Mary Lorson


Mary Lorson is an American writer, musician and composer. Best known as the lead singer of alternative pop groups Madder Rose and Saint Low, Lorson has gone on to release albums with The Piano Creeps and Mary Lorson & the Soubrettes. She lives in Ithaca, New York.

Biography

Lorson was born and raised in the suburbs of New York City and formed Madder Rose with Billy Coté in 1991 in Greenwich Village. When Madder Rose disbanded in 1999 she founded Saint Low with bassist Stahl Caso, violinist Joe Myer, pianist Michael Stark, vocalist Jennie Stearns, and drummer Zaun Marshburn. Lorson and Coté toured with Tanya Donelly from 1996-7.
Lorson and Coté have collaborated on film scores including the original score for "What Remains: The Life and Art of Sally Mann" for Steven Cantor and HBO. She and Coté have a son, Roman. A breast cancer survivor and high school English teacher, Lorson is the author of "Freak Baby and the Kill Thought," an original screenplay about the life of vaudeville singer and actress Eva Tanguay. The album "BurnBabyBurn," released by Mary Lorson & the Soubrettes in 2011, features a version of Tanguay's 1922 song "I Don't Care."
Lorson's projects also have included developing a television series, "Old School"; scoring the independent web series "The Chanticleer"; a multimedia performance memoir, "Signal"; and setting a chapter of James Joyce's Finnegans Wake to music, for the Waywords and Meansigns project. Her 11th full-length album, "Themes From Whatever," was released in November 2017.

Discography

Mary Brett Lorson

  • Themes from Whatever, 2017

Mary Lorson & the Soubrettes

  • BurnBabyBurn, 2011

The Piano Creeps

Future Blues , 2008

Mary Lorson & Saint Low

Realistic, 2006Tricks for Dawn, 2002Saint Low, 2000

With Billy Coté

What Remains, original score, 2007Barrier Device, original score, 2004Two Left Shoes, original score, 2003Piano Creeps, 2003

Madder Rose

Beautiful John, Bring It Down, 1993Swim Car Song, Panic On, 1994The Love You Save, 1995Tragic Magic, 1997Hello June Fool, 1999