Leigh Nash

Location: United States, New Braunfels, Texas

Leigh Bingham Nash (born June 27, 1976) is a singer-songwriter who is the lead vocalist for the rock band Sixpence None the Richer[1] and is also a member of Fauxliage and Movement Nashville.
Nash was born Leigh Anne Bingham in New Braunfels, Texas. She had several years experience for singing in local cafe before she met guitarist and songwriter Matt Slocum at a church retreat in the early 1990s.
The two formed Sixpence None the Richer soon after and went on to record four full-length albums with the band. Their first album, released when she was just 16, was The Fatherless & the Widow. The album garnered critical acclaim and Slocum and Nash searched for new band members.[2]

They found Tess Wiley, Dale Baker, and J.J. Plascencio. The new band recorded This Beautiful Mess, which won a Dove Award for Best Album. Wiley quit the band after their US tour and the band signed to the Squint Records label following the demise of REX.[3]

The band's eponymous album was released in 1997 and the single "Kiss Me" in 1999. In 1999 they received numerous Dove Awards, including Best Artist of the Year. The band was also nominated for a Grammy Award.

In 2000, Nash sang the song Need to Be Next to You for the movie Bounce in order to thank Miramax that had used "Kiss Me" in the movie She's All That and brought them into spotlight. Written by Diane Warren, it became Nash's first solo single.

After problems with their record labels, Sixpence None the Richer came back in 2001 with the album Divine Discontent after losing both Dale Baker and J.J. Plascencio. Two singles from that album, "Breathe Your Name" and "Don't Dream It's Over", went onto the charts. However, Sixpence None the Richer announced their break-up on 26 February, 2004 when Slocum sent a letter to CCM Magazine.

In spite of the colossal success the band enjoyed with ubiquitous pop singles like "Kiss Me" and "There She Goes," the group was continually plagued by the business woes of the trade and finally decided to split ways amicably. Disoriented by this major change, Nash and her husband left their Nashville home of ten years and moved to Los Angeles.

While in L.A., Nash penned a batch of songs that would eventually comprise her first solo record, Blue on Blue, a sweetly understated collection of musings on love and motherhood released in August 2006 on One Son Records, Nash's own imprint label through Nettwerk Productions. The first single, "My Idea Of Heaven", was released to USA radio the week of 14 July 2006.

In the meantime, Nash moved back to Music City and into a new community of musicians – a recently formed rock collective called Movement Nashville. The group hopes to dispel the myth that musically Nashville is limited to Country or Christian.

Nash, Megan Thomspon and Kate York started a Christian band called "Thompson, York & Nash". They worked on a few songs that have been put on Myspace.[4]

In 2007, Leigh and Matt met over coffee and positively discussed the reuniting of Sixpence None the Richer. In January 2008 Nash traveled down under to New Zealand to perform at the annual Parachute Music Festival. Performing on the main stage twice, she attracted crowds of over 30,000 who enjoyed her acoustic covers of Sixpence None the Richer hits "Kiss Me" and "There She Goes".

She has rejoined Sixpence and worked on new EP My Dear Machine EP,[5] and the Christmas album The Dawn of Grace with tour dates planned throughout 2008 in the States and Europe.

In Fall 2008 she toured with the band Delerium, with whom she has recorded as Fauxliage.
Nash has two distinct poles of inspiration: her work with Sixpence in the Christian music sphere and her childhood fascination with older female country artists like Tanya Tucker, Loretta Lynn and Patsy Cline.

"I started singing country music and learning old country songs on the guitar when I was twelve. I was really, really shy but just had this desire to get on stage and started calling clubs myself to ask if I could come down and sing," says Nash, who grew up in the southern Texas town of New Braunfels.

Before long, the adolescent Nash was singing Loretta Lynn and Tanya Tucker songs like "You Ain’t Woman Enough to Take My Man" and "Texas When I Die" on alcohol-free, open mic Sunday nights, backed by a middle-aged band of town locals. In spite of her country allure, Nash never developed an accent, and later in life her interest in pop acts like The Sundays, Innocence Mission and The Cranberries provided more formative material for her songwriting and singing.

Bingham married PFR drummer Mark Nash in the late 1990s; the couple met while both bands were performing at the Cornerstone Festival in Illinois. They had a child in 2004. The couple divorced in 2007.