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Kim Richey’s Old Friend: Coffee

Kim Richey spent the initial portion of her 15-year career chafing at various stylistic restraints, some self-imposed, others foisted upon her by others. Through the second half of the ’90s, the itinerant daughter of a Dayton, Ohio, record-store owner sampled and discarded various guises: new-country misfit (1995’s Nashville-friendly self-titled debut), Lucinda Williams in waiting (1997’s calculated Americana stab Bittersweet) and top-40 hopeful (1999’s super-slick Glimmer). And while those albums had at least two things in common—great songwriting and a soulful, not-in-the-least-bit-showy vocal approach—it wasn’t until more recently that Richey locked into a groove all her own. That in mind, Wreck Your Wheels (Thirty Tigers), her sixth and latest release, finds the artist reveling in a friction-free comfort zone somewhere along the well-read, emotionally honest folk/pop continuum. Richey will be guest-editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our Q&A with her.

Richey: A day without coffee … Of all the places I’ve been (I’ve never been to Italy, mind you), I think Australia has the best coffee. They’re not messing around, especially those Melbourne people. My favorite Melbourne coffee shop is Degraves Espresso Bar, located in one of the many downtown alleys that are filled with cafes and shops.

Video after the jump.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYUI0_h6EKc