Todd Snider
Music - Rock and Pop
Alert Added!
Customize your e-mail preferences and more on My Ticketmaster.
Please enter your e-mail address.
That is not a valid e-mail address format. Please try again.
Please enter your zip code.
This zip/postal code entered is invalid. Please try again.
You are currently registered for a different area. To change your area, please visit My Account and update your Profile.
E-mail me before tickets go on sale for Todd Snider.
If you have a My Ticketmaster account, this artist will be added to My Alerts in My Ticketmaster.
Your info may also be shared with the artist. By signing up, you may receive e-mails directly from the artist's representatives as well as from Ticketmaster.
If you are under 13 years old, you must not fill in this form or provide any information about yourself.
Ticketmaster Privacy Policy
Your info may also be shared with the artist. By signing up, you may receive e-mails directly from the artist's representatives as well as from Ticketmaster.
If you are under 13 years old, you must not fill in this form or provide any information about yourself.
Ticketmaster Privacy Policy
United States Of America
(1 - 1 of 1)
Download Music From iTunes
By clicking any links above, the iTunes application will launch or you will be prompted to download iTunes if you don't have it.
Todd Snider In-depth Biography
Singer/songwriter Todd Snider first garnered attention for his timely alt-rock satire "Talkin' Seattle Grunge Rock Blues," a folk-rock song that struck a chord with younger people fed up with angry alternative rock bands, and at the same time, appealed to aging rockers who grew up with the folk revival of the 1960s. Snider was born in Portland, OR, and grew up in Santa Rosa, Austin, Houston, and Atlanta. After moving to Memphis in the mid-'80s and establishing residency at a local club named the Daily Planet, he was discovered by singer/songwriter Keith Sykes, a member of Jimmy Buffett's Coral Reefer Band. Sykes began to work with Snider to help advance his career, and after passing on demo tapes of Snider to Buffett, he was signed to the star's Margaritaville Records. Snider's debut album, Songs for the Daily Planet was released in the fall of 1994; "Talkin' Seattle Grunge Rock Blues" was added to the album as an afterthought only after intense lobbying by a Canadian music critic, and ultimately became a minor hit. On his second effort, 1996's Step Right Up, Snider and his band, the Nervous Wrecks (comprised of lead guitarist and multi-instrumentalist Will Kimbrough, bassist Joe Mariencheck, drummer Joe McLeary, and keyboardist David Zollo), continued blending bluegrass, blues, folk-rock, and country-rock to forge their own distinctive sound. On his third album, 1998's Viva Satellite, Snider took a Tom Petty approach, replacing much of his acoustic setup with twang-drenched electric guitar. In 2000, he signed to John Prine's Oh Boy label and returned to his singer/songwriter roots with Happy to Be Here. He recorded three more records for the label, 2002's New Connection, 2003's Near Truths and Hotel Rooms Live, and 2004's East Nashville Skyline. That Was Me: The Best of Todd Snider 1994-1998 was released on Hip-O in 2005, and the next year Snider's eighth album, Devil You Know, came out. ~ Richard Skelly, All Music Guide
Some of the information on this page is provided by All Music Guide and does not necessarily reflect the views of Ticketmaster.
Similar Artists
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bookmark & Share






