Over the last ten years, she has been the lead singer and rhythm guitarist
for the Austin based Rock Band: Sister Seven. Patrice Pike has performed
onstage with the likes of Dave Matthews, Sarah McLachlan, Natalie Merchant,
and the Allman Brothers to name a few.
She sang the National anthem to a worldwide
audience for the JFK memorial in Dallas as well as for the homecoming celebration
for Lance Armstrong after his first victory at the Tour de France.
There’s an excellent description in the Chicago Free Press about Patrice’s
beginnings in the music world. Jen Earls writes, “Pike grew up a
musical child, influenced early by [artists] such as Joni Mitchell, Linda
Ronstadt, and Elton John, before getting into Motown.” “I
listened to Stevie Wonder every day,” Pike says. She also played
vilolin, French horn, and sang. In her teen years Pike sang and studied
jazz, opera and traditional African-American spirituals at Booker T. Washington
High school for the performing and visual Arts in Dallas. “Back
then, we were just a bunch of kids trying to stay out of trouble and surviving
by being in that godsend of a place. It was my saving grace, I mean, there
were people in my class that I was hanging with like Roy Hargrove [Grammy
award winning Jazz trumpet player] and younger kids like Peaches [Erykah
Badu] just being creative and getting exposed to all these amazing things.
I remember getting to watch Gregory Hines teach a class of dance students,
and sitting down one on one with Winton Marsaillis telling me...
...that it was all right if I didn’t want to be a jazz singer. He said, “It’s
really just about being soulful, Patrice. Just do what you love.” Patrice comments, “ We were
all so lucky to have that place. It forever solidified my conviction that
I am a musician.”
Earls
continues, “ In college she wanted to study jazz, but at the time,
the famed University of North Texas music program didn’t offer a
full curriculum for vocalists. By then Pike was learning more playing
with the band Little Sister [later named Sister Seven] than she was in
college classrooms.”
“She traded her textbooks for smoky bars.” “The school of Hard
Knocks, that’s it,” Pike says. “The stuff I’ve
learned [since I was 15] I wouldn’t trade it for any piece of paper.”
Patrice’s new band, Patrice Pike and the Black Box Rebellion was invited to play
their industry debut in March 2001 at the annual South By South West music
conference in Austin. The band includes Wayne Sutton on guitar, Michael
Hale on drums and Danny Beltran on Bass. Wayne and Patrice were the founding
members of Sister Seven and have been a songwriting team since before
Sister Seven was formed. Wayne and Patrice wrote the two Billboard hits
“Know What You Mean” and “Only Thing That’s Real”,
both of which propelled Sister Seven into the strange and fickle world
of Pop Radio.
The two along with their bandmates in the Black Box Rebellion and some
guest musicians will release an EP, Flat 13, this summer followed by their
full-length album, Fencing Under Fire, in the spring of 2002. “We
are really excited about the record we are making, because these are songs
we have been writing over the last few years that did not fit the Sister
Seven spectrum. We formed this band based on what musicianship was best
for these songs we have been writing. It all stems from the songwriting,
where as Sister Seven stemmed mostly from the wellspring of musicianship
and grew into songwriting. One of the coolest things is we chose the engineer
we wanted without the input of any other opinions. Jim Watt’s was
my first choice and his work as the engineer on the most recent Emmy Lou
Harris record Red Dirt Girl is so sonically fine; I had to call him right
away. I can’t wait to put this record out!”