Welcome to the Biography section. This page contains information taken from various sources including the
official Jewel website bio section.
Jewel was born on May 23, 1974 to Atz Kilcher and Lenedra Carroll. She was born in Payson, Utah, but the family soon moved to Anchorage, Alaska. Jewel�s name stems from Lenedra, whose middle name is Jewel, and from her Grandfather, Yule (spelled "Juel" in his homeland), a Swiss native who settled in Homer, Alaska in 1940.
Jewel first discovered her singing and writing gifts at home, where Lenedra involved Jewel and her two brothers, Shane and Atz Lee, in "creativity workshops," where they enjoyed writing poems, singing and creating arts-and-crafts projects. She also taught them a reverence for the natural world and the wisdom of indigenous people. Lenedra sang with her children often, too. One of Jewel�s favorites was the melody, "This Little Bird," which she & her mother sing on Jewel�s "Spirit" CD.
By age six, Jewel began performing with her parents for Anchorage's locals and tourists. She also started to master one of her specialties, yodeling, with her father's help. During their "family dinner show," the Kilchers sang, presented skits and showed a documentary of the Kilcher's pioneering home life that Yule had created in the 1950s.
When the Kilchers divorced two years later, Jewel and her two brothers went with Atz to live on the Kilcher family's 800-acre homestead in Homer. Jewel found solace in writing, and her early journal reflects the hurt and uncertainty she felt during this time.
During her early teen years, Jewel and Atz performed together in Homer during the summers. Jewel learned how to "work a room" the way her dad did, and to gauge people's reactions to the songs and stories. She'd travel back to Anchorage to spend the winters with Lenedra.
Jewel also gave horseback rides to visitors of her aunt's youth hostel/bed-and-breakfast. "Homer was filled with travelers," Jewel recalled. "I had friends from Chile and Guatemala, Puerto Rico, Australia and New Zealand. Those people turned me on to a lot of different languages, religions and different ways of thinking. Summer was always a good education."
Still, journal writing and caring for her horse, Clearwater, were some of Jewel's favorite pastimes. When she was 14, a native Ottowa Indian tribe "adopted" Jewel and helped her realize her gift for speaking, as well as writing, from her heart.
In 1989, Lenedra helped Jewel practice a rendition of "Over The Rainbow" for a performance on Tom Bodet's "End of the Road Show," a popular Alaska Public Radio series. It was during this performance that Jewel found her voice and perhaps her destiny.
Around this time, Jewel began to play the guitar and perform songs that she composed. She also joined a local rap group called "Le Cr�me" for a brief stint, where she was known as "Swiss Miss."
Jewel spent her junior and senior high school years at the Interlochen Fine Arts Academy in Michigan as a voice major. Her voice matured while practicing difficult arias by Monteverdi, Bononcini and other operatic composers.
Jewel also talked the academy into letting her participate in the drama program, which wasn't allowed at the time. She ended up landing the leading role in that semester's play, "Spoon River Anthology."
After graduating from Interlochen in 1992 and traveling for a few months, Jewel moved to San Diego, California to live with Lenedra and Atz Lee. Jewel fizzled out in a variety of jobs, including waitressing, and found herself broke and wondering what to do next.
With Lenedra's encouragement and belief in pursuing their dreams, they moved out of their apartment and into separate VW Vans. Cutting costs left more time for Jewel to focus on writing songs, playing music and singing.
About this time Jewel met local singer/songwriter Steve Poltz and his band, The Rugburns. The two later co-wrote "You Were Meant For Me" and Steve appears in the video with Jewel.
Along with other local songwriters - including Poltz, John Katchur, Gregory Page, Frank Lee Drennen, Joy Eden Harrison and Lisa Sanders - Jewel practiced her craft at local clubs and improvisational "house jams" where the musicians would share songs and collaborate.
"It was incredible, just a brilliant environment," Jewel recounted. "I'd go out to cafes and I'd feel like it was Paris in the '20s. We all were starving and no one was recognized, but here were all these talented, brilliant writers. I just felt so honored to be around them and writing with them."
Eventually, Jewel landed a regular Thursday night gig at the InnerChange Coffee House in Pacific Beach. For $3 (later it cost $5), patrons listened to four-hour sets of mostly original material interspersed with little stories about her life. By this time, Jewel had composed more than 100 songs.
By July 1993, Jewel's local following had grown large enough to attract the attention of Los Angeles record executives.
