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Chris Pierce

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Key Information

Chris Pierce is an American singer-songwriter, producer, multi-instrumentalist, radio host, educator, public speaker, wine producer and officiant born and based in California.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Pierce is from Pasadena, California. He grew up singing in church and playing in bands from an early age and listened to classic soul, rhythm and blues, jazz, gospel and rock and roll recordings. When he was 15 he was diagnosed with otosclerosis which caused him to lose significant hearing.[2] A surgery helped him regain 60% of his hearing in his right year. In his teenage years, he pursued acting and singing in local theater presentations and appeared on notable television shows such as Kids Incorporated, Big Break hosted by Natalie Cole, Star Search and Half and Half.[2]

While still in high school, Pierce began playing gigs with Grammy-nominated rock musician Jon Butcher.[3] After high school he received a scholarship to study jazz at USC. At 19 years old he performed on a US tour with Sonia Dada and later continued on to Moscow, Russia. After touring with Sonia Dada, Pierce came home to Southern California to work on his degree in jazz studies at USC.[3] In 2005, Pierce met Seal at a house party and later joined him as his opening act on a world tour. Pierce says, "I kinda got discovered by him... That opened up a bunch of different things."[2]

Career

[edit]

For over 3 decades, Pierce has been recording and doing independent road tours. He has opened for Neil Young, B.B. King, Seal, Rodrigo y Gabriela, Jill Scott, Aaron Neville, Colbie Caillat, Al Green, Jamie Cullum, Toots & the Maytals, and Robert Cray. In 2021, Chris Pierce's cover of "No One" by Alicia Keys was featured on the ABC television series A Million Little Things and the single was released by Hollywood Records. Pierce also co-wrote the hit song "We Can Always Come Back to This" which was featured 3 times on the NBC drama This Is Us. The song peaked at #1 on the Billboard Blues Chart and #12 on iTunes's Top 100.

His songs have also been featured in film and television including Crash,[4] Brothers and Sisters, In Plain Sight, True Blood, Eli Stone, What About Brian, Lincoln Heights, Army Wives, North Shore, Half and Half, Dawson's Creek, Sister Act, Great Plains and The Long Shots starring Ice Cube. His single "Are You Beautiful" has been used in a national Banana Republic ad campaign.[5]

Chris Pierce performing at the Mountain Winery in Saratoga, California (2019)

Reception

[edit]

Critic Paul Saitowitz of The Press-Enterprise has compared Pierce's voice to Ray Charles, writing that it "fluctuates from delicate falsettos to shrieks reminiscent of Ray Charles".[5] In a concert review, the San Antonio Express-News wrote that he has "one of the most powerful voices going."[6]

Pierce's 2021 album, American Silence garnered critical acclaim from NPR,[7] SiriusXM, The Bluegrass Situation,[8] Acoustic Guitar,[9] No Depression,[10] Rolling Stone,[11] Americana UK[12] and more for its strong racial justice themes. NPR's Robin Hilton said, "I haven't been so deeply, deeply moved by just a person and their guitar like this in a long time.”[7] Rolling Stone wrote, "American Silence is the sound of everyone who's hungry for change, steadying themselves and marching toward a common goal."[11] No Depression noted the timelines of the album's release around the worldwide racial justice uprisings: "Chris Pierce's American Silence is one of those albums that truly feels like a lifetime in the making."[10]

Additionally, his song "Keep On Keeping On" was chosen as KCRW's "Today's Top Tune" and he appeared on KCRW's "Morning Becomes Eclectic" with Nic Harcourt, who selected Pierce's album, Walking on the Earth, as "Best Album of July 2008".[13]

Personal life

[edit]

Pierce currently resides in California. He married actress Tara Buck in 2012.

