Broke and Hungry From the Crucial Blues Harmonica

Sophie Hunger

Sophie Hunger am Haldern Pop Festival 2019 - 11 - Foto Alexander Kellner.jpg

Sophie Hunger at Haldern Pop Festival 2019

Background information
Birth name Émilie Jeanne-Sophie Welti
Also known as Emilie Welti
Born (1983-03-31) 31 March 1983 (age 39)
Bern, Switzerland
Origin Zurich, Switzerland
Genres folk-pop-blues
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter, film composer
Instruments Voice, guitar, blues harp, piano
Years active 2002–present
Labels Two Gentlemen, Manimal
Website SophieHunger.com

Musical artist

Sophie Hunger (born Émilie Jeanne-Sophie Welti on 31 March 1983) is a Swiss singer-songwriter, film composer, multi-instrumentalist (guitar, blues harp, piano) and bandleader, currently living in Berlin.

Early life [edit]

Émilie Jeanne-Sophie Welti was born on 31 March 1983 in Bern, Switzerland. She was a diplomat's daughter and grew up, with two older siblings, in Bern, London, Bonn and Zurich. She graduated high-school in 2002, then subsequently studied German and English.[1]

While a child, Hunger took piano lessons for a time. She was familiar with jazz from an early age, since her father used to listen to it. Independently, she had a varying taste in music, as a teenager, she first was into hip-hop and R&B. Later she listened to rock – then, as a young adult, she discovered country, bluegrass and folk.[2]

Career [edit]

From 2002 to 2006, Hunger was a guest singer for the project Superterz and appears on the 2006 album Standards released by that group.[3] Starting in 2004, Hunger was the lead singer of the indie rock group Fisher. The band split in 2007.[4] [5]

Hunger plays guitar, blues harp, piano and composes most of her songs in British English, French, Swiss German, German and Swiss Italian. In 2006, in a few days, she home-recorded her solo début album, Sketches on Sea. [6]

On 6 July 2008, Hunger and her band gave a concert in the Miles Davis Hall at the Montreux Jazz Festival, as well as Yael Naim and Camille.[ citation needed ] In July 2009, Hunger and her band closed out day 2 of TEDGlobal.[7]

In June 2010, Sophie Hunger and her band played the John Peel stage at Glastonbury Festival. Sophie Hunger was the first Swiss artist that has ever played there. In July 2010 she played at the 100 Club, London, in October 2010 at The Roundhouse, London.

In late 2010, it was announced that Sophie Hunger would release a début record for the North American market as Sophie Hunger: s/t on Manimal Vinyl in April 2011. The CD contained tracks from 1983 and Monday's Ghost.

In 2011, her version of Noir Désir's "Le vent nous portera" was featured in the film Café de Flore, directed by Jean-Marc Vallée.

She features on "Song of I", a track from Steven Wilson's To The Bone album.[8]

In 2012, The Swiss native mixes folk and pop influences with a liberal sprinkling of jazz. Her third album The Danger Of Light is refreshingly different and Ms Hunger does have a great voice, expressive and beguiling, yet also powerful when it needs to be. The closing Take A Turn is the simplest track of all, with just finger picked guitar and a harmonica giving it a more folky feel. It's soft and has a fragile purity that demonstrates just what a fine singer she is.[9]

In 2015, her 5th album was released. Hunger is a musician who plays with pop structures and instrumentation while simultaneously taking bold, largely successful risks. She's an experimenter with an ear for hooks, and the songs of Supermoon twist and turn in delightfully surreal ways, while remaining endlessly accessible and inviting.[10]Capable of veering between bold, reckless wit on "Superman Woman", with an almost childish enthusiasm, into hushed, fragile weariness on "Craze", the material from her latest album Supermoon - which features vocal contributions from Eric Cantona - is eclectic and surprising.[11]

