Danielle Marie Peck
(born September 14, 1978 in Jacksonville, North Carolina) is an American country music artist. Signed to the independent Big Machine Records label in 2005, Peck released her self-titled debut album, which produced the Top 30 country hits "I Don't", "Findin' a Good Man", and "Isn't That Everything". A fourth single, "Bad for Me", charted in mid-2007.
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DANIELLE PECK TICKETS
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Biography
Early life
Peck was born in
Jacksonville, North Carolina, but grew up in
Coshocton, Ohio. She is the daughter of a
United States Marine. Her parents both came from musical backgrounds. Her mother's side of the family traveled and sang in churches. Her father'
parents and grandparents were steeped in country music, playing dances in the area.
[1]
Before Peck was able to even speak, she was able to sing. The first song she ever sang was
Johnny Cash's "
Folsom Prison Blues," which she continues to perform in her live shows to this day. She wrote her first song before the age of 10. She also sang in her church, as solo and as part of a choir. At age 16, she joined a band called
The Neon Moon Band
, which performed around the local area.
After graduating from
River View High School in 1997, Peck went out on the road and formed her own band, that performed at festivals and other events. She then moved to
Nashville, Tennessee, finding work as a
waitress while pursuing a career in country music. While in Nashville, she met
Clay Myers, a publisher who signed her to a deal with as a songwriter with Barbara Orbison's Still Working Music. Peck soon started writing for her staff members.
Musical career
Soon, Peck signed a recording contract with
DreamWorks Records, with executive Scott Borchetta. She was working on her debut album, when DreamWorks folded and Borchetta founded his own record company entitled
Big Machine Records, also the present-day record company for teenage country singer
Taylor Swift as well as
Trisha Yearwood.
In 2005, she released her very first single from the album called "I Don't" (co-written with Clay Mills and Burton Collins). The song peaked at #28 on the U.S.
Billboard
Hot Country Songs chart. Peck released her
self-titled debut album in June 2006. The album peaked at #23 on the
Billboard
Top Country Albums chart. The album produced two more Top 30 singles in "Findin' a Good Man" (her highest-charting single to date) and "Isn't That Everything". Also in 2006, Peck took part in a duet with fellow country singer
Jack Ingram on his 2006 album
Live: Wherever You Are
, titled "Never Knocked Me Down," which was an audio excerpt from the
CMT program
Outlaws 2005
.
Peck released her fourth single in early 2007. Titled "Bad For Me", the single (which was co-written by Australian country singer
Sherrié Austin) was intended to be the lead-off to an upcoming sophomore album. "Bad For Me" failed to reach the Hot Country Songs Top 40 (#46), however, and the second album's release date was delayed until late 2008. That album, titled
Can't Behave
, was made available on
December 23rd of that year at various online music stores, such as
iTunes and
Rhapsody. The album's title track was released as a single in January 2009. The single never entered the Hot Country Songs chart, however, and Peck parted ways with Big Machine shortly afterward.
[2]
2007 ALCS controversy
In 2006, Peck briefly dated
Boston Red Sox pitcher
Josh Beckett. On
October 18,
2007 she was a last-minute choice to sing the national anthem before Game 5 of the
American League Championship Series between the Red Sox and the
Cleveland Indians. While the Indians organization stated that she was chosen because she was an Ohio native and Indians fan, it was believed that she was brought in to distract Beckett, who was starting the game for the Red Sox.
[3] Beckett went on to a decisive victory and when asked about Peck's presence, he replied "I don't get paid to make those [expletive] decisions...She's a friend of mine. It doesn't bother me at all. Thanks for flyin' (sic) one of my friends to the game so she could watch it for free." Peck has never publicly commented on the controversy.
Discography
Albums
| Year
| Album
| Chart Positions
|
| US Country
| US
| US Heat
|
| 2006
| Danielle Peck
- Released: June 6, 2006
- Label: Big Machine Records
| 23
| 115
| 3
|
| 2008
| Can't Behave
- Released: December 23, 2008
- Label: Big Machine Records
| —
| —
| —
|
| "—" denotes the album failed to chart or not released
|
Singles
| Year
| Single
| Chart Positions
| Album
|
| US Country
| US
| CAN Country
|
| 2005
| "I Don't"
| 28
| —
| —
| Danielle Peck
|
| 2006
| "Findin' a Good Man"
| 16
| 93
| 31
|
| "Isn't That Everything"
| 30
| —
| —
|
| 2007
| "Bad for Me"
| 46
| —
| —
| Can't Behave
|
| 2009
| "Can't Behave"
| —
| —
| —
|
| "—" denotes the single failed to chart or not released
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References
- Title Unavailable
- Country Rosters Remain Stable Despite Sales Downturn
- Head games? Tonight's anthem singer is Beckett's ex - cleveland.com