Joan Osborne
Joan Osborne (born
July 8,
1963) is an American singer-
songwriter originally from
Anchorage, Kentucky. After moving to
New York City in the early
1990s, Osborne formed her own record label,
Womanly Hips, to release a few independent recordings before signing to
Mercury Records. Her first album was
Relish, which became a hit due to the single "One of Us". The song was much more pop-oriented than the rest of the album, which was steeped in
country,
blues and
folk music. "Right Hand Man" and "St. Teresa" were minor hits following the success of "One of Us", and Osborne's audience grew significantly with her appearance at
Lilith Fair. Doing so placed her in the same school of female singer-songwriters as
Tori Amos and
Sarah McLachlan. Her second studio album was
Righteous Love, which was a long-delayed commercial failure; it fell off the charts quickly.
Osborne was featured in the 2002 film Standing in the Shadows of Motown and toured with legendary Motown sidemen The Funk Brothers. She and her band accompanied the Dixie Chicks for a national tour in the summer of 2003, during which time she also joined veteran San Francisco jam-rockers The Dead (see Grateful Dead) as a vocalist, and released her third album, titled How Sweet It Is, a collection of classic rock and soul covers.