Lydia Loveless


Lydia Loveless is an American alternative country singer-songwriter from Columbus, Ohio. Her music combines pop music, classic country, honky tonk, and punk rock.

Early life

Loveless was born in Coshocton, Ohio, in the Newcastle area. She is the daughter of Parker Chandler and has two older sisters, Eleanor Sinacola and Jessica, who now performs under the stage name "Jessica Wabbit". Loveless grew up on a farm in a rural area outside of Coshocton and was home-schooled. She said she felt like an outcast in a town that emphasized religion and conformity until she moved to Columbus, Ohio when she was 14. She enjoyed Hank Williams III and punk-influenced country music, while also embracing popular music and rock and roll and "pretty much anything on Kemado Records."
Her family is musical: Loveless' father was a pastor, drummer, and later country-western bar owner for a time. She and her sisters played several instruments. Loveless took piano lessons, then began trying to play the guitar at 12.

Career

In 2004, Loveless, her father, and her sisters made up part of a four-member new wave pop band called Carson Drew, named after the father in the Nancy Drew books. Loveless played bass. The band broke up in 2007.
At a show in Cincinnati where she opened for his band, Loveless met producer David Rhodes Brown who went on to produce her first album, 2010's The Only Man. Loveless was not happy with the slick production of the album. Loveless made the record when she was 15 years old. Loveless clarified that she likes the songs she wrote, but the drawn-out process to get the album released influenced her feelings about the project.
Columbus attorney Steve McGann became her manager. Loveless and her band drove 20 hours to Austin, Texas, and ended up playing for Bloodshot owners Rob Miller and Nan Warshaw at the 2010 South by Southwest music festival.
In 2012, signed with Bloodshot and determined to make a more raw and edgier album, she released Indestructible Machine with songs that feature themes of frustration with her hometown, drinking, depression, and a humorous song about being stalked by a man who referred to himself as Steve Earle but was not in fact the singer of Copperhead Road. Loveless recorded the album with many live takes and a minimum of overdubs at Grove City, Ohio’s Sonic Lounge recording studio with engineer Joe Viers. SPIN characterized the record as standing out "for its utter lack of bullshit," with "roaring vocals, in her narrators' lived-in-bars recklessness, and in her overall inability to mince words."
Indestructible Machine received praise in publications such as the Chicago Tribune, Spin, AllMusic, and The Washington Post. Greg Kot wrote that Loveless' "defiant tone is matched by songs that put country and punk on equal ground, unvarnished and direct".
In the Spring of 2013, Loveless did an extensive Canadian tour supporting the Supersuckers. Loveless and her band also toured Scandinavia and Spain during the Fall of 2013.
. 9:30 Club May 31, 2014
In 2013, Loveless released Boy Crazy, an EP. Mark Deming of AllMusic praised the release, asserting that the album "is further proof that Loveless is a major talent, and if her next album is as good as this, she may run the risk of becoming a very big star". One of the songs, "Lover's Spat," is about the serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer.
Rolling Stone cited Loveless as one of its "10 New Artists You Need to Know: January 2014."
In February 2014, Loveless released her third full-length record, Somewhere Else, on Bloodshot Records, which has a dark, "poppy" vibe. Stereogum said Loveless is using her "unmistakable voice as a songwriter, and she's only getting better at using it to blur the line between running her mouth and pouring out her heart." Loveless was listed as one of "5 Best New Artist for January 14" by SPIN magazine. The record includes "Head", a single Loveless wrote with her guitar player, Todd May, a fellow songwriter. The album had an overwhelmingly good reception and entered Billboard's Heatseekers chart the first week of its release at position number 7.
In April 2014, Loveless released the Mile High/Blind 7" record for Record Store Day. The record had a non-album cut titled "Mile High" on the A side and a cover of Kesha's "Blind" on the B side. It was a limited edition release on lime green vinyl. The tracks were released in digital album format May 27, 2014.
In April 2015, Loveless was part of a Record Store Day release with label-mate, Cory Branan. The two artists cover two Prince songs: Loveless doing I Would Die 4 U and Branan doing Under The Cherry Moon. The 7" limited edition releases will be pressed onto purple vinyl.
Loveless donated her vocal talent to the end credits song from the film, A Dog Named Gucci, in the song "One Voice," which also features the talents of Norah Jones, Aimee Mann, Susanna Hoffs, Neko Case, Brian May and Kathryn Calder. It was produced by Dean Falcone, who also wrote the film's score. One Voice was released on Record Store Day, April 16, 2016, with profits from the sale of the single going to benefit animal charities.
In August 2016, Bloodshot Records released her third studio album, Real. Her first ever music video, for the album's first single "Longer" received its world premiere on Rolling Stone magazine in July 2016. The video was directed by filmmaker Gorman Bechard, who directed the documentary on Loveless. On August 19, a second Bechard-directed music video was released this time for the song "Clumps." The next morning Loveless and her band made their American TV network debut, performing three songs on CBS Saturday Morning. A third video for the song "European," also directed by Bechard, debuted in November 2016.
The AV Club called Real "an adventurous, brutal honest sucker punch." While The Boston Globe said, "Loveless continues to manifest a remarkable combination of bruised vulnerability and desperate longing, alongside a tough, self-deprecating resilience, but there's more of the former and less of the latter this time. She's still preoccupied with the downsides of love: longing for something you don’t have, the inevitable dissolution of whatever you manage to find, and the emotional pitfalls of navigating it." Rolling Stone liked the shift in genre towards a more pop sound.
On July 21, 2020 Loveless announced her next record, Daughter, will be released on her own label, Honey, You're Gonna Be Late Records on Sept 25, 2020.

