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Biographical Sketch
This biography is just a compilation
of facts of public record.
1962
Catherine Ann Irwin born on March 4th in
New Haven, Connecticut. Her parents, both teachers, are avid collectors
of Clancy Brothers records as well as more traditional folk music.
Her Irish dad plays bagpipes, her aunt was once in a skiffle band.
Spent her childhood in Goshen, 10 miles northeast of Louisville,
Kentucky. Catherine learns about bluegrass at Brown, her "hippie
school."
1964
Janet Beveridge Bean born on February 10th in Bartow, Florida,
one day before the Beatles' debut on The Ed Sullivan Show.
1974
Janet and her family move from Tampa, Florida, to Louisville.
1976
Janet & Cathy first spy each other. Cathy has a friend, Jennifer Catlett, the person on the "Feels
Like the Third Time" cover, who lives near Janet. The two
are mean to Janet, she being two years younger, so Janet avoids
them.
1980
Catherine plays in a folk trio with her brother, Alec, and a friend.
Inspired by mid-west punks
The Dead Boys, the band turns punk, too, adds members, and
become the locally-legendary Dickbrains. (Their signature song,
"Fat Man", and others, can be heard here.)
Catherine continues playing more folksy-type music, privately.
The Dickbrains reign supreme, briefly, then Catherine announces
she is going to travel overseas, and the band dissolves. Catherine
skips town.


Read more about the Dickbrains
here (from where this photo is taken).
1982
Janet plays percussion in bands called
Skull of Glee and the Zoo Directors. Catherine and Janet meet
at a Circle X show. Catherine falls out laughing when she hears
Janet's full name, and the two are friends ever since. Sometime
after, Janet gets thrown out of her parents' house, so she moves
into Catherine's apartment.

1983
Catherine drafts Janet to perform together
publicly for the first time, singing songs such as "Stand
By Your Man", "D-I-V-O-R-C-E", and "Pistol
Packin' Mama", at The Beat Exchange, accompanied by the late
Bruce Witsiepe (Circle X) on drums and possibly Gary Stillwell
(later of Bodeco) on guitar. They dress up for the occasion -
Janet wears a red polyester dress, vinyl boots, a wig, and possibly
a stuffed brassiere.
1985
C&J record demos together (which they dubbed the "Country Ham" sessions in a 1990 interview), mostly covers but also a few Catherine
originals, in the basement of Janet's parents, a huge country ham sitting beside them as they worked.
Janet and Rick Rizzo start the band Eleventh Dream Day ("EDD").
They soon move to Chicago.
1986
EDD release their eponymous debut LP for the Amoeba label.
1987
Cathy and Janet continue to perform live
together, opening for various friends' garage bands, under the
names "Penny and Jean" and, later, "Mojo Wishbean
& Trippy Squashblossum". Under this moniker, they
contribute a 1985 take of Woody Guthrie's "Little Black Train"
to a WNUR compilation called "Hog Butcher for the World".
Here's a one-minute sample.
In September, EDD record the legendary Prarie
School Freakout LP in six hours. Catherine paints - canvases
for pleasure, houses for income.
1988
Janet and Rick marry.
Keith Holland, Louisville native and founder of Amoeba records,
approach C&J about making a record.
C&J give their little partnership a name - Freakwater - thinking
the word meaningless, neither knowing it was a term for moonshine
whiskey. Most of the tracks for the debut are recorded in June
and July. David Wayne Gay is introduced to C&J by the album's
producer and/or engineer - he plays bass on it as well as every Freakwater
record since.

Eleventh Dream Day are lauded by Greil Marcus of Interview
magazine and catch the attention of Bettina Richards who was,
at the time, working A&R for Atlantic Records. Richards signs
them to Atlantic.
1989
Catherine and Janet release their debut LP, Freakwater,
for Amoeba Records, a full year in advance of Uncle Tupelo's No
Depression, the LP cited as the cornerstone of the "alt-country"
movement.

Atlantic issues EDD's critically acclaimed Beet, but it
doesn't sell well.

1991
Catherine and Janet record their second album as Freakwater, Dancing
Under Water, but they get into some sort of disagreement with
Keith Holland of Amoeba Records, and he snags their master tapes.
Freakwater never gets paid by Amoeba for any sales, and it takes
years for Janet and Catherine to gain control of the masters.

