Tanya Davis

Canadian singer-songwriter and poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tanya Davis is a Canadian singer-songwriter and poet, based in Prince Edward Island. Her style is marked primarily by spoken word poetry set to music.

OriginSummerside, Prince Edward Island, Canada
GenresPop, folk, spoken word
OccupationsSinger-songwriter, poet
Years active2006–present
Quick facts Background information, Origin ...
Tanya Davis
Davis (2017)
Davis (2017)
Background information
OriginSummerside, Prince Edward Island, Canada
GenresPop, folk, spoken word
OccupationsSinger-songwriter, poet
Years active2006–present
WebsiteTanya Davis
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Background

Born in Summerside, Prince Edward Island, she moved to Ottawa for a time after high school to attend university, and then hitchhiked to British Columbia, where she worked in community development[1] before moving to Halifax in 2005.[2] She has since moved back to Prince Edward Island.[3]

Career

Shortly after moving to Halifax, Davis began performing spoken word poetry at various cafés in the city. She soon recorded an album, Make a List, which was nominated for Female Recording of the Year, Alternative Recording of the Year and Album of the Year at the Nova Scotia Music Awards, along with a nomination for Davis herself as New Artist of the Year,[2] as well as four nominations for the MusicPEI Awards.[1] She was named poet of the year in The Coast's annual year-end reader's poll for 2007.

She followed up with Gorgeous Morning in 2008.[1]

She has toured across Canada and internationally as a poet and musician, both as a solo artist and with Jenn Grant.[4]

Davis attracted international press attention in 2010 when How to Be Alone, an animated film directed by Andrea Dorfman illustrating a spoken word piece by Davis, became popular on YouTube.[5] She subsequently released her third album, Clocks and Hearts Keep Going, in November 2010.[6] The album was produced by Jim Bryson.[6]

Davis authored a book of poetry titled At First, Lonely in spring 2011, published by Canadian publisher The Acorn Press.[7] She also served as poet laureate of the Halifax Regional Municipality from 2011 to 2013.[8]

In 2013, she wrote the poetic narration to Millefiore Clarkes' Island Green, a short documentary produced by the National Film Board of Canada about organic farming in PEI.[9]

In 2014, she appeared in her first acting role, starring in Andrea Dorfman's film Heartbeat.[10]

In 2020 Dorfman and Davis again collaborated on the short film How to Be At Home, based on another poem by Davis about coping with isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada.[11] The film was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's year-end Canada's Top Ten list for 2020.[12]

Davis was appointed poet laureate of Prince Edward Island on April 28, 2023.[13]

Personal life

Davis has stated in the press that she identifies as queer:

My sexuality is as fluid as my creativity. I don't sit firmly in the category of lesbian, but I don't sit firmly in poet or songwriter either. I love people for people. I think the way I love is queer.[14]

Discography

  • Make a List (2006)
  • Gorgeous Morning (2008)
  • Clocks and Hearts Keep Going (2010)

References

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