Discography

[edit]
  • Liberation Vol. 1 (2002)
  • Intimate Moments (2004)
  • Static Trampoline (2005)
  • Walking on the Earth (2007)
  • Chris Pierce Live at the Hotel Cafe (2009)
  • I Can Hear You (2011)
  • When the Hustle Comes to a Stop (2012)
  • Reverend Tall Tree (2015)
  • You've Got to Feel It! (2017)
  • American Silence (2021)
  • Let All Who Will (2023)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Chris Pierce is an American singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer specializing in Americana, folk, blues, and soul genres.[1][2]
Born and raised in the Los Angeles area, Pierce earned a degree in Jazz Studies from the University of Southern California and overcame otosclerosis—a rare hearing disorder diagnosed at age 15 that resulted in the loss of hearing in one ear and partial deafness in the other—by relearning music fundamentals to sustain his career.[3][4][2]
His notable achievements include co-writing "We Can Always Come Back to This," which aired on multiple episodes of the NBC series This Is Us, topped the Billboard Blues Chart, and earned a nomination for Best Song/Recording Created for Television from the Guild of Music Supervisors and Jerry Goldsmith Awards.[2][5]
Pierce has released independent albums such as American Silence in 2021 and has collaborated with artists including Sunny War in the duo War & Pierce, while sharing stages worldwide with performers like Seal, B.B. King, and Cold War Kids; his music has garnered over 500,000 Spotify spins for tracks like "Amen" and airplay on AAA and non-commercial radio stations.[2][6]

Early life and education

Upbringing and family influences

Chris Pierce was born and raised in Pasadena, California, in an interracial family consisting of his African American father and Caucasian mother of European descent, who were the first such couple in their neighborhood.[7][4] His parents' differing cultural backgrounds exposed him to a wide range of music, with his father influenced by African American traditions and his mother by styles from her heritage, fostering an early appreciation for musical diversity within the home.[4] Pierce's initial exposure to music came from his parents singing to him during childhood; neither pursued music professionally, though his father possessed a notably strong voice inherited from a large family of singers—Pierce's paternal relatives, including his father's nine siblings, were known for their vocal talents.[8][9][10] His mother, an educator who later focused on at-risk high school students, emphasized intellectual pursuits, encouraging extensive reading in the household.[11][12] The family encountered racial prejudice, including an incident at age five when locals burned a cross on their lawn, highlighting the challenges of their mixed-race union in mid-20th-century Southern California.[13] Despite such adversity, his parents instilled music as a source of peace and unity, shaping Pierce's foundational views on its emotional and reconciliatory power.[14]

Musical beginnings and hearing challenges

Pierce's earliest exposure to music came from his parents, who sang to him as a young child, instilling a foundational appreciation despite neither being professional musicians—his mother worked as a teacher. Their diverse album collections further shaped his broad musical interests, spanning multiple genres from an early age. Raised by a white mother and Black father, Pierce was taught the value of music as a source of peace and love amid personal and societal challenges.[8][4][14] At age 15, during high school, Pierce developed otosclerosis, a rare hereditary disorder involving abnormal bone growth in the middle and inner ear that impairs sound conduction and leads to progressive hearing loss. The condition rapidly diminished his hearing to approximately three percent in both ears, rendering him effectively deaf in one ear and severely impaired in the other.[15][2][16] This hearing loss presented a profound obstacle to his budding musical aspirations, yet Pierce described it as a defining moment requiring a deliberate choice to persevere in music rather than abandon it. He underwent surgeries in adulthood, including one at Stanford approximately two years prior to 2021, though the left ear procedure failed, leaving him fully deaf on that side and with about 70% hearing retained in the right—a state persisting for over 30 years as of 2018. Music, in Pierce's view, served as a therapeutic anchor through this adversity, enabling him to channel resilience into his creative process.[11][4]

Formal training at USC

Pierce received the Ella Fitzgerald Scholarship at age 18 to study jazz at the University of Southern California (USC).[17] This funding supported his enrollment in the newly implemented vocal jazz studies program at USC's Thornton School of Music.[18] [19] His curriculum emphasized vocal techniques within jazz studies, including ear-training classes typical of the department's offerings.[19] Pierce completed a degree in Jazz Studies, graduating in 1995.[19] [4] This formal education followed early professional gigs and provided structured training in improvisation, ensemble performance, and jazz vocal interpretation, building on his self-taught foundations despite hearing challenges.[4]