"A bunch of limos started coming down and I'd get flown off to New York," Jewel remembered. "I'd be eating carrot sticks and peanut butter in my van, then fly off to New York and have these huge dinners, and then be plopped back in my pumpkin bus."
Jewel signed with Atlantic Records in late 1993. With an advance from the company, she rented a house with Lenedra and bought a used Volvo and a new guitar.
Jewel chose Ben Keith (Neil Young and James Taylor) to produce her first album. She began recording in 1994 at Neil Young's Redwood Digital Studio in Woodside, California. Young's longtime band, the Stray Gators, backed Jewel on five songs along with Steve Poltz.
But to capture Jewel's strong audience connection, Atlantic Records suggested a live recording. A sound crew set up at The InnerChange Coffee House to record three sets of Jewel singing to her regulars.
was a pair of concerts (one free, one minimal charge) that Jewel gave as a "thank you" gift for the members of this mailing list on July 18th & 19th of 1996. They were held at the Bearsville Theatre in Bearsville NY while she was recording at the Bearsville Studios (Bearsville is about one
mile from downtown Woodstock NY...yep, THAT Woodstock!!). Since then, the list has had an annual EDA camp out at a campsite near Woodstock that has attracted nearly 50 list members each time.
The public heard Jewel�s first album, "Pieces Of You," in 1995. After a slow start and relentless touring, "Who Will Save Your Soul," "You Were Meant For Me" and "Foolish Games" became hit singles.
"POY" earned Jewel an American Music Award for Best New Artist. In 1999, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified "POY" with its prestigious Diamond Award for U.S. sales exceeding 10 million units. The album � which hit #4 on the Billboard 200 -- is certified at more than 11
million units. This makes "POY" one of the top five best-selling albums of all time by a female artist.
Jewel's second album, "SPIRIT," debuted in November 1998 in the #3 spot on the Billboard 200 and was certified platinum out-of-the-box. The collection has since been certified triple platinum by the RIAA.
Patrick Leonard (Madonna) produced "Spirit," which features the singles "Hands," "Down So Long" and "Jupiter (Swallow The Moon)".
Jewel has received three Grammy Award nominations, an American Music Award, and an MTV Video Music Award. In addition, she has graced the cover of such major magazines as Time, Rolling Stone (twice), Vogue, Interview, Entertainment Weekly, People, and Details.
Jewel and her mother/manager, Lenedra Carroll, established their nonprofit, humanitarian organization in 1999, called Higher Ground for Humanity. Higher Ground's mission is to inspire positive change on global, community and individual levels. Visit www.highergroundhumanity.org for more information.
Among its most ambitious efforts, HGH launched the Clearwater Project (www.clearwaterproject.com) during October's worldwide awareness-raising event, NetAid. Jewel and other talented musicians performed for this huge benefit concert, which was broadcast live on radio, television and the web. Visit www.NetAid.org for more information on this global project.
Jewel�s holiday album � Joy: A Holiday Collection -- includes popular Christmas songs along with a few secular, inspirational songs, some of which Jewel wrote. The enhanced multimedia technology also includes a video of Jewel�s taping session of "Gloria," her first self-composed aria.
Jewel harmonized in October 1999 with legendary songwriter and country musician Merle Haggard for two duets -- "Silver Wings" and "That's The Way Love Goes -- on his new career-retrospective release.
Jewel�s first collection of poetry, "A Night Without Armor," was released in 1998 and has been a staple of the New York Times best-seller list.
Jewel debuted worldwide as the lead female role in her first feature film, Ang Lee's "Ride With The Devil," on December 10, 1999.
Jewel pens deeply intimate and detailed glimpses of her public and private life in her second book, "Chasing Down The Dawn,"
which HarperCollins released in October 2000. In candid and elegantly written prose, Jewel chronicles a breadth of rich experiences; from the wonder of
watching a lightning storm below her private-jet window eight miles above the Earth, to the grueling challenge of performing with bronchitis during 1999's
Spirit World Tour. She weaves snapshots of stardom and private love with poignant vignettes of her childhood as a folk singer with a pioneering family in the Alaskan frontier.
Pages of photos from the Kilcher family archives and photographs taken by Jewel and her friends are plentiful throughout the book.
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Angel Needs A Ride
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RVH �1997
All Rights Reserved. All songs on this site are trademarks or
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Copyright � 1997-2001 Bob Hedman.
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1974
-Jewel is born, Payson, Utah.