(Catherine sings at the 1991
Bodeco reunion show).
Source.
1992
EDD puts out the excellent Lived to Tell but it doesn't
break out either. Catherine does the art for the cover.
Matthew, Rick and Janet's son, is born. Freakwater records the
Feels Like the Third Time LP .
1993
EDD puts out the El Moodio LP, and Atlantic drops the band
very soon after. (What idiots! El Moodio is a quality,
mainstream effort with two or three singles on it). They record
Ursa Major for Altavistic Records later in the year.
1994

Freakwater tours in America, sometimes opening for Wilco, and
also in Europe. A German record company, Glitterhouse, puts out
a live album, titled June 6, 1994. The band is profiled
in a Rolling Stone article about up-and-comers, alongside
Shudder to Think and Guided by Voices.

Bettina Richards, who signed EDD to Atlantic, begins the independent
Thrill Jockey records. Freakwater and EDD join their artist roster.
1995
Freakwater's Feels like the Third Time LP is released by
Thrill Jockey on May 23rd. Their South of Cincinnati single
and the Old Paint LP are released on October 10th.
1996
In April, Freakwater are courted by Steve Earle to sign with his
E-Squared label, but, after months of fruitless negotiations, the
deal falls through.
1997
Freakwater records the Springtime LP in April and tours
at home and abroad.

1998
Springtime is released on January 20th. David Gay relocates
to Asheville, North Carolina and works with Morgan Geer on their
project, The Payday Knights, which later permutates into White
Heat, and, ultimately, The Unholy Trio. Max Conrad Johnson, support musician on Springtime, plays
his last show with Freakwater at the Mercury Paw on New Year's
Eve.
1999
The difficult End Time sessions begin in January. Later
that year, Freakwater tours nationally, playing twenty-six shows
in a month's time. Two of them, including October 9th's Chicago
show, feature the string section from that album.
Some wise person at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville
invites Freakwater to a photo shoot, adorning them in the vintage
threads of T. Texas Tyler, Johnny Dollar, and Hank Thompson. End
Time is released on September 2nd. Janet and Rick separate
at the end of the year. Janet takes a steady job at a Chicago
law firm.
2000
Freakwater turn down the chance to tour Australia, Janet needing
to provide for her family. Catherine Irwin plays her first solo
show, supported by The Unholy Trio, at Austin's SXSW.
2001
Janet and Rick divorce. An attempt to record as Freakwater is
discussed but doesn't materialize.
(Photo courtesy of Barry
Brecheisen)

2002
Catherine records her solo debut LP, Cut Yourself a Switch,
in May. Janet Bean and the Concertina Wire play four shows in
Chicago over the course of the year, and complete their LP. Freakwater
play a handful of gigs - a couple alone and five as part of the
Thrill Jockey 10th Anniversary Tour. Janet plays a solo show in
Spain during this tour. The Unholy Trio plays what might have
been their last gig in August, but resurface, playing under the
name of their leader, Morgan Geer, in December. Catherine plays
fifteen solo shows supporting Switch, released October
8th, with Dave on bass. A 2003 Freakwater recording is pondered
over. . .
Photography by Jim
Newberry
2003
In the first part of the year, Catherine
and Dave play sixteen shows. Eleventh Dream Day are described
as "Chicago's most underrated band" by Chicago Magazine.
Dragging Wonder Lake by Janet Bean and the Concertina Wire
is released on April 8th, and the band plays four shows to support
the new work. In June, Freakwater play three gigs in California
(almost four years have passed since they last appeared on the
west coast), opening for Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. The Unholy
Trio, alive and well, continue to tear it up in the southeast.
Catherine and Dave tour again briefly in the fall, as do the Concertina
Wire. The Old Paint LP as well as Eleventh Dream Day's
Prarie School Freakout are reissued in October. EDD reunites
with original guitarist Baird Figi for a November Chicago show.
Also in November, PBS' Austin City Limits broadcasts
a performance by Neko Case, who performs Catherine's "Hex"
in the middle of her set.
2004
Catherine, Janet, & Dave perform independently and intermittently
through the year. Catherine temporarily relocates to Chicago,
and she & Janet begin demoing new Freakwater material. In
November, Neko Case releases a live CD, The Tigers Have Spoken,
which has Catherine's "Hex" as its third track. In December,
Catherine & Janet play a short Freakwater set as part of "Bloodshot
Record's Holiday Happy Hour" at Carol's Pub in Chicago, and
debut four new songs. Plans are made to record a new Freakwater
album the following January, their first in six years.
2005
In January, Freakwater record the Thinking of You LP
and participate in a benefit for Tsunami relief. In March, the
Looking for a Thrill DVD is released (Janet and Catherine
are interviewed on the disc). In July, Catherine and some old
friends put on an art exhibition of their work at the Cinderblock
in Louisville.

