Folk-punk singer/songwriter Elliott Smith rose from indie obscurity to mainstream success in 1997 on the strength of “Miss Misery,” his Academy Award-nominated song from the film Good Will Hunting. A native of Portland, Oregon, Smith began writing and recording his first songs at age 14, later becoming a fixture of the city’s thriving music scene; as a member of the band Heatmiser, he debuted in 1993 with the LP Dead Air, issuing his first solo effort Roman Candle on the tiny Cavity Search label a year later. For his 1995 self-titled album, Smith signed with the noted Kill Rock Stars label; either/or followed in 1997, around the same time that filmmaker and longtime fan Gus Van Sant requested permission to use the singer’s music in his upcoming Good Will Hunting. Smith also composed a handful of new songs for the soundtrack, among them “Miss Misery,” and when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced its Oscar nominations the following February, the track was a surprise entry in the “Best Original Song” category. Although he did not win, Smith performed the song live at the televised Oscar broadcast, appearing onstage alongside superstars Trisha Yearwood and eventual award-winner Celine Dion in one of the most notably surreal musical moments in recent memory; his Dreamworks label debut, XO , followed later in 1998, and Figure 8 arrived in early 2000
Elliott Smith
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