Ruth Moody

Ruth Moody

WEEKEND: Aussie-Canadian singer Moody in Port Angeles concert Sunday night

PORT ANGELES — Ruth Moody, the Australian-born, Canadian-raised singer, is having a good run.

Last year, she did 12 shows with Mark Knopfler, the guitar master behind Dire Straits, including performances in France, Amsterdam and the Royal Albert Hall in London.

Now, Moody is back on her home continent, headed for Port Angeles and a concert Sunday night in the Peninsula College Little Theater.

Though known for her music with the trio the Wailin’ Jennys, Moody has her own band now and a new album called “These Wilder Things,” to be the centerpiece of her 7:30 p.m. show at the college, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd.

Tickets are $20 at the door for this Juan de Fuca Foundation for the Arts concert (www.JFFA.org).

Just what are “These Wilder Things”? In an interview from the Chicago stop on her U.S. tour, Moody said the songs on her fresh record have to do with growth and change — a progression from her 2010 album “The Garden.”

“Wilder” travels from the Celtic sound of “Life Is Long” and the bluegrass-tinged “One Light Shining” to Moody’s stripped-down cover of the Bruce Springsteen hit “Dancing in the Dark.” And Knopfler lends his guitar and voice to the dark “Pockets.”

He and Moody are members of a mutual admiration club, after she sang on his 2012 album “Privateering.” Moody is just as enthused about the band she’s traveling with these days: multi-instrumentalists Adam Dobres and Adrian Dolan and upright bassist Sam Howard.

“All the boys sing as well,” she added, so there are three- and four-part harmonies along with her own guitar-, accordion- and banjo-playing.

Moody’s ethereal voice is well-known to listeners of “A Prairie Home Companion,” which has featured the Wailin’ Jennys on more than a dozen occasions.

She’s a two-time Juno award winner from Winnipeg, Manitoba, a woman who went from a classical background to loving the banjo.

“It’s a complete instrument, with rhythm and melody,” Moody said. “It’s my favorite for singing.”

She finds too that the banjo is an excellent escort in her writing process. Moody’s songs muse about “love and loss and change . . . and how I’m navigating this journey we’re on.

“Some of my songs are personal, but I think, I hope people can relate to them,” she added.

“When I write, it’s when I have something to figure out.”

More in News

Port Angeles Parks Department workers walk along the Port Angeles City Pier moorage floats after they were removed for seasonal storage on Tuesday. The floats will be towed to a storage area near the McKinley Paper mill to protect them from winter winds and waves. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Seasonal storage

Port Angeles Parks Department workers walk along the Port Angeles City Pier… Continue reading

Port Angeles’ short-term code may come up short

Long-term impacts with affordable housing, other factors, remain to be seen

Clallam Transit to extend fare-free program

Agency has received $1.9M in two years from climate act, GM says

OMC Foundation awards $500K in scholarships

Students to receive medical training with hopes of working at hospital

Clallam County Juvenile Court Coordinator Candice Lawler stands in the foyer of the old courthouse in Port Angeles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Juvenile services program shows youth ‘they are not alone’

Drug court coordinator shares personal experience with kids

Port Angeles identifies $3M for safety facility

City turns to tax sources, pushes road project

Port Angeles High School junior Tucker Swain, left, tries out a sample of roasted broccoli with ranch dressing dipping sauce prepared by Stacey Larsen, the district’s WSU Clallam Extension Farm to School consultant at the school’s cafeteria on Friday. Including locally grown produce like the Chi’s Farm broccoli into meals, increasing the amount of whole grains in foods and reducing salt and added sugar are part of the school district’s efforts to create healthier options and meet updated USDA nutrition standards. A new app provides students and parents a way to view menus and the nutritional content, calories and allergens in meal options. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
New flavors, new recipes for Port Angeles School District meal program

Goal is to promote healthy options for nutrition standards

Piping may help reduce flooding

Project aims to protect landowners, beavers

Jefferson County reduces its risk of fire danger

Collaboration moves level from high to moderate

One person was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle after a fifth-wheel trailer was fully engulfed in flames on Friday. (Chris Turner/Clallam County Fire District 3)
One person flown to hospital after fire destroys trailer

A person was airlifted to a Seattle hospital after a… Continue reading

Motorcycle rider airlifted to Seattle hospital after collision

A 63-year-old man was airlifted to a Seattle hospital… Continue reading

The city of Port Angeles’ city hall east parking lot low-impact development project is complete. (City of Port Angeles)
Low-impact development parking lot complete

Project to help filter stormwater contaminants