1997–2000 Hughes released her first CD,
Torch Life, in 1997, and exploded onto the Southeast music scene. She rode the "swing" craze of the late 1990s, creating her trademark "Kool Kat Lounge-a-Go-Go" show that featured jugglers, cigarette girls, magicians, and comedians in addition to her band, The Retro Jazz Kats. She and The ‘Kats clinched the title of "Favorite Jazz Artist" multiple times from Creative Loafing magazine. Author Philip DePoy also created the jazz-singing character "Gwen Hughes" in his 1999 novel Dancing Made Easy, part of his Flap Tucker detective series. The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution declared, "Gwen Hughes was swinging before swinging was cool."
2001–2004 Hughes released two more albums in 2001.
Lost and Found solidified her reputation as a songwriter.
The Misplaced Martini, an album of jazz standards including "Caravan," was recorded live at Sambuca Jazz Cafe and garnered national radio airplay. Martini also featured a recording of "
Mood Indigo," recorded in the cosmetics section of Parisian department store. Hughes began making an international splash after self-funded trips to Paris, Prague and Istanbul. It was during a Croatian tour in 2004 that Hughes met Slovenian drummer Tomi Purich (
Jan Plestenjak,
Nina Puslar). Purich believed in Hughes's ability to connect with European musicians and audiences alike and began managing and booking Gwen Hughes and the Global Jazz Gang (renamed Mono in 2013) all throughout Eastern Europe. Since 2004, Gwen and the EU band have built a devoted following through more than 14 tours of the continent. In 2015 and 2016, the band was invited to tour Slovenia on behalf of The U.S. Embassy in Ljubljana. Former U.S. Ambassador
Joseph A. Mussomeli wrote, "I sometimes worry that she and her band did more to better bilateral relations than I ever could have hoped to achieve as the US ambassador!"
2004–2007 When the swing craze began to die down, Hughes returned to her love of minimalist music, modeled after personal favorite Cassandra Wilson. Her next album reflected that when she released
Instead of Light in 2007. Partnering with Wilson's mix producer (of the Grammy-winning
New Moon Daughter) Danny Kopelson, plus Drew Young (formerly of Putumayo Records), the album cemented Gwen's place as "the love child of Hank Williams and Peggy Lee…her southern heritage weaves through her lounge-dwelling persona like kudzu around a fencepost." The album featured Hughes' version of "
Whole Lotta Love", paired with
Willie Dixon's "You Need Love."
2008–present In 2010, Hughes created her first 14-piece big band, The Continental Dance Orchestra, which had the honor of playing at Asheville, North Carolina's historic Grove Park Inn for the 25th anniversary of their "Swing Dance Weekend" in 2011. Later that year, CDO appeared on the first annual
TCM Classic Movie Cruise, sailing from Miami to Mexico, where the band played romantic dance music for classic stars
Eva Marie Saint, the late
Ernest Borgnine, and
Tippi Hedren. Hughes's music was also featured in television and movies, including PBS'
Road Trip Nation and films such as
Crazy Eyes. She appeared in 2009 singing on TBS’
House of Payne. Her voice and music is also featured in the soundtrack of independent films
We Three Kings (2001) and
Take Me Out (2011). In 2016, her voice was the a cappella soundtrack to Down South the award-winning short film about the late Black Lives Matter activist, Marshawn McCarrel . 2013 saw the limited release of Gwen & Mono (the EU touring band)'s CD,
Dancing in the Moonlight. In 2016, Gwen was signed to the Grammy-winning Zoho Music and released Native Land, an Americana-flavored project on Zoho Roots. In 2019, Hughes stepped into the EDM market with the new release on Fairfield Records, "I'd Know Your Voice Anywhere (Mark Alston Deep House Remix)." Hughes' recent projects on the Tiger Turn label are a continuing series of public domain church hymns reframed in jazz arrangements, "We Gather Together: Jazz Hymns for Thanksgiving and "In the Garden: Jazz Hymns for Easter." ==Acting career==