Singer-songwriter

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The term singer-songwriter is a somewhat nebulous term for musicians that has different meanings to different people in different geographic areas. Foremost, a singer-songwriter must write the lyrics and compose the music for the majority of the songs they perform, usually as a solo act. The term is also much more associated with folk music, and performers who play acoustic guitars, than other musical forms. The term is used to describe female performers much more often than male singers, and relatively unknown artists, although many go on to great acclaim. Most popular singers, including Elvis Presley and Britney Spears, for example, are singers, but not singer-songwriters, even if they occassionally write songs. Most country music stars, even those who write all of their own lyrics, do not generally call themselves singer-songwriters, with, perhaps the exception of Tom T. Hall. As a group, singer-songwriters tend to cover serious and emotional matters more than light-hearted material more fashionable in pop music.

Some of the early singer-songwriters include Bob Dylan, John Stewart (of the Kingston Trio, Townes Van Zandt, Joni Mitchell, Carly Simon, Van Morison, John Denver, Gordon Lightfoot, Tom T. Hall, and John Prine. More recent singer-songwriters include Lucinda Williams, Nanci Griffith, K. D. Lang, Tracy Chapman, Sarah McLachlan, Dar Williams, Ani DiFranco, Cheryl Crow, Hayes Carll and Alanis Morisette.