Patty Griffin: The Loneliest Girl in the Whole U.S.A.

I think being human’s a pretty lonely experience for a lot of us,” Patty Grif?n recently told the Albuquerque Journal. “No matter how busy we keep ourselves, you’re kind of out there on your own.”
I’m no Dr. Phil. I can’t neatly break down for you what drives Ms. Grif?n, but I do know that her best songs are among the loneliest sounding recordings I’ve ever heard. Like anyone else, I see her tiny frame and hear that big, booming voice that so quickly turns delicate and soft, and in its best moments breaks off as it runs out of air. I’ve read about how the breakup of her marriage led her to write the songs for her 1996 debut Living With Ghosts, and then I consider that she got even better, writing “Useless Desires” for her last album, 2004’s Impossible Dream (so it was no surprise when Paste ranked her 19th on its list of the 100 Best Living Songwriters). The line, “Everyday I take a bitter pill … to help me not to wonder how I ended up like this,” brings a tear of recognition. It also makes the “pretty lonely experience” of which Grif?n sings a bit less lonely. Collective mourning brings us together. People who need their music fused with overwhelming positivity may not understand Grif?n’s appeal, but for anyone’s who’s felt a hellhound on his trail or stared into the glacial isolation of a Northern sky, the bond is strong and permanent.
Her career has been a rollercoaster. Grif?n signed to A&M on the basis of a demo tape that ended up becoming her debut album once the sessions with Daniel Lanois acolyte Malcolm Burn were met with record-company disapproval. Label chaos left her without proper promotion for her follow-up, 1998’s Flaming Red, and then an album, Silver Bell, never made it out of the can and left Grif?n temporarily without a record deal. In the meantime, other well-established musicians from Emmylou Harris to Bette Midler to the Dixie Chicks recorded her songs. And she’s since been hooked up with Dave Matthews’ artist-friendly ATO Records, where she’s recorded several albums that sound like the work of an unforced artist. Every cloud, it seems, has a silver lining. But why so many clouds?