Lynn Miles is an award winning singer-songwriter, record producer, teacher, writer, public speaker. She’s also pretty funny, a 3 minute standup routine is at the top of her bucket list. Lynn has 16 albums to her credit. She won a Juno award (Canadian Grammy)in 2003 for Roots Traditional Album of the year, and went on to be nominated in the same categories in 2011 and 2006. She is also the recipient of 6 Canadian Folk Music Awards including 3 for songwriter of the year. Her 2 most recent awards we given to her duo THE LYNNeS for songwriters of the year, and ensemble of the year at the 2018 Canadian Folk Music Awards. In 2016, Americana artist Clair Lynch recorded Lynn’s song “Black Flowers” on her Grammy nominated album “North By South”.Lynn estimates she’s written about 900 songs, she’s never done an official count. She has produced 5 albums for other artists.
Her most recent album “tumbleweedyworld” was nominated for album of the year at the Canadian Folk Music Awards, and her previous album (#15) “We'll Look For Stars ”was # 1 on the Euro/americana chart for the month of August 2020. Lynn tours as a solo artist, also with her stellar guitar player Keith Glass, and with her folk/rock band, and style of music she calls FROCK. Since the release of “tumbleweedyworld” she also plays with a stellar bluegrass band, THE TUMBLEWEEDS. Lynn has performed her music with arrangements by Grammy nominee Peter Keisewalter with the National Arts Centre Orchestra.
Lynn created a “Winter/Christmas” show that she has performed for the last seven years. There is a CD of the live recording “Winter” complete with strings, which she wrote the arrangements for. In the first five years of the show, she has raised over $10,000.00 for local charities with her “ugly sweater” raffles. Her mom Irene designed the sweaters to be "as hideous as possible".Her song “What If You Were a Refugee” is available on iTunes and all proceeds of downloads go to agencies that help refugees. If there's a first nation land acknowledgment at the venue Lynn is playing, she will donate a small percentage of her earnings from that concert, to a chosen organization that supports first nation initiatives.She gave a presentation on Musicians and Mental Health at the 2019 Folk Alliance International conference and her writing has appeared in issues of Penguin Eggs Magazine.
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