Documentary

Loveless was the subject of a documentary called Who is Lydia Loveless? in which filmmaker Gorman Bechard documents the making of Loveless' next record, as well as following her on the road, and looking into what life is like for a band at her level in the music industry. "I also wanted to look at stuff we normally don’t see a lot of. What are the finances for a band like this? Where does the money go? Who gets the money? Is Spotify good? Is Spotify bad? How does piracy affect you? What about the fans? I really wanted to go into all of that for a band that can still sell out 200–250 seat venues and bars but is still all travelling in an old Ford van. A good night is when they have a couple of hotel rooms. No one is rolling in the dough so to speak. So what is it at that point when you have amazing critical success and acclaim but you’re not there yet?" In October 2015, Bechard and his crew filmed a live Lydia Loveless concert at Skully's in her hometown of Columbus for the documentary. The film has its World Premiere on April 7, 2016 at the Columbus International Film & Video Festival.

Songwriting

Loveless' lyrical bent includes feminist/strong-woman statements, therefore naturally includes a lot of drinking songs. Loveless is an avowed fan of Kesha, and has played "Blind" in her live shows.

Discography

Albums and EPs

Singles

Live performances

In addition to touring extensively Loveless has performed at many in-studio radio shows, including Daytrotter, KEXP-FM, and NPR.
YearTitleLabel
2016Lydia Loveless – and Audio Live sessionAudiotree
2017Lydia Loveless Folkadelphia Session April 11, 2017Folkadelphia

Music videos

Loveless was married to her bassist, Ben Lamb, who is also a graphic artist. They resided in Columbus, Ohio; after the divorce, Loveless moved to Raleigh, North Carolina.
Loveless' older sisters, Jessica Wabbit and Eleanor Sinacola, also have their own bands. Loveless' younger brother, Nate, is the drummer of Shores of Elysium, a death metal/deathcore band from Columbus, Ohio.
Loveless is an avowed fan of the IBM Selectric typewriter.
She has at least two tattoos. One is a heart with an X through it. Another tattoo is in the shape of a key, inspired by writer Joe Hill's comic book, Locke and Key.