Vocalist, Kat Edmonson RETURNS to the show! With all the familiarity of talking to an old friend, we dive into bucket list goals of the past and future, finding inspiration in the unlikeliest of places, and a show where even the best soundcheck can lead to surprises at downbeat! Watch the interview on our YouTube channel: youtube.com/c/ChristianWiggs
“The Kat Edmonson Show!” Machine Dazzle! Flying blind!
Vocalist, Kat Edmonson RETURNS to the show! With all the familiarity of talking to an old friend, we dive into bucket list goals of the past and future, finding inspiration in the unlikeliest of places, and a show where even the best soundcheck can lead to surprises at downbeat!
FEATURED RELEASE:
Kat Edmonson
“Dreamers Do” (2020)
Getting to Know: Kat!
Kat Edmonson is an award-winning songwriter and singer "with an equal foothold in jazz, cabaret and vintage cosmopolitanism pop" (The New York Times). She has been featured on Austin City Limits, Tiny Desk Concerts, A Prairie Home Companion, and The Late Show with David Letterman.
Raised on the music and film of the early-to-mid-twentieth century, Kat is a rare artist who embodies the spirit of the past while remaining resolutely au courant. She performs original songs and familair classics in her live show, interweaving humorous anecdotes, philosophical musings, and her love of film with disarming candor and vulnerability. Her longtime band members’ keen and sensitive accompaniment allows Kat to freely veer off-script as she’s often inclined to do.
Kat is equally comfortable on the stage, in the recording studio, on a movie set, or recording The Kat Edmonson Show from the intimacy of her own home. She has played major stages across the United States, Europe, and Asia from Carnegie Hall to the Montreux Jazz Festival to the Blue Note in Japan. In 2016, she appeared in Woody Allen’s Cafe Society as a 1930s jazz singer and was highlighted on the official soundtrack performing her version of “Mountain Greenery.” Her experience in Allen’s film inspired the artist to study the craft of acting. She subsequently spent two years in conservatory at The William Esper Studio in New York City.
Watch the interview on our YouTube channel here!