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In the thirty years since moving from upstate New York to New York City, Christine has released seventeen solo albums (the last three on Appleseed Recordings), compiled eight previous "themed" song compilations, frequently toured the US, Canada and overseas, founded the Four Bitchin Babes group of funny female folksingers (with which she recorded and performed from 1990 to 1997), and has won numerous awards and accolades for her creativity and wit.
Among the many honors her work has garnered are two New York Music Awards, seven ASCAP performer awards, the Kate Wolf Memorial Award and the 2001 Backstage Bistro Award for Outstanding New York Singer/ Songwriter of the Year. In 1998, she was the wonderfully surprised subject of "Big League Babe," a 2-CD tribute containing versions of her songs secretly recorded by dozens of her fellow singer-songwriters.
Although Christine has written songs of great poignancy, it is her riotously clear-eyed commentaries on personal and societal foibles that have established her musical niche. "Sensitive New Age Guys," "What Was I Thinking," and other Lavin originals have been featured in Off-Broadway musicals.Christines live performances have become multi-faceted family-fun extravaganzas over the years. Her concerts are often preceded by a knitting circle, with Chris and like-minded fans trading tips and stitches. And in the shows themselves, Chris literally shines, strapping on a miners helmet to search for each citys perfect man in the audience and climaxing her sets with an incongruously impressive display of glowing baton-twirling. Along with the visuals, Chris delights her fans with her acute original songs, comic monologues, quizzes, contests, and the frequent use of a Boomerang sampling device that multiplies and delays her voice into harmonies and swirling rounds. Christine has been featured on ABC-TVs "Good Morning America," NBC-TVs "The Today Show," and, on the radio, on NPR, "CBS Sunday Morning" and CNN. Chris also periodically presents a "Slipped Disks" folk music show on "Channel 15, The Village" on XM Satellite Radio.
In other creative areas, Christines prose career includes a 2003 collaboration with illustrator Betsy Franco Feeney on the childrens book "The Amoeba Hop" (Puddle Jump Press), based on Christines song of the same title, which won the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences annual Science Book & Films "Best Books for Children" Award and led to a guest performance for the International Society of Protozoologists. Her essays and articles have appeared in the Washington Post, Delta Sky Magazine, Inside Arts, Performing Songwriter and other periodicals.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Quirky, but great,
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This review is from: One Meat Ball (Audio CD)
I thought several of the cuts on the CD were great. Check out Dave Van Ronk's contribution. We old folkies love him. Pete Seeger? As always. Jeff Daniels as a singer? Yes indeed! I especially enjoyed hearing Marcia Pelletiere (my sister) speaking her poem before her group, the Accidentals, sang it.
The rest of the performers were new to me, but all were very enjoyable in a folky hipster kind of way. This CD comes with recipes. I don't cook, but they sound delicious.
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