Sign In. Edit Jan Terri. Showing all 5 items. Jump to: Overview 1 Mini Bio 1 Trivia 3. Has recorded and released two albums: "Baby Blues" came out in while "High Risk" was issued in View agent, publicist, legal and company contact details on IMDbPro.
Getting Started Contributor Zone ». New recordings surfaced, including her first new album in 20 years, Wild One , although much of the album was recorded back in , and Holiday Songs along with the infamous comeback single Excuse My Christmas. Today Jan considers herself to be retired, however recordings continue to surface, mostly digital and available from her Bandcamp page, including the planned album, I'm A Horsie now titled High Risk , and the collection No Rules, No Boundaries.
If you like what you hear please go to her page and support her : you can even order yourself a signed photograph or even a personal phone call! She is currently trying to crowdfund a new album, and you can help HERE. That Ave Maria is pretty great. Based on your above bio on her, I thought it would suck. Ok, now listening to Journey to Mars, and now I see what you're saying Posted by Darryl W. Bullock at Email This BlogThis!
Digital Dave 9 November at Newer Post Older Post Home. Subscribe to: Post Comments Atom. Here Pussy Pussy. Try to hit as many balls back as you can, and try not to get pummeled. What we do know is that the much-loved, sometimes maligned, viral video legend has made a bit of a comeback. Eventually, her nose-to-the-ground approach worked, and a press kit, which included a blue teddy bear to promote Baby Blues, landed in the hands of Marilyn Manson.
However, Terri is most known for her grainy, low-quality VHS videos on YouTube, which are chock full of unintentional comedy and irresistible charm. Terri has been relatively quiet since she stopped performing and recording music to take care of her mother from until she passed away in But thanks to YouTube, including the more than 1. She plans on releasing her third studio album, The Wild One, sometime this year as part of a documentary and book compilation made by her friend and former bass player, Darren Hacker.
She also has a fourth studio album, No Rules No Boundaries, on the shelf in Nashville, ready to be mixed and mastered. The next generation of bubbly Save time, money, and ultimately help save the planet by forgoing your La Croix.
The A. Club: Why did you decide to make a comeback? I just never released it. It had been shelved, because I was sort of retired. I was going to have the third and fourth album together. Now, the fourth album No Rules No Boundaries just has to be mixed and mastered. The Wild One just has to be mastered and sent to printing. People have been asking for more stuff, so….
AVC : Your dad passed away, and your mom got sick in , and you stayed with your mom for the rest of the time until she passed? JT: Yeah, my mom got kind of sick, and I was in a bad car accident in JT: I was standing still. I was in a stop position. AVC : What was that like, caring for your mom? JT: It was kind of rough, because she had a walker, then she had a wheelchair, but when she became bed-ridden, it got worse. It got bad near the end. She had dementia. She used to throw things, because she thought I was a mean person.
She thought the dog sometimes was my boyfriend or my husband, so she was really out of it. AVC: Were you making any music between the time your mom and dad died? JT: In , I had to go down to Nashville to sing tracks for the fourth album. It just had to be mix and mastered. The only copy is in Washington D. All the other artists were just redoing other songs. The Christmas one goes just like the song, so I made it into story form. JT: No, I gave it to somebody who was supposed to get me a publisher.
So, he had mine and the same with some other stuff, and he committed suicide, so nobody knows where that stuff is. He killed himself in or He was a friend, and he has a lot of book collections, so he was helping.
AVC: Would you ever want to reprint them and try to sell them? AVC: Your career has been all self-made. JT: Nope. I own my own record label. And the publishing company, too. You look into Chicago showcases, you look into and check studios out and try to see which ones make you feel comfortable and which ones you can afford, and take it from there. JT: Just my mom and my dad. Not too much my dad, more my mom. AVC: You were an only child. What memories do you have that stand out? I remember they flew in on a helicopter and came in on the field and played.
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