1980
-Jewel begins performing with her parents in Anchorage, Alaska
1982
-Jewel's parents divorce and Jewel moves to Homer, Alaska
1987
-Jewel and her father, Atz, play gigs in Homer
1988
-Jewel is "adopted" by and Ottawa indian tribe
1989
-Jewel performs "Over the Rainbow" on a popular radio show in Alaska
1990
-Jewel attends Interlochen Fine Arts Academy in Michigan
1992
-Jewel moves to San Diego to join her mother, Lenedra
1993
-Jewel builds a following performing in San Diego coffee houses.
-Jewel sign with Atlantic Records
1994
-Jewel begins recording her first album at Niel Youngs Redwood Digital Studio
1995
-February 28: Pieces of You is released
1996
-May: Pieces of You is certified gold
-August: Pieces of You is certified platinum
-Jewel thanks her fans with "Jewelstock"
-Jewel tours the U.S and makes her first promotional appearences in Europe
1997
-January: Jewel wins American Music Award
-January: Pieces of You is certified 2x platinum
-February: Pieces of You is certified 3x platinum
-March: You Were Meant for Me hits number one, certified platinum
-May: Jewel first appears on Rollingstone cover
-May: Pieces of You is certified 4x platinum
-Jewel participates in Lilith Tour
-July: Pieces of You is certified 5x platinum, Jewel appears on Time cover
-September: Pieces of You is certified 6x platinum,Jewel wins Best Female Video at the MTV Video Music Awards for "You Were Meant For Me." She unexpectedly sang "Angels Standing By" to reflect the recent mood and mourning in the world over Princess Diana's death
-November: Pieces of You is certified 7x platinum
-December: SoundScan proclaimed Pieces Of You the second best-selling LP of 1997 - selling over 4.3 million copies in the U.S. during the year.
1998
-January: Jewel is nominated for an American Music Award for Favorite Female Artist Rock/Pop and Favorite LP (Pieces Of You), Pieces Of You is certified 8x platinum.
-February: Jewel is nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance ("Foolish Games").
-May: Jewel can be found singing "You Make Loving Fun" on A Tribute To Rumours - a tribute LP to Fleetwood Mac. In May, Jewel fans received new material in the form of a book of poetry called A Night Without Armor. The book is a collection of poems Jewel has written dating back to her childhood and sold over 500,000 copies (spending 10 weeks on The New York Times Best-Seller list).
-October: Jewel hit the Top 40 with "Hands."
-November 17: Spirit is released with the first single "Hands." Spirit is certified platinum by the end of the month and Jewel hit the Top 10 with "Hands."
-December: A lawsuit is filed against Jewel for over $10 million by a former manager who claims that she discovered and managed the singer until Jewel's mom had her fired. Spirit is certified 2x platinum.
1999
-January: Jewel and her mother, Lenedra Carroll, established Higher Ground for Humanity, Spirit is certified 3x platinum.
-March: Pieces Of You was certified 9x platinum. Jewel hit the Top 40 with "Down So Long."
-May: Jewel takes home a Blockbuster Award for Favorite Female Artist - Modern Rock. Jewel hit the Top 10 with "Down So Long."
-June: Spirit is certified 4x platinum.
-July: Jewel performs at Woodstock '99 in Rome, New York.
-August: Jewel hit the Top 40 with "Jupiter (Swallow The Moon)."
-October: Jewel performs at NetAid. Pieces Of You is certified 11x platinum.
-November: Joy-A Holiday Collection is released. Jewel is named 1 of Glamour magazine's "1999 Women of the Year."
December: Joy-A Holiday Collection is certified platinum. Jewel's feature film acting debut Ride with the Devil opens nationwide
-Jewel's Spirit World Tour hits Australia, Asia, Europe, & North America
2000
-Spirit goes quadruple platinum (4,000,000 sold)
-Jewel performes at the Al Gore rally in Nashville (booooo)
-Jewel gives her first solo acoustic concert since 1996, tours California
-Jewel performes in Bosnia for the USO Holiday Tour
-October: Jewel releases her 2nd book, Chasing Down The Dawn.
2001
-October: Jewel hit the Top 40 with Standing Still
-November: Jewel released This Way with the first single Standing Still. Jewel said of the new LP: "I wanted to focus on the craft of performing and songwriting. I've always been a live musician, and I wanted my voice to shine through. At the same time, I hope to stay relevant as a writer, which means staying honest about where you are. The most important thing to me is maintaining my authenticity. I'll always be curious musically and want to try new things, but above all, I want the music to sound honest and good in 20 years."
Jewel hit the Top 10 with Standing Still.
December: This Way is certified platinum.
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