* En anglais uniquement
Native New Yorker
K.J. Denhert has not been an easy artist to pigeonhole. The far-reaching singer/songwriter is relevant to folk-rock and adult alternative, but she is equally relevant to neo-soul -- and at times there are hints of jazz in her work.
Denhert likes to describe her solo material as "urban folk-jazz," and while her folk-rock/R&B blend isn't straight-ahead jazz in the way that
Abbey Lincoln and
Carmen McRae are straight-ahead jazz, she does incorporate jazz elements when it's appropriate.
The singer/songwriter, who plays both acoustic and electric guitar, brings a variety of influences to the table -- influences ranging from
Chaka Khan and
Roberta Flack to
Joni Mitchell,
Janis Ian,
Simon & Garfunkel, and
James Taylor. In fact,
Denhert has been quoted as saying that her earliest influence was
Taylor (who married '70s soft rock/adult contemporary star
Carly Simon and shouldn't be confused with the
James "J.T." Taylor who became
Kool & the Gang's lead singer in the late '70s). The list of artists
Denhert inspires comparisons to is long and diverse.
The Indigo Girls,
Shawn Colvin,
Tracy Chapman, and
Sarah McLachlan are valid comparisons, but so are neo-soul artists such as
Jill Scott,
Alicia Keys,
Erykah Badu,
Lauryn Hill, and
Jaguar Wright.
Denhert wouldn't be out of place on a Lilith Fair stage, nor she would be out of place in Vibe magazine.
While
Denhert was born in New York City in the late '50s and grew up in the Bronx, her parents were immigrants who had moved to the Big Apple from the country of Grenada. By the age of ten,
Denhert was studying the guitar and listening to a lot of folk-rock and singer/songwriters (especially
Joni Mitchell,
Simon & Garfunkel, and
James Taylor). After reaching adulthood, she enrolled at Cornell University but ended up dropping out during her sophomore year and joined an all-female rock band called Fire.
Denhert spent a total of six years with Fire; she joined in 1980 and stayed with the band until its breakup in 1986. After that, she took a non-musical temp job with the Dannon company (as in Dannon yogurt) and eventually became a business analyst for that outfit.
But
Denhert never gave up music; when she was based in Cleveland, OH, and working for Dannon during the day,
Denhert played guitar in a funk band on the side. After several years in Cleveland,
Denhert moved back to the Big Apple in 1995 -- and the mid- to late '90s found her performing as a solo artist on the Manhattan club scene (where she performed mostly original material but also included some covers here and there). Since the late '90s,
Denhert (who was 44 in 2003 and now lives in suburban Westchester, NY) has put out several releases on her own label, Mother Cyclone Records, including the EP Looking Forward, Looking Back (her first solo effort) in 1999, Live in 2001, and Girl Like Me in early 2003. ~ Alex Henderson