In August, the Burn to Shine Vol. II DVD is released
- Freakwater are featured performing their song "Jewel".
The LP Thinking of You is released
on September 13th, and Freakwater undergoes a 35-date American
tour to support the work. In December, Janet and Catherine sing
backup on Howe Gelb's "Ballad of the Tuscon 2", a disc
he produced and sold to benefit two No
More Deaths volunteers. Also, Catherine records vocals for
the Danish band Homesick Hank on the Paul Oldham-produced LP Leave it Behind .
2006
In January, Freakwater (sans Dave Gay) play 20 European dates,
and a benefit for Chicago music fixture Gary Schepers the following
month.
In April, Eleventh Dream Day release Zeroes and Ones, and play four shows to support it. In May, Catherine opens for Neko Case during her European tour. Neko Case and Jolie Holland continue to support Freakwater during their own gigging. In October, Freakwater perform at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco and the Hideout in Chicago. Janet contributes a track to Bloodshot Record's Old Town School of Folk Music Songbook: Volume One, which is released in October.
2007
Freakwater open for M. Ward in January. Eleventh Dream Day tours Europe in the spring, and Brett Eugene Ralph's Kentucky Chrome Revue play a couple of shows. In May, Noise Pollutiion released Bold Beginnings: Louisville Punk 1978-1983, on which is included tracks from the Dickbrains and Skull of Glee, from Catherine and Janet's punk past. In June, Freakwater headlines a nine-act country bill at the Hideout in Chicago. In July, Catherine, with trepidation, performs the Eagles' "Peaceful Easy Feeling" on WFPK's "Live Lunch" as part of Lousiville's 6th annual Lebowskifest.

Photography by Jason
Creps
In July, the Unholy Trio play some "reunion" shows in North Carolina. In the second half of the year, Catherine Irwin, Eleventh Dream Day, the Kentucky Chrome Revue, and The Horse's Ha independently hoe their own rows.
2008
In January, Janet, Jon Langford, Sally Timms, and others perform at a Hurricane Katrina Benefit in New Orleans. In March, Freakwater play two shows, underwritten by a group of fans, in Chattanooga, Tennessee. In May, Janet remarries. In July, Freakwater open for She & Him on an east coast tour. The Horse's Ha record their debut record and play at least a half-dozen shows over the course of the year. Catherine works, along with a cadre of artists, to assemble "The Exquisite City", a exhibition at the Chicago Tourism Center, of an sprawling, imaginary cityscape. Eleventh Dream Day headline the Ears and Eyes festival, perform on WXRT's Live Eclectic broadcast, and begin writing songs for their next record.
2009
In January, Freakwater joins a long list of Chicago artists for the Big Shoulders Ball at the Black Cat in Washington DC the night before Obama's inauguration.
Janet Bean and Jim Elkington, collectively known as the Horse's Ha, release their debut record, Of the Cathmawr Yards, June 9th on the Hidden Agenda label, and tours the northeast intermittently throughout the year.
Eleventh Dream day plays a handful of shows, too. Dave Gay tours and records with the Reigning Sound. Catherine plays occasionally at benefits, etc., in Louisville. In December, Freakwater record a new song for the Radio Free Song Club podcast.
In December, Ear X-stacy releases Face A Frowning World: An E.C. Ball Memorial Album, featuring was released by Ear X-tacy in December. It features tracks by Catherine Irwin and many of her peers.
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