Professional career

Early collaborations and breakthrough

Pierce's professional breakthrough occurred in 2004, when he encountered British singer Seal at a living room gig in Los Angeles, leading to an invitation to serve as the opening act on Seal's world tour.[20][3] Prior to this, Pierce had been performing as a local singer-songwriter in the Los Angeles area following his graduation from the University of Southern California's Jazz Studies program, often at intimate venues while building his repertoire of original soul, blues, and Americana material.[4] This exposure with Seal elevated Pierce's visibility, resulting in additional opening slots for established artists, including B.B. King at the House of Blues, where he performed songs like "Keep On Keepin' On" and "Walking on the Earth."[21] He also shared stages early in his career with figures such as Al Green, Aaron Neville, Colbie Caillat, Neil Young, and Jill Scott, accumulating over 25 years of such high-profile engagements that underscored his versatility as a multi-instrumentalist and vocalist.[8][22] These opportunities marked the transition from local obscurity to broader recognition, though Pierce continued to prioritize independent songwriting and live performances rooted in his influences from gospel, jazz, and rhythm and blues.[23]

Solo recordings and projects

Chris Pierce has maintained an active solo recording career, independently releasing eight albums that emphasize his songwriting, harmonica playing, and themes of social justice, personal resilience, and Americana roots.[6] These works, often distributed through his own Pierce Records label, predate and complement his collaborative efforts, showcasing raw, unpolished production focused on live-feel instrumentation and introspective lyrics. Early solo efforts include Static Trampoline (2005), a collection blending folk, blues, and soul with original tracks exploring everyday struggles and hope. This was followed by Walking on the Earth (2007), a 12-track album featuring songs like "All That Matters Is Now" (3:26) and "Beautiful Frustration" (3:56), recorded with emphasis on acoustic guitar and vocal delivery to evoke communal uplift.[24] Pierce self-produced much of this era's output, prioritizing direct-to-audience distribution via limited CD runs and early digital platforms. In the 2010s, releases such as When the Hustle Comes to a Stop (2012) continued this trajectory, incorporating fuller band arrangements while retaining solo authorship on material addressing urban life and redemption. Pierce's output paused for several years before resuming with American Silence on February 26, 2021, his ninth studio album, which confronts systemic issues through tracks like "Chain Gang Fourth Of July" on mass incarceration and the title song critiquing historical erasure of Native American boarding schools.[25][26] Most recently, Let All Who Will arrived on September 1, 2023, marking Pierce's return to original material after focusing on tours and partnerships; the 10-track set, including "Overdue" and "Meet Me at the Bottom," draws on gospel influences for messages of collective healing amid adversity.[27][28] These solo projects underscore Pierce's commitment to uncompromised artistic control, with releases typically bypassing major labels for direct fan engagement via platforms like Bandcamp and streaming services.

Live performances and tours

Chris Pierce has maintained an active schedule of live performances throughout his career, focusing on folk and Americana venues, festivals, and tours across the United States. He has appeared at prominent events such as the Newport Folk Festival, AmericanaFest, Folk Alliance International, Bottlerock Napa Valley, Rancho La Puerta Folk Festival, Four Corners Folk Festival, and MerleFest.[29] These appearances highlight his standing within the roots music community, where he delivers acoustic guitar-driven sets emphasizing original songwriting and covers of socially conscious material.[30] A significant milestone came in 2023 when Pierce was selected as the opening act for Neil Young's Coastal Tour, a limited run of 13 West Coast shows from July 1 to July 23.[31] This opportunity allowed him to perform before larger audiences, sharing stages with Young and reinforcing his reputation for interpreting Young's catalog, including renditions of "Southern Man."[1] Pierce has also collaborated live with established artists like B.B. King, Seal, and Jill Scott, expanding his exposure beyond solo folk circuits.[30] In addition to festival and tour work, Pierce has played intimate club and theater venues, such as the Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage on March 12, 2025, where he presented a set of original material.[32] Other notable solo shows include appearances at the Kerrville Folk Festival in 2021 and Rancho La Puerta Folk Festival in 2023.[33][34] His performances often feature a blend of solo acoustic arrangements and full-band setups, adapting to venue sizes from small coffeehouses to outdoor amphitheaters.[35] Pierce continues to book regional tours, with recent and upcoming dates at venues like the Troubadour in West Hollywood and the Museum of Making Music in Carlsbad.[36]

