The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)
Kim Richey
Woodside Hotel, Aberdour, November 10
American singer/ songwriter Kim Richey is a traveller.
So it seems apt that when being interviewed about her forthcoming gig in Fife, the Ohio-born Grammy-nominated country singer is exploring somewhere else – on this occasion walking at Dover Castle.
Kim’s headline performance at the Woodside Hotel, Aberdour, on November 10 won’t be her first trip to Fife.
She’s played at the Polish Club in Kirkcaldy a couple of times, and played at Aberdour in May.
However, coming as it does at the end of her tour, she hopes to have the opportunity to explore a bit more of Scotland – possibly visiting friends in Glasgow and Kirkcaldy thereafter.
“I’m doing a duo show with Ben Glover,” she said.
“Ben has a new record out called Shorebound, so we are going to join together and play songs from our new records and some of the old kind of favourites, too.
“I’ll be singing a lot of harmony on Ben’s material as well as performing my own music.
“We will also tell some stories and there will be a little bit of everything.
“Aberdour is the grand finale of our tour, so we should be well-practiced by the time we get there.”
In 1988, Kim was persuaded to move to Nashville by Bill Lloyd and Radney Foster of Foster & Lloyd countryduo fame.
However, when it comes to her own roots, her family tree is slightly more unknown.
“I was told years ago I was Dutch, Welsh, French and Irish, so any time anyone asked me, I’d repeat that,” she said.
“Then I said it one time in front of my mum and she said: ‘where in the world did you ever get that?’
“So I have no idea. “Then I found out recently that my great grandfather on my mum’s side was adopted and they don’t have any records or anything of where he came from. So we don’t even have that family name going that far back. So I have no idea.”
Kim describes the current political situation in the USA as “pretty dismal”.
“It’s awful, to be honest,” she said. “It’s embarrassing. There are so many things that are wrong.”
However, she reserves comment when it comes to Brexit shambles in the UK. She added: “I don’t know if I’m really allowed to have an opinion because I don’t live here.
“I don’t really know that I should be telling people who live here what they should and shouldn’t do really.”
And as for independence?
“Most of my friends in Scotland think it should go its own way,” she said. “And as for the Irish border – holey moley!”
www.kimrichey.com Scottish