Candy Coburn
Have you ever met someone
that had such conviction in what they were doing
that you felt moved, that you looked at them and
could really feel that they were doing exactly
what they were intended to do with their life – that
they are right where they need to be? Well,
meet Candy Coburn.
If you were to ask her many fans across the Country,
how would you describe Candy it would be “she
is simply infectious”.
From the moment she hits the stage, you get the
sense that Candy is not your run-of-the-mill chick
singer. Maybe it’s the fact that she doesn’t
count on her good looks to engage the crowd she
relies on her energetic delivery, true-to-life
lyrics, and a show that rocks. Or perhaps
it’s her signature green guitar she never
performs without it. Whatever it is, it’s
easy to see why Candy and her music are undeniably
contagious.
Born in Kentucky, raised in south Missouri while
spending summers in Texas with her father, Candy’s
introduction to music came from her grandmother’s
old console table. Out of its 8-track and record
players, gospel music played along with the sounds
of the Glenn Miller Orchestra, Loretta Lynn and
George Jones. She’d listen as her grandmother
sang along, encouraging her to do the same. Today,
even at 89 years old her grandmother can still “belt
it out,” says Candy laughing. But
when it came to rock and roll, that was a no-go.
“It was a big joke growing up even in high
school, and certainly in the school of music in
college that I didn’t know hardly anything
about the Beatles or the Rolling Stones - anything
normal or mainstream- because I wasn’t allowed
to listen to it. My Grandma thought it was the
devil’s music,” says Candy. “I
didn’t listen to pop music until at least
6th grade.
While she grew up on and loved gospel, country
music stole Candy’s heart. As a child, she
remembers watching her first CMA Awards show and
getting this feeling in her stomach, one that said “Man,
I want to do that!” But it would be years
before she was able to do her own music, her own
way. As all life journeys go there were a few bumps
along the way, a few detours, several wrong turns;
but all that is necessary in making the outcome
that much richer.
After high school, Candy landed a music scholarship
to the University of Missouri and enrolled as a
music major with a minor in journalism. There she
studied Opera, but a tenacious Candy wanted more.
Her voice teacher told her that if she wasn’t
doing Opera she would be wasting her talent. It
wasn’t long before the teacher made her life
miserable for daring to branch out in a new direction.
Discouraged, she quit school, got a job and played
with a couple of bands in different areas and a
killer worship team in church. However, Candy
went back and finished at the University of Missouri
with a Theater degree.
“I started playing guitar then and wrote
my first song. I was never told this entire
time ‘hey you need to learn to write a song
and play an instrument.’ When I go
into schools and talk to kids now, I am amazed
to hear they are already writing.”
Candy will jokingly tell you that she could write
a book about how to not do things in the
music business. She’s been through every
band drama you can think of; she’s slept
in cheap hotels that no normal person would dare
step foot in, she’s driven all night to a
gig only to find it was canceled, she’s lost
more money than she cares to remember and she’s
been told “No” so many times that a
normal person would have said “Yes,” to
giving up sooner. But she keeps going …
“This thing is unbelievable to me. When
people get my music and it changes how their life
is … man I never thought I’d get to
see that happen in my life. It makes me feel like
I am doing something good. I have these female
fans who, when I met them, were bummed out, didn’t
feel like they had a lot to give, but they hear
something in my songs and it is something they
can plug into and be a part of and believe in. “
So, that’s Candy’s
story. It may not be one of those “made for
TV” kind of stories, but it’s hers
and it’s real. Truth be told, as many hurdles
as she has been through, she should have quit a
long time ago. Fortunately, Candy doesn’t
understand the concept of giving up. Candy has
this innate ability to soften even the hardest
of hearts. Candy’s music makes her
fans believe with conviction and faith that dreams
can and really do come true in God’s time.
Candy has recently recorded
a new CD with Joe Scaife (Montgomery Gentry/Gretchen
Wilson) a major Nashville Producer, this CD should
be released Nationally in late 2009.
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