On August 31 2018, Switzerland's Sophie Hunger released her fourth and most sonically diverse album to date in the form of Molecules. This time out, Hunger, along with producer Dan Carey, have opted for synths and electronica to form the basis of her new album Molecules. Recorded with Carey in South London, the album represents the biggest departure from what might be described as Hunger's signature sound to date, embracing a darker sonic identity and an altogether starker tonal palette.[12]

In 2020, Sophie released "Halluzinationen". Earlier this year Fiona Apple's Fetch The Bolt Cutters almost broke Metacritic, such was the rapturous critical reception: along not-too-distant lines, there's a bountiful amount of idiosyncratic songwriting to enjoy here, too.[13] Alt Swiss star Sophie Hunger has released another single from her Dan Carey sessions at Abbey Road studios. 'Everything Is Good' is part of a new album titled Halluzinationen. [14]

Discography [edit]

Studio albums [edit]

Sophie Hunger performing with her band at TEDGlobal in the United Kingdom on 22 July 2009

Sophie Hunger performing with her band at Leverkusener Jazztage 2015 in the Germany

Year Album Peak positions
SWI AUT BEL
(Wa)
FRA GER
2006 Sketches on Sea
2008 Monday's Ghost 1 105
2010 1983 1 87 62
2012 The Danger of Light 2 57 52 50
2015 Supermoon 1 17 178 83 6
2018 Molecules 2 21 16
2020 Halluzinationen 1 31 11

Live albums [edit]

Year Album Peak positions
SWI AUT FRA GER
2013 The Rules of Fire 21 89
With the band Fisher, under the name Emilie Welti
  • 2006: Fisher – Fisher (Kuenschtli.ch)
  • 2006: Superterz: Standards

Singles [edit]

Year Title Peak positions Album
BEL
(Wa)
FRA
[15]
2014 "Le vent nous portera" 20 154

Soundtrack [edit]

as Emilie Welti
  • 2008: Der Freund (with Marcel Vaid):
  • 2010: Zimmer 202 [16]
as Sophie Hunger
  • 2016: My Life as a Courgette

Filmography [edit]

as Emilie Welti
  • 2008: Der Freund
  • 2012: Der Kumpel
as Sophie Hunger
  • 2012: The Rules of Fire
  • 2016: My Life as a Courgette

References [edit]

  1. ^ Erik Brandt Hoege: „Man braucht irgendeine Bewusstlosigkeit" Interview for Jetzt.De, published 28 December 2008. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  2. ^ Jakob Buhre:„Ich glaube, das Ganze ist ein Zufall." Published 3 March 2009. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  3. ^ Martin Fritsche (2010). "Background Superterz" (PDF). Superterz. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  4. ^ Fisher Archived 5 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine at kuenschtli.ch. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  5. ^ Tobi Müller: Sophies Welt Published 14 December 2007. Published in: Das Magazin, number 50/2007.
  6. ^ "Sophie Hunger Electronic Press Kit – Streaming Music, Photos, Videos, Lyrics and Info". SonicBids.com. 2008. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  7. ^ "Program Speakers A-Z". TED.com. Retrieved 22 July 2009.
  8. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Steven Wilson - Song Of I ft. Sophie Hunger". YouTube.
  9. ^ "Sophie Hunger - The Danger Of Light". Werkre. 25 January 2013. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  10. ^ "Album Review: Sophie Hunger – Supermoon – Renowned For Sound". Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  11. ^ "Sophie Hunger at Bush Hall, gig review: Eclectic and surprising". The Independent. 21 May 2015. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  12. ^ "The Hunger games: Sophie Hunger and Dan Carey on the making of Molecules". ProSoundNetwork.com. 7 September 2018. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  13. ^ "Sophie Hunger - Halluzinationen - Album Review". Loud And Quiet . Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  14. ^ "Sophie Hunger shares 'Everything Is Good' - listen | Gigwise". www.gigwise.com . Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  15. ^ "Sophie Hunger discography". Les Charts. Hung Medien. Retrieved 20 June 2014.
  16. ^ ps-72.com: Zimmer 202 (in German)

External links [edit]

melchiorwerces.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophie_Hunger

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