Musical style and themes

Genre influences and technical approach

Chris Pierce's genre influences stem from his formal education in jazz studies at the University of Southern California, where he engaged with improvisational masters such as Charlie Parker and John Coltrane.[4] His parental background exposed him to soul via Aretha Franklin, alongside blues from John Lee Hooker and B.B. King, and further soulful voices like Al Green, Aaron Neville, and Nina Simone.[4] These expand into folk traditions exemplified by Richie Havens and broader roots elements including Sam Cooke, Bill Withers, and Donny Hathaway, yielding a synthesis of folk, blues, soul, and Americana in his work.[4][37] Technically, Pierce approaches music as a multi-instrumentalist, centering acoustic guitar, harmonica, and piano to craft layered, roots-oriented arrangements that incorporate jazzy inflections and thumping blues rhythms without excess aggression.[38][37] His vocal technique features a soulful, dynamic range—from husky croons and falsetto flourishes to powerful howls—delivered with raw authenticity and Ben Harper-esque timbre, enabling expressive storytelling in message-driven songs.[37][4] Productions, such as those for Let All Who Will by Niko Bolas and David Resnik at Sunset Sound, emphasize precise, listenable balances of folk precision and soulful power, adapting to his otosclerosis-related hearing limitations through vibration-sensitive monitoring and specialized headphones.[38][4] This method supports seamless genre blending, as seen in tracks merging Piedmont blues pulses with gospel-infused uplift.[37]

Lyrical content and social commentary

Chris Pierce's lyrics frequently explore themes of racial injustice, personal resilience, and societal oppression, often drawing from his experiences as a Black American to critique systemic racism and advocate for empowerment. In his 2021 album American Silence, Pierce addresses issues such as mass incarceration, homelessness, and racial violence through narrative-driven songs that blend personal anecdotes with broader social critique, as seen in tracks like "Sound All the Bells," where he recounts encounters with racism from childhood profiling to adult discrimination.[39][40] The album's title track, "American Silence," serves as a pointed commentary on the complicity of inaction in perpetuating racial inequities, with Pierce alternating between individual stories and collective indictments to highlight how racism permeates American institutions.[41] Pierce positions himself as a reluctant protest singer, expressing fatigue with the persistence of issues necessitating such music while emphasizing hope and historical resilience in Black communities. Songs like "Young, Black and Beautiful," written amid 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, function as anthems celebrating Black youth and urging awareness of cycles of adversity, with lyrics evoking empathy and defiance against brutality.[9][42] Similarly, "Chain Gang Fourth of July" confronts the irony of patriotic celebrations against the backdrop of historical and ongoing Black oppression, using vivid imagery to underscore disparities in freedom and justice.[43] His approach avoids overt didacticism, instead employing poetic honesty and soulful restraint to convey emotional urgency, as noted in reviews praising the lyrics' convincing power without preachiness.[44][45] In later works like the 2023 album Let All Who Will, Pierce continues this vein with message-oriented songs rooted in folk, blues, and soul traditions, focusing on empowerment for the marginalized while critiquing societal failures, though with a broader palette that includes spiritual and redemptive elements.[38] Overall, Pierce's lyrical content reflects a commitment to truth-telling about racial dynamics, informed by first-hand observation rather than abstract ideology, aiming to foster resilience amid enduring challenges.[8][28]

