“Carol LaDuke has a voice with experience. You can hear there is a lived life in her voice and so much emotion that we the listeners, are left stunned and asking for more.”
— ACT/ONE Magazine
I write my own songs -both melodies and lyrics with the exception of BABY DON’T GO TONIGHT composed by Britain songwriter/ producer Andy Shearer. My music genres range from Americana, Country, Blues, Rock, and Pop. I am grateful for producer Steve Goodie of Quality Recording Studio in Nashville, Tennessee who records my songs and brings my songs to life.
During COVID, I use my time writing new material, rehearsing and polishing my performances. I will continue to write and record new songs and perform on Cape Cod, MA and Nashville, TN.
My career highlights include singing my songs at Nashville’s iconic Bluebird Cafe and reaching #12 on a chart for independent artists with my song HOW LONG DID YOU CRY.
What sets me apart is my vocal versatility, unique tone, and powerful pipes.
I love traveling, horses, art, cowboy boots, good friends, good coffee, great laughter, serendipity, and turning ideas into reality.
Please have a look around my website, visit my merchandise shop, and leave me your email so I can keep you up on my future buzz and news. Lots of exciting things are coming!
I am grateful for each and every one of my fans.
Your friendship and support mean everything to me.
I can’t thank you enough.
Love,
Carol
CAROL LADUKE
As a young girl playing on the beaches of Provincetown, Massachusetts (at the northernmost tip of Cape Cod), Carol LaDuke built castles in the sand. Then she found words, and began a life-long pursuit of creating castles of the imagination. Her most recent effort to explore the bounds of expression comes in the form of "Dragonfly," a collection of esoteric, beautifully-sculpted songs which - although filled with universal themes and recorded in Nashville - still somehow manages to evoke the essence of those New England shores.
Provincetown ("P-Town" to the natives) has historically been a destination not just for tourists, but also for a wide array of artists, actors, writers, and musicians. Her step-father, who served as a law enforcement officer during the summers, once arrested Marlon Brando for disturbing the peace, and she babysat for Norman Mailer and partied with Joe Cocker (not at the same time) "It's a town that just really nurtures creativity," says LaDuke. . "It's just a very liberal town," she adds, "where everybody does their own thing, and everybody supports everybody."
She remembers her mother reading poetry to her at about the age of three (she still has the book), and she began reading on her own at four. When LaDuke was only five years old, she went to see a performance of The Barbarians, a Cape Cod rock band which was in the sixties touted as America's Rolling Stones. The music - and the idea of music as art - captured her immediately, and has remained in her heart throughout her life. "I studied and analyzed songs I loved, word by word, listened to every note, every instrument," she says, noting the magical power of music to transform you to another time and place. "I thought 'Rambling Man' by the Allman Brothers was an advert for Greyhound Bus Lines," she laughs, recalling her reaction to hearing the song on the AM radio in her sister Candy's VW Bug. "Little did I know five years later, Dickie Betts would be singing in my living-room at the Ranch in Jensen Beach, Florida. Life is funny like that."
As special as music is, however, it's the words which have been her guiding force, from the poems she formed in her head while riding her horse on the beach to the lyrics she crafts and sings aloud while walking her dogs. Words are the foundation of the castle upon which she shapes the sand. In 2011 she released "Poems from Provincetown," a collection which one reviewer called, "a sweet and insightful window into the author's childhood memories, as well as a poignant glimpse at the rich history of a small and close-knit New England fishing village." Since then, she's released another well-received collection of poetry, "Circus Horse," and has written a play entitled "The Wall."
In 2017, LaDuke let the music take front-and-center. She collected some of her old songs, wrote some new ones, and took them to producer/multi-instrumentalist Steve Goodie in Nashville, who helped make her latest castle a home. The six-song EP, "Dragonfly," is available for download on Reverbnation.
LaDuke, who is also just a few credits short of having her degree in Political Science from the University of Mass/Boston, makes frequent trips to Nashville for musical sandcastle-building, for the truly creative spirit can never rest on its laurels.