15年前的惨剧打击了乡村明星姐妹Shelby Lynne 和 Allison Moorer,在一场争执中,她们的父亲举枪射击妻子,然后把枪口对准了自己。Lynne当时才17岁,惨剧后留给她的责任是将其妹妹抚养长大。以往,Lynne和Moorer沉浸于音乐制作,而对成长中遇到的各种困难闭口不谈。
by Steve Huey
Allison Moorer was born into a musical family and raised in the small southern Alabama town of Frankville; when Moorers father shot her mother and then turned the gun on himself, older sister Shelby Lynne — soon to become a country singer herself — took charge of raising Allison. After attending the University of South Alabama, Moorer moved to Nashville, hoping to get her start as a studio backing vocalist. She struck up a songwriting partnership with musician and future husband Butch Primm, and soon signed a publishing deal. Performances of Walter Hyatts Tell Me Baby at benefit shows for the late singers family landed Moorer a contract with MCA Nashville. Moorers big break came when A Soft Place to Fall, a track she had co-written with Gwil Owen, was tapped for inclusion on the soundtrack of The Horse Whisperer; it garnered rave reviews, as well as an appearance in the film itself for Moorer, and set the stage for the singers 1998 debut album, Alabama Song. She returned with another solo effort in 2000 with The Hardest Part. Two years later, Moorer had a new deal with Universal South and released a third album, Miss Fortune, later that summer. Show, which was recorded in January 2003 at Nashvilles 12th & Porter, appeared in June. Her sister and Kid Rock joined Moorer for this first-time live recording. Not slowing down, Moorer found a new label home with Sugar Hill in early 2004. The Duel, recorded with a new studio band in less than two weeks, was released in April of 2004. Two years later her sixth album, Getting Somewhere, came out.