Artist

Ian Tamblyn

Genre: Folk ,Contemporary Folk ,Urban Folk ,North American
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Born in Thunder Bay, the veteran folk artist spent many years performing across the Ottawa-Hull area during the late 1960s and early 1970s. In addition to music, Ian Tamblyn has written multiple stage plays over the decades. His first major opportunity arrived when Sylvia Tyson included one of his compositions on the Canadian television program Ian & Sylvia. His self-titled debut album appeared in 1976 and earned a Juno Award. Two years later Posterity Records issued Closer to Home. Additional releases and a retrospective collection came afterward, yet Tamblyn declined the constant touring lifestyle embraced by fellow Canadian singer-songwriters such as Joni Mitchell and Bruce Cockburn, choosing instead to settle in Chelsea, Quebec. Having composed roughly 1,500 songs, he founded the still-popular Acoustic Waves concert series in Ottawa, scored several films, and joined expeditions to Greenland and Iceland that each produced an album. Voice in the Wilderness, his fourteenth record, was released in 2001. He remains active on the Ontario folk-festival circuit and has produced projects for Alex Haughton and Furnaceface.