Page spends most of her days with a career in the business world. However, she has a deep passion for music. She comes by naturally with strong genes from a family of musicians. She has navigated her life around a consulting career, wife, mother of two boys and one of five sisters who share Page’s passion for singing.
Her love of music is rooted from Missouri’s Ozark country. Her grandfather, Lonnie Robertson, has been recorded as one of America’s best old-time country fiddlers and singers, and documented in the Smithsonian in Washington, DC. Lonnie also played the guitar and fiddled his way from Missouri to Virginia in stage performances and radio stations along with his wife, Thelma, and son, Jarrett, as a family trio. Jarrett is Page’s father who was an officer in the Army. He chose to make the Army his career while singing and playing guitar as an avocation. He introduced music to his daughters.
Being raised as an Army brat, Page fondly remembers visiting her Missouri family each year and listening to her father play and sing music with his parents around the kitchen table. The only constants in Page’s youth were visiting family in Missouri, her father’s singing and her mother and four sisters.
Twenty years ago Page picked up her Grandfather’s Martin and quickly learned to play, awakening a natural talent of picking and singing. Her acoustic style is smooth and her sound authentic. Raised listening to John Denver and Gordon Lightfoot you will find those gems in her playlist along with pop culture, country, folk, and rock songs.
Her love of music is rooted from Missouri’s Ozark country. Her grandfather, Lonnie Robertson, has been recorded as one of America’s best old-time country fiddlers and singers, and documented in the Smithsonian in Washington, DC. Lonnie also played the guitar and fiddled his way from Missouri to Virginia in stage performances and radio stations along with his wife, Thelma, and son, Jarrett, as a family trio. Jarrett is Page’s father who was an officer in the Army. He chose to make the Army his career while singing and playing guitar as an avocation. He introduced music to his daughters.
Being raised as an Army brat, Page fondly remembers visiting her Missouri family each year and listening to her father play and sing music with his parents around the kitchen table. The only constants in Page’s youth were visiting family in Missouri, her father’s singing and her mother and four sisters.
Twenty years ago Page picked up her Grandfather’s Martin and quickly learned to play, awakening a natural talent of picking and singing. Her acoustic style is smooth and her sound authentic. Raised listening to John Denver and Gordon Lightfoot you will find those gems in her playlist along with pop culture, country, folk, and rock songs.