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Obit: Odetta has died (1930-2008)

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bankley 03 Dec 08 - 06:31 AM
catspaw49 03 Dec 08 - 06:26 AM
Bryn Pugh 03 Dec 08 - 06:00 AM
Johnny J 03 Dec 08 - 05:18 AM
Folkiedave 03 Dec 08 - 04:57 AM
Backwoodsman 03 Dec 08 - 04:07 AM
VirginiaTam 03 Dec 08 - 03:54 AM
Lizzie Cornish 1 03 Dec 08 - 03:49 AM
Genie 03 Dec 08 - 03:35 AM
Ruth Archer 03 Dec 08 - 03:22 AM
Genie 03 Dec 08 - 02:38 AM
M.Ted 03 Dec 08 - 12:53 AM
Stilly River Sage 03 Dec 08 - 12:47 AM
Little Hawk 03 Dec 08 - 12:41 AM
alanabit 03 Dec 08 - 12:37 AM
Mary Katherine 03 Dec 08 - 12:30 AM
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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: bankley
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 06:31 AM

glad we met.... swing low


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: catspaw49
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 06:26 AM

seconding everything already said and also what hasn't.

Its impossible to sum up in any meaningful way her contribution to folk music in particular and the world in general..........The task is too daunting and even as impossible just to start.

I wish I could ............. Thank you Odetta.


Spaw


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: Bryn Pugh
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 06:00 AM

One of my all-time heroines.

May she rest in peace. Her memory will never be forgotten.

I am saddened, to say the least.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: Johnny J
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 05:18 AM

Really sad news.


She was a major influence in the sixties folk scene and I had the pleasure of hearing her live on a couple of occasions, Tonder 1984 and in Edinburgh about 12 years ago at the first and only Capital Blues Festival.

Even non folkies will surely remember her duet with Harry Belafonte ... "There's a hole in my bucket" which featured regularly on Uncle Mac's Children's favourites. :-)


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: Folkiedave
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 04:57 AM

That is a very sad moment for all folk music. I feel so privileged to have seen her sing live - a memory that will stay with both my wife and I forever.

Thanks for the memories.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 04:07 AM

My earliest influence in folk-music. Introduced to her wonderful voice back in the early '60s by my friend Jack Whyte, himself a fine writer and singer.

She leaves a wonderful legacy of magical performances and deeply-held belief in Truth. We should all thank God for giving her to us.

RIP, great lady.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: VirginiaTam
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 03:54 AM

Peace to the Lady and blessings on her family, friends and fans. She must have gone on to the most Amazing Place.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: Lizzie Cornish 1
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 03:49 AM

Thanks for those, Genie.

Somehow, I think she'll still 'be there' when Barack takes over as President, she and Martin Luther King Jr, both, and more than a few others too.

And yes, it must have been wonderful for her to at least know that the world had changed, her world had changed, in such a dramatic way at long last.

Sad that she didn't get to sing though.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: Genie
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 03:35 AM

Some wonderful Odetta memories:

Odetta: Cotton Fields

Odetta: You Don't Know My Mind

Odetta: "Keep On Moving It On" - Feb. 2008


Odetta: "Amazing Grace" 2003


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died (2 December 2008)
From: Ruth Archer
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 03:22 AM

Amazing woman. RIP.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died
From: Genie
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 02:38 AM

What Stilly said.

It's so sad to lose two such powerful and expressive voices and souls as Miriam Makeba and Odetta so close together. Kind of a one-two punch.   But I'm glad both of these fighters for human rights and equality lived to see history turn the page that's just been turned, with the US 2008 election results.   

The more I think about it, the more outrageous it seems that neither of these two amazing singers made Rolling Stone's recent list of the "One Hundred Greatest Singers Of All Time.

G


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died
From: M.Ted
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 12:53 AM

She had more than a voice--she had boundless positive energy--no matter how bleak or hopeless things seemed, you just heard her voice, and it made you believe again.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 12:47 AM

She didn't make it to that concert of a lifetime, but at least she lived long enough to know that it will take place. She will be missed.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died
From: Little Hawk
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 12:41 AM

She was a huge influence on the folk scene in the early 60s. I remember well. She had a truly mighty voice, powerful and passionate.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Odetta has died
From: alanabit
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 12:37 AM

Other Mudcatters will know her music much better than I do. But it seems like folk music has lost one of its most iconic figures. May the great lady rest in peace.


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Subject: Obit: Odetta has died
From: Mary Katherine
Date: 03 Dec 08 - 12:30 AM

The New York Times
December 3, 2008

Odetta, Voice of Civil Rights Movement, Dies at 77
By TIM WEINER

Odetta, the singer whose deep voice wove together the strongest songs of American folk music and the civil rights movement, died Tuesday. She was 77.

The cause was heart disease, said her manager, Doug Yeager.

He added that she had been hoping to sing at Barack Obama's inauguration.

Odetta — she was born Odetta Holmes — sang at coffeehouses and Carnegie Hall and released several albums, becoming one of the most widely known and influential folk-music artists of the 1950s and 60s.

Her voice was an accompaniment to the black-and-white images of the freedom marchers who walked the roads of Alabama and Mississippi and the boulevards of Washington in quest of an end to racial discrimination.

Rosa Parks, the woman who started the boycott of segregated buses in Montgomery, Ala., was once asked which songs meant the most to her. She replied, "All of the songs Odetta sings."

Odetta sang at the August 1963 march on Washington, a pivotal event in the civil rights movement. Her song that day was "O Freedom," dating back to slavery days.

Born in Birmingham on Dec. 31, 1930, Odetta Holmes spent her first six years in the depths of the Depression. The music of that time and place — in particular prison song and work songs recorded in the fields of the deep South — shaped her life.

"They were liberation songs," she said in a videotaped interview with The New York Times in 2007, for its online feature "The Last Word." "You're walking down life's road, society's foot is on your throat, every which way you turn you can't get from under that foot. And you reach a fork in the road and you can either lie down and die, or insist upon your life."

Her father, Reuben Holmes, died when she was young; she and her mother, Flora Sanders, who later remarried, moved to Los Angeles in 1937. Three years later, Odetta discovered she could sing.

"A teacher told my mother that I had a voice, that maybe I should study," she recalled. "But I myself didn't have anything to measure it by."

She found her own voice by listening to blues, jazz and folk music from the African-American and Anglo-American traditions. She earned a music degree from Los Angeles City College. