Mary Gauthier


Mary Veronica Gauthier is a Grammy-nominated American folk singer-songwriter.

Life and career

Gauthier was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. Born to a mother she never knew and relinquished in St Vincent's Women and Infants Asylum, Gauthier was adopted when she was about a year old by an Italian Catholic couple from Thibodaux, Louisiana. Struggling to deal with being adopted, she used drugs and alcohol. At age 15, she ran away from home, and spent the next several years in drug rehabilitation, halfway houses, and living with friends; she spent her 18th birthday in a jail cell. These experiences provided fodder for her songwriting later on. Spurred on by friends, she enrolled at Louisiana State University as a philosophy major, dropping out during her senior year. After attending the Cambridge School of Culinary Arts, she opened a Cajun restaurant in Boston's Back Bay neighborhood, Dixie Kitchen. Mary ran, and cooked at, the restaurant for eleven years. She was arrested for drunk driving opening night, July 12, 1990, and has been sober ever since. After achieving sobriety, she was driven to dedicate herself full-time to songwriting, and embarked upon a career in music. She wrote her first song at age 35.
She sold her share in the restaurant to finance her second album, Drag Queens in Limousines, in 1998. The summer of the release of this album, she was invited to play 11 major folk festivals, including the Newport Folk Festival. Drag Queens in Limousines won in The 1st Annual Independent Music Awards for Folk/Singer-Songwriter Song, and she was nominated for Best New Artist of the year by the Boston Music Awards. She was nominated for three Gay and Lesbian American Music Awards and won best country artist of the year. In 2002 her third album, Filth and Fire, was named "Best Indy CD of the year" by Jon Pareles of The New York Times. She moved to Nashville, Tennessee in 2001 and secured a publishing deal with Harlan Howard Songs, then secured a record deal with Lost Highway, a division of Universal Music, in 2003. Her first major label release, in 2005, Mercy Now was on the top 10 list for the year in dozens of publications, including The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Daily News, and Billboard Magazine.
She was awarded "New Artist of the Year" by The Americana Music Association the same year. Mercy Now was voted the No. 6 Record of the Decade by No Depression magazine. Her second Lost Highway release, Between Daylight and Dark, appeared in September 2007. She has had her songs recorded by numerous artists, including Jimmy Buffett, Tim McGraw, Blake Shelton, Bobby Bare, Boy George, Bill Chambers, Mike Farris, Candi Staton, Amy Helm, Kathy Mattea and Bettye LaVette. Mike Farris and Bettye LaVette both received Grammy nominations, and Mike Farris took home the 2015 Grammy for Best Roots Gospel Album, which included Gauthier's song "Mercy Now".
Her songs have been used in several TV shows, including , , Showtime's Banshee, HBO's Injustice and Paramount Network's Yellowstone. Her 6th studio record The Foundling and was released by Razor & Tie Records in 2010, and was named the No. 3 Record of the Year by Los Angeles Times music writer Randy Lewis. In 2013, she released a Live CD called LIVE at Blue Rock, recorded outside of Austin, TX. Gauthier released her seventh studio album, Trouble and Love, in 2014. She was nominated in 2015 for the at the 26th Annual GLAAD Media Awards, held in L.A. Additionally, Cold and Bitter Tears: The Songs of Ted Hawkins, released in late 2015 on Austin-based Eight 30 Records, features Gauthier's take on the late Los Angeles busker's signature song Sorry You're Sick.
Rifles & Rosary Beads, her most recent record, called "music that's just plain important" by The Los Angeles Times earned Gauthier her first Grammy nomination in the category of Best Folk Album, and won 2018 Album of the Year at The International Folk Music Awards. Rifles & Rosary Beads was also nominated for 2018 Album of the Year by the Americana Music Association, and Gauthier was named the 2018 International Artist of the Year by the UK Americana Music Association.
Her short stories have been published in several books and magazines, including the book Amplified, released by Random House, and , an arts magazine out of Wimberly, TX., and the Capitola Review. She has been featured with her own chapter in several books on country and americana music, including "They Came To Nashville", by Marshall Chapman, and "Right By Her Roots" in Americana Women and Their Songs, by Jewly Height, and a Dutch book on country music De Bezem Door Nashville, by Harry de Jong, with photographs by Henk Bleeker. Her songs are taught at several universities, including Alice Randall's country music lyric in American literature class at Vanderbilt University. Her songs have appeared on Wally Lamb's playlist, Tom Waits's playlist, and playlist. She is currently writing a book about the Art of Songwriting. She is a regular on the Grand Ole Opry, and currently resides in Nashville, Tennessee.

Discography