Tania Opland
BornMarch 31, 1961
OriginAnchorage, Alaska, United States
GenresContemporary Folk, composer, singer-songwriter
Occupation(s)Singer, multi-instrumentalist
Instrument(s)vocals, guitar, five string violin, hammered dulcimer, ocarina, octave mandolin, hurdy gurdy, recorder
Years active1984 - present
WebsiteTania Opland

Tania Opland (born March 31, 1961 in Anchorage, Alaska) is a performing musician, recording artist, composer, singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. She is best known for very wide-ranging repertoire, incorporating contemporary, traditional and early music from American, Celtic, and other European sources[1][2][3]Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page)., and for her musical collaborations with Mike Freeman (her husband) and popular science fiction writer Anne McCaffrey[4].

Early life

edit

Tania Opland is the youngest child of Anchorage attorney Robert N Opland and Mildred (Lien) Opland. Her grandparents, Alfred (1900-1985) and Martha (1900-1983) Opland, were early pioneering teachers for the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the Territory of Alaska, and were also involved in reindeer herding[5]. Music was important to the family, and as a child Opland had lessons on piano, cello, violin and guitar[6]. The second-hand violin she got when she was nine years old turned out to be a hand-crafted instrument by Eskimo violin maker Frank Hobson, and became her stage instrument for many years[7].

Opland's first paid performance, at the age of 17, was at a local renaissance festival in Anchorage[8]. While attending University - first Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and then The University of Alaska, Fairbanks - she continued to perform one repertoire (British ballads and folk songs) at renaissance and medieval events while building a repertoire of originals and popular cover material for other venues. She also learned Russian songs to help with her study of that language[9]. Frustrated with her degree courses and wishing for more time to play music, she left Fairbanks for a trip across Siberia and then moved to Seattle to experiment with the prospect of playing music full time[10].

Career

edit

Opland started playing in and around Seattle in 1984, mainly in bars and coffee shops and at open mics. Victory Music, a non-profit musicians' cooperative, hosted an open mic in Tacoma which became a networking base for new performers in the region including Kat Eggleston, William Pint, Felicia Dale, TR Ritchie, Kendra Shank, Steve Guthe, Heidi Muller and many others[11]. Opland's five solo albums were recorded by Rob Folsom, who was the sound engineer for this open mic[12]. It was also here that she met Steve Guthe and Kat Eggleston, who were then called "The Ferryboat Musicians" and made their living busking on the Washington State Ferries. Following their example, Opland became one of the regular entertainers in what what is now remembered as the heyday of ferryboat music on Puget Sound[13][14][15], and added the hammered dulcimer to her list of performance instruments[10]. She made a lasting mark on the North Kitsap County music community when, in 1993, she started up a weekly jam session in a local coffee shop which carried on in one form or another for over a decade[16][17].

Also in 1993 she started making regular trips to the UK and Ireland[10], met her music partner / husband Mike Freeman in 1994, and the couple have continued touring from home bases in Kitsap County, Washington and County Kilkenny Ireland ever since. Together they have recorded a duo album and two collaborations with science fiction author Anne McCaffrey[18].

Hunter's Moon
File:Hunter's Moon (Tania Opland) cover art.jpg
Studio album by
Tania Opland
Released1993, 2003
StudioRob Folsom, OMB Studio, Port Orchard, WA USA
Length52:00
Cut to Rhythms
File:Cut to Rhythms (Tania Opland and Mike Freeman) cover art.jpg
Studio album by
Tania Opland and Mike Freeman
ReleasedJanuary, 2000
StudioDave Howard, Kilcullen Recording, Thomastown, Co Kilkenny Ireland
Length60:00

Solo Discography

edit
  • Renaissance Fare (cassette, 1987)
  • Choice (cassette, 1989)
  • Winter's Time (cassette, 1990)
  • Bonnie Rantin' Lassie (CD, 1993, re-mastered and re-released in 2003 as Hunter's Moon)
  • Tania Opland (CD, 1995)
  • Choice Fare (CD, 2000. A compilation of tracks from Renaissance Fare and Choice)
  • Winter's Time (CD, 2010. An extended version of the 1990 cassette album)

Collaborations

edit

With Mike Freeman

edit
  • Cut to Rhythms (CD, 2000)

With Mike Freeman and Anne McCaffrey

edit
  • The Masterharper of Pern (CD, 1997)
  • Sunset's Gold (CD, 2009)

References

edit
  1. ^ "Cut to Rhythms". Rambles (a cultural arts magazine). 2002-03-16.
  2. ^ Rock 'n' Reel magazine (England) - reviews, Issue 18/Summer 1994
  3. ^ The Living Tradition (Scotland) - reviews, Summer 1994
  4. ^ "Journey musically into the world of Pern". Deseret News (Salt Lake City). 2004-09-17.
  5. ^ Anchorage Times - obituaries, June 26, 1985
  6. ^ "Tania Opland & Mike Freeman - Anglo-Alaskan Acoustic Music" Dirty Linen, #98, Feb/March 2002
  7. ^ "Rubbing Elbows concert interview, Moore Theatre, Seattle". Jethro Tull. 2003-09-22.
  8. ^ "Tania Opland web page".
  9. ^ "Instead of engineering, she entertains everywhere" (Kitsap County Herald - Arts And Leisure, January 3, 1990)
  10. ^ a b c "Mini Profile, Vol. 21, No. 1, Feb - April 1995". Dulcimer Players News. 1995-02-01. Cite error: The named reference "Dulcimer Players News" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  11. ^ Ancient Victorys newsletter, Spring 2008
  12. ^ "Musicians mix it up in studios big and small" Kitsap Sun - Bravo Arts & Entertainment section cover story, January 7, 1993
  13. ^ "Sound across the Sound" Seattle Times - Arts/Entertainment section cover story, August 7, 1988
  14. ^ "Ferry Me Along with the Music". Victory Music, November 2009.
  15. ^ "The Day the Ferry Music Died". Associated Press. 2011-09-05.
  16. ^ "Friday night music jam" Kitsap Sun - West Sound Arts & Entertainment section cover story, September 12, 2003
  17. ^ "Coffee & Camaraderie". Kitsap Sun. 1998-02-19.
  18. ^ "Tania Opland and Mike Freeman web page".
edit

Category:Musicians from Alaska