Allard attended Orange County High School in Orange, Virginia where she excelled in long distance running. She set record times in the one-mile and two-mile distances in 1980, the latter of which stood for many years. Phil Audibert, a local author and musician, gave Allard her first guitar lesson. As a fourth-grader, she sang "Leaving on a Jet Plane" at a 4-Htalent contest, accompanied on the guitar by Extension agentTed Carroll. Her early contest recognition led to the Lion's Club Bland Music Contest and then folk concerts at the Four County Players theater in Barboursville. She and Mark Brookman, a Gordonsville, Virginia native, put together a musical duo "that was making people take notice." After finishing college, when she was well into her 20s, Allard decided to pursue her music. For a few years she performed weekly at Random Row, a bar in Charlottesville. She slowly built up a repertoire of original material, and a fan base. As she puts it, "Once I buckled down, I was very serious about it and very focused about it and started writing." Billy Marshall Brockman, also an Orange County native, gave Allard the push she needed to launch her music career properly. "He taught me over half of what I know about music," she says.
Career
Playing at a club in Harrisonburg one night, Allard and Brockman were on break, sitting at the bar, discussing music with a bartender named Dwayne. "I had a crush on him," Allard admits. Soon they were married. Her new husband had a degree in marketing and "he taught me about it as well," Allard says. She produced her first CD in 1994, with four more to follow — "all of them released under the independent label she and Dwayne started." While their friends were having children and buying cars and houses, Allard and her husband were plowing all their money into "running up and down the road, putting together press packets, marketing this product called Terri Allard." As she recalls: Allard formed the Terri Allard Jazz Quartet with some of "the area's top musicians," including drummer Robert Jospé, pianist Bob Hallahan, and bassists Pete Spaar. The group performs popular jazz standards with favorites including those by Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, and Etta James.
Allard's father Bill is also a musician. She lost her brother Scott A. Allard, a professional actor, in 2005 to melanoma. Her son Will has performed with her band from a very young age.