The WDVX Blue Plate Special – 12/13 – Teni Rane
December 13 @ 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Inside of Teni Rane’s songs, you’ll likely encounter Appalachian songbirds, white oaks, and wildflower fields. These are just some of the earthly delights that surround her home in Chattanooga and dance through her music. Her debut album, Goldenrod (2024), pays tribute to her favorite native plant’s “charismatic yellow self” and highlights the ways we too can sway through the shoulder seasons of our own lives. As a songmaker, Rane likes to wade in the undertow, through the deeper currents of loneliness and longing that churn below the surface of our days. Glide Magazine raves that she’s an “up-and-coming Americana winner along the lines of Sierra Ferrell.”
Rane grew up in the American South, disconnected from her mother’s Armenian culture, heritage, and language. As she sings, “I don’t know which way to turn or how to be, there’s too much debris when identities collide.” Often feeling caught between worlds – neither fully Armenian nor totally at ease in Southern American culture – music became a compelling avenue to help make sense of her unique identity. It is no small wonder that her forthcoming album, Never Turning Back, orbits themes of kinship, homesickness, and the precarity of our human-made environments. Rane is a cartographer of the heart – capturing the many ways it breaks and breaks us open. An intense (over)thinker, her songs ask questions about what makes a home and how we discover our place in the world. The album ranges from geographical adventure narratives like “Leaving You Behind” and “Arkansas” to tracks like “As I Walk Home,” written in an existential haze at 2am about our imbalanced world.
Cat-like, Rane lives many lives. In addition to making music, she played semi-pro soccer on Gotland Island in the Baltic Sea; earned a Bachelors in chemical engineering; and teaches yoga and mindfulness. As she tracks the wooden acres and water lines around her, Rane is learning how to turn inward and listen to her own artistic calling. After an inner reckoning, she upended her carefully constructed corporate life and charted a new course into music and mindfulness – focusing on writing and recording songs that capture the high joys and deep sorrows of the human experience. Her focus-shift to songcrafting didn’t go unnoticed. Americana Highways described her first EP, Heart in Tennessee (2020), as “the mesmerizing sound of a singular talent.” A 2022 residency at Sweden’s Kneippbyn Resort Visby yielded four singles, including “Meet Me in Stockholm,” a bilingual plea from a homesick Rane to her friend to help fill solitary hours.
Goldenrod (2024) climbed to number 13 on the Folk Radio Charts and garnered critical praise. The album features Grammy-nominees Dave Eggar (cello, piano) and Phil Faconti (guitars, ukulele), alongside previous collaborator Roger Gustafsson (bass, steel guitar). Her partner, Jonathan Shumaker, is also featured on bass. Rane has toured nationally at venues like the Falcon Theater (Newport, KY), University of Arkansas (Fayetteville, AR) and the Lyric Theater (Lexington, KY). She also has a fondness for playing house concerts, listening rooms and botanical gardens (her favorite). After spells in Arkansas, Sweden, and Northeast Tennessee, she’s returned to her roots – the county where she was raised, where the city meets the country along the Tennessee River in Chattanooga, TN.







