|
Home: K : Kristy
Starling : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Word/Warner Records)
Spend any time with Kristy Starling and you will hear her
sing.
The 22-year-old college student is known for singing anywhere,
anytime, all the time: in the car, in the kitchen, even (much
to the chagrin of new husband Adam) while watching TV.
"It's pretty much who I am," the Oklahoma City
native admits with a laugh. "If anyone were to describe
me, they would say, she sings! Because that's all I do, it's
just my life. I guess it's because I can express myself so
easily through music. I feel like it's just so natural to
me."
One place Kristy hadn't expected to
find herself singing — at
least, not at this stage of her life — was before an
audience of millions on the country's number one morning
news show. But in one of those fairy-tale-come-true stories
we sometimes hear, Kristy's life has been transformed literally
over night: one day she's a music student in college, the
next she's in New York City performing live before millions
on NBC's Today show. Fast forward one month and Kristy is
in Malibu, California, recording with Grammy-winning producer
David Foster and beginning work on her debut album.
Kristy has made the transition from student life to up-and-coming
recording artist with surprising ease. Indeed with her powerful,
richly textured voice, bubbly personality and an assured
stage presence, she seems a natural for a music career. In
fact, Kristy has come a long way. Once a shy young girl too
timid to sing in public, her story shows what one can do
with a little hard work, a whole lot of determination, and
a willingness to face one's fears.
The youngest of two in a close-knit,
middle class family, Kristy was raised surrounded by music. "We all grew
up singing, all the time," she says. "My mom says
she sang to me every night when she was pregnant with me;
to this day she says she honestly thinks that's why I sing
as well as I do!"
Kristy's earliest performances were
as a young child, singing in church and at school musicals.
Recognizing the youngster's talent, family members and
teachers pushed her to develop her vocal skills. But somewhere
between childhood and adolescence, Kristy developed something
else: a paralyzing stage fright. Suddenly, performing anywhere
except the bathroom mirror was out of the question. Still,
her family urged her to sing — even
if it was just around the house with the headphones on.
"My parents would hear me singing
in the bathroom or just around the house and she could
tell I had a little soul in me, I liked to do little runs
with my voice. So she thought if she bought some tapes
of that kind of music, I could practice singing like that.
She bought me a bunch of Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey
tapes and I ran those things until they wouldn't run anymore!
I memorized every single note."
Teachers and friends urged Kristy to
perform as well. One teacher convinced Kristy to sing in
an ensemble contest, hoping that as part of a group she'd
feel more at ease. Even her best friend pushed her to sing,
telling her, "you
need to do solos, it will be good for you!"
While it sounds like practically all
of Oklahoma City was on her case, what ultimately got Kristy
to face her fear came from her own heart. "I wanted
to sing so badly! And I wanted to be good so badly. So
I just knew that I had to do this. And I would look at
my mom: she has a beautiful voice, but she never sings
because she gets real scared, she's really timid. I saw
that and I thought, I cannot just back off and not sing.
"I didn't do very well at first
because I was just so scared. Every time I would sing my
voice would shake and it would be horrible. But I got more
and more confidence in myself; finally I got to the point
where I was like, Okay! I can do this!"
Indeed, as Kristy began performing in the Fine Arts competitions,
she started winning. By high school she had won the state
competition, finishing ahead of hundreds of fellow female
vocalists. She finished second in the national competition
two years running.
By her 20's, competing and performing had become old hat.
Married to Adam in Fall of 2002, finishing her senior credits,
Kristy planned to find work leading a church music program.
Adam, who had studied youth ministry, was fielding several
post-graduation offers from churches. The young couple seemed
on their way to a life in the church.
Then Adam's mother heard about another
national singing competition — "Today's Superstar," NBC News'
morning show competition complete with live vocal performances
and audience voting via the Internet. Once again urged by
family and friends to compete, Kristy — along with
4,100 other wannabes — mailed in a videotape, never
imagining she'd be chosen.
Amazingly, Kristy would become one of six finalists. Over
the course of one frantic fall, she'd fly New York City twice
a week for performances and a harrowing on-air voting process
in between writing term papers and studying for exams. Kristy
lasted through five elimination rounds, only to lose in the
final round to a singer from Atlanta. And she did it all
without a trace of the stage fright that she'd worked so
hard to overcome as a young teenager.
Though Kristy took second place, her performances had captured
the attention of David Foster and Warner Bros. Records. Foster,
the legendary producer behind such divas as Whitney Houston
and Celine Dion, wanted to work with Kristy; Warner Bros.
was interested in signing her to a record deal. But early
on in her Today show interviews, Kristy had professed an
interest in Christian music. It's a conviction she holds
fast to today.
"Christian music is an expression of who I am and what
I believe in," she stresses. "I guess to me it's
the only thing that I could honestly sing with everything
that I am. I don't think I could sing anything else and really
give everything I have."
Now preparing her debut for Warner Bros. Christian Music
Division, Kristy and Adam have had to make a few adjustments.
In an odd bit of irony, graduation has been postponed but
Kristy's music career is about to take off. This has given
her an opportunity to consider her own goals.
"I want to be a role model to young girls and even
to people my own age," she declares. "I want to
be a person who moms can look at and say 'I want my daughter
to be like her.' These days people look for that genuine
quality, which is exactly what I strive to be on stage and
in the everyday. God has always promised to be faithful to
me and I want to be in faithful in return."
That's a powerful message amply demonstrated
by the dramatic changes in Kristy's own life. But that's
not all. If nothing else, Kristy's recent whirlwind proves
one thing: "I
just want people to know that their dreams can come true.
If you try hard enough, you can do anything."
|