Reception and impact

Critical reviews

Critics have lauded Chris Pierce's 2021 album American Silence for its direct engagement with themes of racial injustice and social hope through soul-infused protest songs. Acoustic Guitar magazine characterized the record as soulful, wise, and empathetic, emphasizing Pierce's willingness to unsettle audiences while balancing confrontation with uplift.[45] Americana UK praised its passionate construction and generous spirit, deeming it unignorable protest music rooted in personal conviction.[44] No Depression described the album as a culmination of Pierce's lifelong soul music pursuits, highlighting its raw authenticity amid broader Americana influences.[40] Pierce's 2023 release Let All Who Will drew acclaim for its eclectic fusion of roots, soul, and stylistic innovation across 15 tracks spanning nearly an hour. American Songwriter commended the rootsy soul elements that elevate its diversity, noting substantial lyrical depth without overwhelming vocal pyrotechnics.[37] Rambles.NET highlighted Pierce's unique personality, crediting his unexpected genre blending—merging soulful introspection with broader fusions—for distinguishing him in a crowded field.[46] The Alternate Root appreciated his smooth, Vance Gilbert-esque vocals and James Taylor-like melodies, portraying the songs as therapeutic balm for emotional wounds.[47] Earlier work like the album Static Trampoline (2006) received positive notice for its melodic craftsmanship and rhythmic allure. Enjoy the Music.com review extolled its wonderful melodies, mesmerizing rhythms, and clearly articulated lyrics carrying significant interpretive weight.[48] Live performances have similarly garnered enthusiasm; a 2023 Parklife DC critique of Pierce's solo show at Mt. Baker Theatre in Bellingham, Washington, described it as brilliantly uplifting, weaving hope, tragedy, and redemption through raw delivery.[49] Overall, reviews in specialized Americana and roots music outlets portray Pierce as a sincere, genre-spanning artist whose output prioritizes emotional honesty over commercial flash, though coverage remains limited outside niche publications.[45][37]

Commercial and cultural reception

Pierce's song "We Can Always Come Back to This," co-written and featured on three episodes of the NBC series This Is Us, achieved #1 on the Billboard Blues Chart and peaked at #12 on the iTunes Top 100 songs chart.[50] His music has accumulated over 500,000 plays on Spotify, primarily in Americana and blues genres, reflecting steady but niche streaming engagement rather than mainstream blockbuster appeal.[2] Pierce has conducted multiple worldwide headlining tours and opened for established artists including B.B. King, Seal, Al Green, and Neil Young, contributing to a dedicated live audience in folk and roots music circuits without translating to broad commercial dominance in album sales or pop charts.[50] Culturally, Pierce's work has garnered recognition within independent Americana and blues communities for its emphasis on social themes such as racism, resilience, and historical overlooked contributions by Black artists, as highlighted in the release of his 2021 album American Silence during Black History Month.[40] The album received acclaim as one of the year's standout folk releases, praised for its raw protest elements and personal narratives drawn from Pierce's biracial experiences.[51] Appearances on platforms like NPR's Mountain Stage have amplified his message of hope and social commentary, positioning him as a voice in contemporary roots music addressing systemic issues through acoustic-driven storytelling.[52] While lacking pervasive pop culture penetration, his output resonates in niche spaces focused on authenticity over mass-market virality.[53]

Achievements and recognitions

Pierce's acoustic rendition of "No One" gained prominence after featuring on the ABC series Grey's Anatomy in 2021, leading to over 500,000 Spotify streams and radio airplay on AAA/NonComm stations.[2] His song "We Can Always Come Back to This," used in NBC's This Is Us in 2020, topped the Billboard Blues Chart and reached number 12 on the iTunes Top 100 songs chart.[2] The track received nominations for Best Song/Recording Created for Television from both the Guild of Music Supervisors and the Jerry Goldsmith Awards.[5] The 2021 album American Silence earned selection as PopMatters' number one folk album of the year, with its track "Residential School" listed among FolkAlley's 100 Essential Folk Tracks.[50] Pierce has shared stages as an opening act for established artists including B.B. King, Al Green, Seal, Aaron Neville, and Colbie Caillat.[8] He performed on NPR's Mountain Stage in 2022, showcasing material from American Silence.[52]

Personal life

Relationships and privacy

Pierce married actress Tara Buck on October 7, 2012.[54] The couple resides in Southern California, where they maintain a low public profile focused on their respective careers in music and acting.[10] Public information on Pierce's relationships is limited to his marriage, with no verified details on prior partnerships or children disclosed in available sources. This scarcity reflects Pierce's preference for privacy, as he rarely discusses personal matters in interviews, prioritizing professional endeavors and broader social themes in his public statements.[14][7]

