WhatzUp
Sweetwater

Best Solo Acoustic Performer

37.67% Sunny Taylor*
26.23% Jettingham
21.70% Shelly Dixon*
6.31% Flying Suraci*
1.78% Chris Worth
0.99% The Agency

Others with Votes:
Freak Brothers, Chris Dodds, David Todoran, Go Dog Go, homeless j, Andy Moser, Angie Baker, Buttonhead, Chris & Paul, Diamond Lil, Einstein Savage, Fawn Liebowitz, Francie Zucco, Jim Martin, Karin Martin, Melissa Perkins Band, Northern Kind, Stephany Harrold, Tempest, Third Frame, Wailhounds

2000 Winner: Sunny Taylor

1999 Winner: Sunny Taylor

1998 Winner: Sunny Taylor

1997 Winner: NA

* On the ballot

Sunny Taylor Matt Sturm, Sunny Taylor’s Evil Twin, said it best: “Maybe next year you guys should have a category like “Best Solo Acoustic Artist that’s not Sunny Taylor.” Taylor swept up four Whammy Awards and swept away the audience with a blistering set, backed by her new band, known simply as Sunny Taylor. She even beat last year’s total of Whammies by one.

Is there anything this young woman can’t do?

Don’t bet on it. Taylor and her new band will be playing a showcase in a couple of weeks in Louisville for representatives of Warner Bros. Records, a gig arranged by her new management company, 3.1 Productions of Nashville, Tennessee. If the showcase goes well — along with a demo CD she and the band are recording for 3.1 — who knows what success may lie ahead?

Taylor and Sturm played the old switcheroo at the Whammy show. After a few minutes onstage with her now-former band, Taylor left and was replaced at the singer’s stand by Sturm, who will take her place and rename the band, Mad Room. After playing for a while, they all left the stage and Taylor returned with the new lineup: Phil Bradley on drums, Del Witte on guitar and Patrick Gillan on bass. They opened with Taylor’s “The Child That I Am” and proceeded to leave the audience with their collective mouths agape.

“I loved the guys from the old band, but they did not share my passion to play. They all had steady jobs and girl friends and it got to be too much for them. I had played with other bands, but not full-time. The new guys play with a little more energy, they’re a little more edgy,” Taylor said. The new lineup signals a change, Taylor said, to a new approach to her music: More rock n’ roll, less pop.

Taylor’s first solo performance was nearly six years ago. It must seem like a lifetime to her now. And judging by her latest performance at the Whammy show, things should get very interesting. Soon.

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