Shawn Colvin (born Shawna Lee Colvin, January 10, 1956)[1] is an American singer-songwriter. While she has been a solo recording artist for decades, she is best known for her 1997 Grammy Award-winning song "Sunny Came Home".
Her first paid gig came just after she started college at Southern Illinois University. Colvin performed at local venues in Carbondale and later formed a band. For six months, they expanded their fanbase throughout Illinois. During this time, Colvin struggled with drug and alcohol use. She later formed Dixie Diesels, a country-swing group. Colvin relocated to Austin, Texas, with the group and then entered "the folk circuit in and around Berkeley, California",[5] before straining her vocal cords and taking a sabbatical at the age of 24.[6]
After touring with Vega,[5] Colvin signed a recording contract with Columbia Records[2][5] and released her debut album Steady On in 1989. The album won a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album.[2] Colvin's second album Fat City was released in 1992 and received a Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Folk Recording. Her song "I Don't Know Why" was nominated for a Grammy in the Best Female Pop Vocal category.[2] In 1993, she moved back to Austin and, in 1994, released the album Cover Girl.[5] In 1995, Colvin released her album Live 88 a collection of live recordings from 1988.[8]
In 1996, Colvin released her album A Few Small Repairs and, in 1997, her single "Sunny Came Home" spent four weeks at the number one spot on the Adult Contemporary chart.[2][9] The song won the 1998 Grammy Awards for both Song and Record of the Year.[2] Colvin released the album Holiday Songs and Lullabies in 1998[10] and in 2001 released another album called Whole New You.[11] In 2004, she released a compilation of past songs called, Polaroids: A Greatest Hits Collection.[2]
In 2006, Colvin left Columbia Records and released a 15-song album called These Four Walls on her new label, Nonesuch Records, which featured contributions by Patty Griffin and Teddy Thompson.[12] In 2009 she released Live, which was recorded at the jazz club Yoshi's in Oakland, California.[13]
Colvin's eighth studio album, All Fall Down, was released in 2012 and was produced by Buddy Miller at his home studio in Nashville, Tennessee. The album featured guest appearances by Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss and Jakob Dylan.[2] Colvin published her memoir Diamond in the Rough in 2012.[14] In 2016, she recorded an album with Steve Earle called Colvin and Earle.[15][16][17]A Few Small Repairs was reissued in 2017, including its first pressing on vinyl, for its 20th anniversary.[18]
Colvin has been married twice, first to Simon Tassano in 1993 whom she divorced in 1995 and to photographer Mario Erwin, whom she married in 1997 and divorced in 2002. She gave birth to a daughter in July 1998.[21]
Colvin says she has struggled on and off with depression, alcoholism and anxiety. She wrote about these struggles in her 2012 memoir Diamond in the Rough, published by HarperCollins.[23]