
Beth Hart, a Los Angeles native who is a blues-styled vocalist and street performer who was formerly. In 1995 she made her public debut in the music industry with Immortal. Her candid personality and her innate musicianship attracted the attention of many, as well as her emotional live performances and voice that was compared to Janis Joplin. Chuck Taylor wrote that Hart was "the embodiment of natural females" in the October 2, 1999 issue of Billboard magazine. She is "bawdy and funny, charming and wild with her preference to use a spicy languages. It's not what she's really good at. She's an elegant, tall singer/songwriter who dances and sings with the enthusiasm and vim like Mick Jagger . Other occasions, she is at the piano or center stage without any appearance of pretense. The legs of her are crossed to the edge of the chair and she talks with a soft, painful voice. Hart experienced similar reactions from the moment she took to the stage at amateur competitions when she was a teen. But, Hart was skeptical about the business of music after it was successful. Hart left her band when she was unsuccessful in touring all over the world. Hart then spent nearly four years contemplating her feelings and finding solutions to issues with music through writing. Hart was ready to give her professional career an opportunity and returned in 1999, releasing Screamin' for My Supper. It was an album that showed Hart's songwriting skills, and featured vulnerable, honest tracks about dealing with life's challenges.
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