Tania Warnock cut her musical teeth as a teenager in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, sneaking into honkytonks and singing with a variety of country bands. Her early influences ranged from Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt to Janis Joplin and Joan Baez.
It wasn't until shemoved to Oklahoma, and began to reevaluate her musical career, that she became acquainted with Red Dirt Music by the likes of Chuck Dunlap, Chad Sullins, Tom Skinner and Mike McClure. It was through these legends that she discovered her love for the genre that is decidedly Oklahoma born music. The way she tells it, Bob Childers', Dance with Gypsies, helped her find her voice as a female Red Dirt artist. Today, her veins are laced with it.
Tania's Coming Home Album, released in June of 2015, has the raw, heartbreak, storytelling character that so many great Red Dirt albums have. She lays it all out there in a vulnerable but brave way that shows her talents not only as a songwriter, but also as an artist who is relatable on a variety of levels, from lover, to mother to someone just trying to find meaning in this world.
With a style all her own, Tania's eclectic songwriting qualities lead you through a tale of her life and the lives of those she loves most. Get ready to get lost in words that pierce your soul and stir the deepest recesses of yourself. It's all in there.