Singer/songwriter
Thea Gilmore was born to Irish parents in 1979. Luckily, her upbringing in the astute area of Oxford, England, allowed
Gilmore to ignore the new wave reign of the 1980s and motivated her to seek out her parents'
Bob Dylan and
Joni Mitchell albums. Later, she found comfort in the work of
Elvis Costello,
Tom Waits, and
the Replacements, naturally absorbing the intelligence behind each artists' work.
Gilmore began writing poetry and short stories to amuse her conventional surroundings, but she needed something more tangible. She left home at age 16 to go work in a recording studio.
Gilmore also founded her own Shameless Records and released her debut album,
Burning Dorothy, in 1998.
The Lipstick Conspiracies and the
As If EP followed two years later, and
Gilmore's star power started to buzz. In the new millennium,
Gilmore inked a deal with Compass in the U.S. and finally graced American shores with the 2002 release of
Rules for Jokers.
Gilmore's third album, 2003's
Avalanche, was a much more daring effort for her, and the single "Juliet" earned
Gilmore her first Top 40 hit in the U.K. A year later,
Gilmore released a collection of cover songs entitled
Loft Music. This self-release effort featured
Gilmore's renditions of songs by
the Buzzcocks,
Paul Westerberg,
Jimmy Cliff, and
the Ramones.
Songs from the Gutter (2005) gathered career-spanning cuts not previously available as well as other hidden treasures from
Gilmore's catalog of unreleased material. In August 2006,
Gilmore issued the emotionally charged
Harpo's Ghost, her first set of original material since
Avalanche. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, All Music Guide