Health management and advocacy

At age 15, Chris Pierce was diagnosed with otosclerosis, a rare hereditary condition involving abnormal bone growth in the middle ear that impairs hearing by fixing the stapes bone.[2] This led to near-total hearing loss, reducing his auditory capacity to approximately 3% in both ears initially.[15] He underwent a stapedectomy on his right ear, replacing the stapes with a prosthetic, which restored about 70% of hearing in that ear.[4] The left ear remained untreated to avoid risks, resulting in complete deafness there, and Pierce has reported daily fluctuations in his right ear's function, requiring adaptive strategies for music performance and production.[55] Pierce manages his condition through reliance on his partially restored hearing, visual cues during live performances, and technological aids like in-ear monitors tuned for his auditory profile.[14] He has described music as a core tool for resilience, crediting it with sustaining his career despite the impairment, and in a 2018 personal account, he explored potential further interventions at facilities like Stanford University but emphasized non-surgical coping via creative output. In advocacy, Pierce promotes music's therapeutic role in overcoming physical and emotional challenges, drawing from his otosclerosis experience in public talks, including a 2012 TEDxAmericanRiviera presentation titled "The Healing Powers of Music," where he argued that musical engagement fosters psychological healing and determination.[56] His interviews and songwriting often highlight this, positioning music as a non-medical aid for health management, though he has not engaged in formal campaigns for otosclerosis research or hearing advocacy organizations.[57] Pierce's narrative underscores personal agency over institutional narratives, avoiding unsubstantiated claims of full recovery while evidencing sustained professional output as proof of efficacy.[58]

Discography

Studio albums

Chris Pierce has independently released several studio albums featuring his soul-influenced songwriting, often blending acoustic elements with fuller band arrangements. His discography emphasizes introspective lyrics and versatile instrumentation, with production handled through small labels or self-release. You've Got to Feel It!, released on September 15, 2017, draws from 1960s Muscle Shoals soul styles, incorporating vintage recording techniques and a 12-track set highlighting Pierce's vocal range and band dynamics.[59][60] When the Hustle Comes to a Stop, issued on December 11, 2012, contains 12 songs exploring personal reflection and life's pace, with runtime of approximately 45 minutes.[61][62] American Silence, Pierce's February 26, 2021 release, confronts social complacency and division through its title track and broader thematic content, earning pre-release praise from outlets like NPR for its timeliness amid 2020 events.[63][25] His most recent effort, Let All Who Will, arrived on September 1, 2023, via Friends at Work/Downtown, featuring 10 tracks produced by David Ferguson and Jack Joseph Puig, and receiving acclaim from NPR and American Songwriter for its narrative depth on resilience and human experience.[27][64]

Collaborative works and singles

Chris Pierce has participated in notable collaborative projects that blend Americana, soul, and roots elements. In the duo War & Pierce, formed with singer-songwriter Sunny War and producer Jared Faber, the group released a self-titled EP in 2016 containing five tracks, including "I Lived to Tell About It" and "Search and Destroy".[65] [66] Subsequent singles from the duo include "On and On" (2016), "Amen" (2020)—which garnered attention via NPR's World Cafe—and "Mercy" (2021).[67] [2] Pierce fronts the band Leon Creek alongside guitarist Matthew Stevens and producer Erik Janson, emphasizing soulful Americana. Their debut album, Far From Broken, appeared in 2021 on an independent label, supported by singles such as "Hope Never Leaves My Side" (2021), "Call It a Day" (2021), and "High Hopes" (2023).[68] [69] [70] Beyond full projects, Pierce has contributed as a featured artist on tracks like Jared Faber's "Going So Hard" (featuring Sy Smith and Freedom Bremner) and J. Chillin's "Gimme a Light" (featuring Taysty).[71] He has also issued solo singles independent of his studio albums, including covers and originals such as "The Dark End of the Street" (2021), "45 Jukebox" (2022), "Tulsa Town" (2023), and "Meet Me at the Bottom" (2023).[72]

References

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