in love with the Beatles at the early age of 5 and used to stand on the living room coffee table and shake my hair and guitar and sing 'I want to hold your hand'. After that it was many 60's and 70's rock bands that kept me captive but Carol King became my songwriter idol and Lindsey Buckingham became my guitar idol."

3. How would you describe your music?

I write in many genres. Folk, Rock, Southern Rock, Americana, Country, Bluegrass, Pop, Jazz. I had a tremendous diversity of music in my life at an early age.

4. What is the best review or statement that someone has written about you and your music and who said it?

Recently Carl Zeigler, documentary film maker and artist, stated that my live performance at The Festival For Change was the most powerful rock/folk set he had ever heard in a long, long time. That blew me away because he is a music and movie aficionado.

5. How many personal CD projects have you finished and are you working on or have any future project in the works? Also how involved are you in the recording process and producing of these projects?

'Don't Forget To Breathe' was my debut CD release and 'Horizons' was my second project. I have many, many unrecorded songs from both past and present years and would like to start another project in 2008 but funding would be the main issue with all of that. When I write a song, I not only hear my guitar, but I hear the other instruments and arrangements in my head and know how I would like the song to come to full life. When recording and mixing I am very hands on and working with producer/engineer Karen Kane I have learned a lot about the small details that can make a big difference.

6. What special honors or awards have you received?

Every day I can play music is an honor and the best awards and rewards are when someone buys your CD because they really like your music or you see someone in the audience singing the words to your song when you are performing. When I hear, "I put your CD in and listen to "That Thought Left Me" every time I need a pick me up, that is the best award.

7. What is your favorite venue to perform live and why?

I would have to say house concerts. It is intimate and the people attending those shows are so attentive and want the story behind the song. So it opens up the music more. Most larger venues I sing with my eyes closed. I am actually very timid about going on stage and have had to learn to have a stage presence. I joke with all of the photographers that say they want to shoot me during a set that if they get a shot of me performing with my eyes open, that I will pay for that shot.

8. What music organizations are you affiliated with or plan on joining?

Besides Indiegrrl I have been affiliated with OUTmusic and Folk Alliance but because of the lack of touring or doing anything music related this year, I have not been active with those two organizations but do have plans when time allows to get back involved with them more. Both organizations are going through restructuring.

9. Do you find as an Indie artist it is easier to express yourself and view points in music instead of following main stream marketing in songs?

Most defiantly. The majority of my music does not fit the mold of the current music industry especially what the industry promotes for women. Not many short, chunky, almost 50 year olds out there shaking their booty on stage and becoming idols.

10. What does "Indie" mean to you?

Control of your own career. I choose how many shows I want to book, where I book them, how I get promoted, what target audience I want to reach out to, and how I want to write my songs and record them.

11. Do you own your own record label or publishing company or one day hope to?

I am actually working on that. It is one of my many plans to turn Spotted Kiva Productions into a label and artist representation company along with the CD duplicating and web design business that we already do.

12. What advice can you give to someone who is just starting to market themselves in the Indie music market?

Don't expect instant gratification on your work and don't expect people to come knocking on your doors to give you opportunities. You have to create those opportunities and you have to work very, very hard to reap the rewards, no matter how talented you are.

13. Do you have other work, projects, or hobbies besides your music and if so tell us a little bit about it?

I love to cook and have still done some side catering jobs over the years since owning my restaurant and catering business up until this year because of the health issues. I also love to golf but again have not done that at all this year because of health issues. In the past I have worked for Dalmatian rescues and also helping other animals in need. If I could afford it I would probably have a large zoo of sorts.

14. How many instruments do you play and what are they?

I play guitar, percussion, and drums and have been messing around with the harmonica. It is good exercise for my lungs that get weak because of the chemo. I also want to learn how to play the piano.

15. What are your main goals for 2008 to boost your music career as a whole?

Personally I want to start getting my music into Television and Movie markets. I am working hard putting together an Indiegrrl Conference for August 21, 22, 23, 24 of 2008 and for Indie Music For Life my biggest plan is to work with some grant writers to pull in funds to take this organization to the next level.

16. What long term goals have you set?

To me long term is a month to month working process now to get accomplished what I have already set into motion.

17. What does Indiegrrl mean to you?

Indiegrrl is more than just networking with friends, songwriters, and musicians and other industry professionals. It can be a great organization that does a lot of things to help its members by opening up doors of opportunity for shows, help with music projects, mentoring younger girls, discounts on services and products that we all need in our careers. At least that is the vision that I see this organization becoming but it takes a committed involvement of members. In 2008 with the help of grants, I hope to have set into place, job descriptions that we need to be filled both voluntary and paid that can take Indiegrrl to that stage of growth.

18. Is there anyone you would like to thank that has helped you along in your career or in the music industry as a whole?

I want to thank my grandfathers and parents for letting me beat on drums and wail on guitars at an early age and for turning their ears when it wasn't so pretty but never stopped me from playing. I want to thank my sister who put up with a lot of practical jokes when we were growing up and who has grown closer to me with age and kept my spirits up through my battles with cancer. I want to thank all of the musicians and songwriters that have been a part of my creative processes through out my life. I want to thank Holly Figueroa O'Reilly for having the vision to start Indiegrrl and for the hundreds of emails over the years and for having the faith in me for taking Indiegrrl to the next level. I love ya Holly. I want to thank all the radio programs and personnel that plug my songs on air. I want to thank Karen Kane for helping me produce my CD projects and for also being a friend. I want to thank the friends that have constantly emailed me or talked to me on the phone giving their support, encouragement, and assistance to get through very tough times. And last but not least, I want to thank Lee Ann Tarducci for all the countless hours of volunteer time she does for both Indiegrrl and Indie Music For Life. We live in different states so we have to work together by phone and emails which makes it a little harder. She is my right arm techie guru, confidante, and best friend and without her support and friendship my life would be incomplete and much harder. I also want to thank my fans for coming out to see me at shows, for supporting me and for buying my cd’s.

Visit Vicki at:

http://www.spottedkivaproductions.com