

Birth name: Amanda Leigh Moore
Birth Date: April 10, 1984
Birth Place: Nashua, NH
Height: 5' 10"
Parents: Don and Stacy Moore
Siblings:Scott(28) and Kyle(22)
Mandy Moore started her career at the tender age of 14. At a young age, she adapted herself by possessing her talents by acting in school plays and singing at local sporting events in Orlando, Florida. Born in Nashua, New Hampshire, April 10, 1984, her family moved to Orlando,Florida when she was just a couple of weeks old. While growing up in Orlando, which was already known for high profile teenage talent, she was discovered at 14, and has emerged as one of the hottest young starts of today. Since her first CD release with So Real in 1999, Mandy Moore's career has flourished as she has released even more hit records, starred in such movies as Princess Diaries, A Walk To Remember, Saved, Try 17, Chasing Liberty, American Dreamz, How To Deal, and her current films, Because I Said So, License To Wed, Dedication, and Southland Tales. She has released her own clothing line called MBLEM and has reached enormous success with it as her clothes have been sold in stores all across America.
In June 2007, Mandy released her latest CD, Wild Hope. She teamed up with such acts as Lori McKenna, Rachael Yamagata, and The Weepies as writing collaborations. She also found producer John Alagia to produce it. After the release of Wild Hope, Mandy went on the road, for a short, summer/spring long tour. Hoping to gain more fans with her new music, Mandy continued on with her musical journey through her tour, and made some lifelong friends along with way, with her band, as they call themselves, Brown Tidal Wave. Mandy Moore is one of the most respectful, well rounded, and multitalented entertainers in the industry today. Now, at age 24, Mandy Moore has legions of devoted fans from all over the world, a talented gift that speaks for itself. Mandy Moore also donates her time to various charities. One of the most likeable entertainers of our time, Mandy Moore have proven that she has staying power and will continue to gain more fans all over the globe.
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Written by JJ-2007
"It's somewhat of a foreign concept for me to care so much about a
record," Mandy Moore says. "I really haven't had the personal
involvement on anything in the past, not like I do with this one."
Moore is proudly referring to her new album, Wild Hope, which she
co-wrote with Lori McKenna, the Weepies, Rachael Yamagata and a slew of
other critically acclaimed singer-songwriters. Recorded at Allaire
Studios and produced by John Alagia, the man behind the boards on John
Mayer's 2001 debut "Room for Squares', Wild Hope is slated for a Spring
'07 release via The Firm Music.
In one sense, Moore's album is a collection of songs -- completed and
compiled over a lengthy period of time, a project on which a pop artist
lavishes overwhelming amounts of her energy, conviction, attention, and
heart -- such as appears regularly in the ever-ongoing pop-music
marketplace.
But for the New Hampshire-born, Orlando-raised 22-year-old, this particular release and how it was accomplished represents something decidedly new. When she discusses it, pride, relief and wonder streak her talk.
"I think that there's a time and a place for some of my past efforts,"
Moore says, referring to her albums released between 1999 and 2002
during the last years of '90s teen-pop. However, these days, Moore's
concern is only to align herself with music she loves and believes in.
She continues: "Teenpop was a great platform to start from; I'm not
someone who regrets anything. But in those days, I was just given songs
and told to go into the studio and record them. Yet, I think that as you
get older, you change and so do your musical tastes. And not to have
those changes reflected in the music I was so involved with was very
disheartening to me."
A head-shaking sense of incomprehension comes into Moore's characteristically upbeat speaking voice. "It just didn't seem like the proper situation."
For the past two years, making her new album, Mandy Moore insisted upon
the proper situation. Exemplified by her current association with The
Firm and the L.A. management company's innovative recent label, done in
conjunction with EMI Music and designed to restructure prevailing
royalty arrangements to benefit artists more closely, was conceived to
facilitate this.
In her way, Moore started to insist upon it in 2003, when she released
'Coverage', a unique collection on which she tackled songs by some of
the greatest songwriters in Anglo-American pop-rock history -- artists
such as Joni Mitchell and Joan Armatrading -- from her own youthful and
adulatory point of view.
"'Coverage' was the beginning of putting the real me out there," Moore
says. "I was just so in love with the music, and wanted to enlighten
every kid out there who didn't realize how great Joe Jackson and Todd
Rundgren were."
Though for her new album, on which Moore also collaborated with James
Renald and Chantal Kreviazuk, Moore was determined to write her own
material. It became an unnegotiable demand
she placed on both herself and everyone she worked with or planned to
work with. "I was not willing to change the course of this record,"
Moore says. "It meant too much to me."
The project, moreover, had begun to take shape in Moore's ambitious
mind, alongside her accumulating experience as a film actor. As she
began to appear in movies such as 'A Walk to Remember' (2002), the
critically acclaimed, 'Saved' (2005) and the Paul Weitz film, 'American
Dreamz'(2006) and began to come into creative contact with people like
John Turturro, Michael Stipe, Susan Sarandon, Billy Crudup, and many
others, these experiences and relationships began to encourage and help
bring out in herself what was always a more vital instinct that Moore
had toward pop music.
"It all became linked to the choices that I was making in movies," Moore
says. "As an actor, you have substantial control with the films you
take on: If you never want to do an action movie, you don't have to. If
you don't want to do nudity, you don't have to. It's case-by-case,
project-by-project. For me all this went hand-in-hand with my music. I
can't go off and do a movie with Diane Keaton, Mia Farrow, Billy Crudup
or Tom Wilkinson and then come back to make a record where I, as a
creative matter, am absent."
For Moore, this was just plain logic. "I knew that I wanted to work
with Lori McKenna, Rachael Yamagata and the Weepies. This is what the
record needed to be, and partly why it took two years to make. It's
been a very interesting and rewarding process. My head is still
spinning."
On Moore's new album, she sings -- with newly found clarity, conviction,
and tone -- beautifully lucid and detailed melodies that convey
essential aspects of how it feels, as she puts it, to be "a young woman
figuring out life and where she fits into the scheme of things about
love, relationships, and about being disappointed." Moore wrote songs
like "All Good Things" and "Looking Forward to Looking Back" with the
Weepies, in collaborations that, on both personal and musical levels,
Moore treasures. Other songs, such as "Most of Me," she wrote with
McKenna, "Ladies Choice" with Yamagata and the breathtaking ballad,
"Gardenia," with Chantal Kreviazuk, in equally successful
collaborations. All of these people were making music that Moore loved.
"With all of these artists" she says, "it was a matter of discovering
their music and asking myself, 'Why isn't this the biggest thing since
sliced bread? Why isn't Rachael Yamagata all over the radio? Did the
Weepies actually not have a top-10 record? What about the great voice
and the great storytelling of Lori McKenna? To me, this was all so
accessible, so wonderfully creative and beautiful."
The biggest difference with the collection of songs on Wild Hope, Moore
says, is that this time the words she sings are her own. By this point,
Mandy Moore talks about the art of songwriting with the depth of
appreciation and experience of an old pro: "There's nothing better than
finishing a song, and being happy with it, knowing that I nailed it and
confident that it was completely what I wanted to say."
The record opens with the striking song, "Extraordinary," another one of
her collaborations with the Weepies. It was the last song that Moore
finished for the album. "It's a really bold statement," she says. "I
think it's as vulnerable as any song on the record, but it takes a
certain amount of nerve to write a song like that and not be shy about
it. I am shy, and often introverted, but extraordinary is what I want
to be -- every day."
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James Hunter (December 2006)