- MySpace Codes
.. .. .. Sophomore album "Sleepwalker" available at CDBaby and iTunes .
Debut album "Glory" available at CDBaby and iTunes .
Live KEXP in studio with north19 (2005) at KEXP.org
About Anna
At the age of 19, Anna Coogan found herself in Salzburg, Austria, studying opera in a language she did not yet know. She explains: “I’m not exactly sure how I got there- a series of good auditions and better luck. I did not speak a word of German when I first got there-- it was a crash course.â€
Somewhat bewildered by the pressures of being in the prestigious world of opera, Anna shocked the old guard at the Mozarteum by singing American show tunes for recitals, and missing class to go skiing in the Austrian Alps. “I love opera, but I never could relate to the music. It did not feel like mine. I’d show up burnt from the mountains, unable to sing very well, and be in a load of trouble with my teachers.â€
Homesick and lovesick for the man she would later marry, Anna returned to the US in 2001, swearing off music for good. She re-enrolled at the University of Washington in Seattle and began to a degree in Evolutionary Biology. It was in late 2001, sometime after the events of September 11, that Anna first heard Alison Krauss sing. “I had never heard any sort of country music until that point. I grew up on the Beatles, on opera and old 1960’s folk music. Hearing old-time music changed the course of my life, yet again. I was hooked.â€
Finally finding music that she could relate to, Anna picked up her old guitar and started hammering out old-time, two chord songs. She wrote her first song, played her first gig, and formed the band “Anna Coogan and north19†in a matter of months.
After only a year together, Anna Coogan and north19 released their first full length record, Glory, on local country-noir label Tarnished Records. The positive reception surprised the young band, who went from playing open stages and coffeeshops to selling out the larger clubs in the region. Glory rose to the top of local station KEXP’s charts, and the band was featured live in-studio on the show “Swinging Doorsâ€. The record sold well across the US and Europe, rose to number 13 on the FAR charts, and was featured on national and local TV.
After the 2007 release of sophomore album Sleepwalker, which was mixed by Grammy winner S. Husky Huskolds (Norah Jones, Tom Waits) and featured on ABC series “Kyle XYâ€, Anna Coogan and north19 quietly retired. Anna once again found herself rootless in the music world: “After all we put into north19, it was sad to see it go.†She says, “But it was time.â€
Since the late 2007 split of the band, Anna has taken to the road as a solo artist, this time backed by fiance Brooks Miner ..boards and musicians on both coasts. Armed with a load of new songs, Anna and Brooks are heading into the studio in July 2009, with the help of producer JD Foster (Patty Griffin, Calexico), engineer Geoff Hazelrigg, and longtime drummer Eric Hastings. The summer of 2009 will be a busy one for the couple, with a European tour (featuring a slot at the prestigious Blue Balls Festival in Switzerland), making a record, and finally, their long-awaited wedding.
Reviews
"Based on her powerful pipes and the catch in her throat, she could just as easily pass for a native of Nashville..." -The Stranger
"Coogan's voice brings to mind the sweet but striking approach of Kelly Willis and Iris Dement."- No Depression Magazine
"Coogan's voice-well honed, sharpened tool that it is-slaloms between cues from Rosanne Cash and Alison Krauss, taking fuel from the formers grit and the latter's sweet soul....rises above the throng of local folksingers in Seattles alt-country scene."- Seattle Sound magazine
“Her voice swoops and soars as she wraps herself around each lyric. Each melody is laced with dug-down deep poetry.†– Portland Oregonian
"Coogan's songs deal eloquently with the wonderings and soggy wanderings that come with a young adulthood spent in the Pacific Northwest....but Coogan embraces the silver lining offerered by the clouds, ultimately making for hopeful songs." - Missoula Independent
"Coogan's voice slides from note to note without ever slipping. "- Seattle PI