Born
Cerys Elizabeth Philip Matthews in Cardiff, Wales in spring 1969, the singer/songwriter fronted one of the biggest Welsh pop bands to emerge in the Britpop era of the 1990s.
Catatonia released five albums, but their biggest success came in 1998 with their third album
International Velvet. Not only was it the band's major-label debut for Warner Bros., but it was their most cohesive set of traditional pop of their career yet. "Road Rage" and "Mulder and Scully" became Top Ten hits in the U.K. The photogenic and quirky-sweet
Matthews also became an instant celebrity; however, her craving for that kind of lifestyle would ultimately lead to
Catatonia's demise. She publicly suffered a nervous breakdown in 1999, and by 2000,
Matthews' nonstop partying landed her in rehab to treat exhaustion and asthma brought on by excessive drinking and smoking. Leaving
Catatonia in 2001 after ten years together wasn't any big surprise for
Matthews, the band, or their fans. The remaining members carried on without her under a different name after
Matthews' final album appearance on
Paper Scissors Stone. A rejuvenated
Matthews moved to Nashville in early summer 2002 in search of a new beginning. She had already collected 76 traditional folk songs with the idea of making an album of folk covers, but meeting
Bucky Baxter eventually changed all that. Upon her arrival in America in June,
Matthews handpicked
Baxter, who had played lap steel guitar for
Bob Dylan and
Ryan Adams. Her debut album,
Cockahoop, was recorded in seven months and appeared on Blanco y Negro in the U.K. in May 2003. Its stateside release followed in October 2004.
–
MacKenzie Wilson, Rovi