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Singer/Songwriter Sarah Hughes is a local
favorite, playing the bars and venues in the college town
of Fayetteville, Arkansas. The powerful Southern voice
anchoring her folk-rock style has drawn comparisons to Janis
Joplin, Bonnie Raitt, & Lucinda Wiliams. She draws from
such diverse influences as Gillian Welch, Neil Young, Willie
Nelson, & Widespread Panic, resulting in a sound that
houses traditional country storytelling in steady rhythms
& strumming with some southern jam-rock on the side.
Born on the banks of the Misssissippi in
Memphis, she was raised 40 miles west in Forrest City,
Arkansas. Her musical beginnings can be traced to her father,
a guitar player himself, who taught her the basics during her
teenage years. Sarah attended Hendrix College to study visual
arts where, in the company of other aspiring musicians,
she began to sing & write songs. After graduating in
2002, she migrated with friends to New York City and although
her raspy drawl was well-received at East Village locales, she
quickly realized that a tiny Harlem apartment and the
metropolitan life were not an ideal fit for her. They were
enough, however, to inspire the song "Southern
Savage."
Sarah soon settled in Fayetteville in
mid-2003 and soon gained recognition throughout the region.
Currently, Sarah plays solo gigs weekly, and her full
band is filling clubs with its high-energy versions of Sarah's
original songs. Sarah recorded her first album last spring
with songs that highlight the adventurous ramblings of a
20-something, including a 2004 trek to Central Mexico. Her
songs are humorous, thoughtful, and delivered in a sexy twang
that makes you say, "She's got
it!" |
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