Tim Grimm will play at Charles and Myrtle's Coffeehouse on Saturday at 8 p.m. The coffeehouse is inside Christ Unity Church at 105 McBrien Road. There is a $10 suggested donation at the door.
Review for Tim Grimm:
Tim Grimm is one of our most requested performers. We are excited about his return.
Tim Grimm is a bit of a Renaissance man in the performing arts world. He has for the past 15 years blended his love for songwriting, travel, and the storytelling of acting (theatre, film and television). His most recent recording, The Turning Point, produced the #1 song on Folk radio in 2014-- King of the Folksingers. It was a particularly gratifying honor, given the song is a tribute to Tim's friend and musical icon, Ramblin' Jack Elliott. Tim's history with Ramblin' Jack goes back 30 years-- beginning with a bicycle ride that led to The Newport Folk Festival, Tim contributing liner notes to Jack's Grammy winning album, The South Coast (1995), Jack's recording Buffalo Skinners with Tim on Tim's album, Coyote's Dream (2003), and now, most recently King of the Folksingers.
After several years (1990s) working in Los Angeles (where he co-starred for two seasons on the NBC drama Reasonable Doubts, worked on Clear and Present Danger with Harrison Ford, and appeared in several films and T.V. projects), Tim returned home to Indiana. He grew up in the woods and small town settings of southern Indiana, son of schoolteachers and grandson of farmers, and his return home was a conscious choice to live a life of significance rather than one of “success’. He now lives with his wife on 80 acres close to where he grew up.
Tim’s songs are full of the rural rumblings that have shaped his life—rich with descriptive details, and sung with warmth and intimacy—recognizing the inextinguishable national romance with the idea of the family farm and the vanishing landscape of rural America. He released the album, Heart Land in 2000, and on the strength of that recording, was named 2000’s “Best Discover in Roots/Americana Music” by The Chicago Sun-Times. His albums Coyotes Dream and Names, led to his being named “2004 Male Artist of the Year” by the Freeform American Roots DJs.
He has released nine solo albums since 2000 (including the newest- The Turning Point), and two collaborations- Amber Waves (with Jason Wilber) and Wilderness Plots.
In 2005, Grimm was asked to compose music and act in a production of The Grapes of Wrath at Indiana Repertory Theatre and Syracuse Stage in New York. His song from the play--The People Highway, made it onto his next album, The Back Fields, which was subsequently named Americana Album of the Year by the Just Plain Folks Music Awards-- the world's largest independent music awards.
In 2007, Grimm put together a concept CD with several of the Midwest’s finest songwriter’s— Krista Detor, Carrie Newcomer, Tom Roznowski, and Michael White. The recording, Wilderness Plots, was drawn from the short stories of noted author, Scott Russell Sanders, and explored the settling of the American Wilderness in the Ohio River Valley Region between The Revolutionary War and The Civil War. Two PBS programs have explored Wilderness Plots-- the first, a documentary on the story and song, and the second a full Wilderness Plots- In Concert (2012). Produced by WTIU in Bloomington, IN, both productions were nominated for Emmy Awards. Tim continued to write songs based on Sander's writings and released the album, Wilderness Songs and Bad Man Ballads in 2011. At about this same time, Grimm also released a tribute album with songs of Tom Paxton, entitled, Thank You, Tom Paxton.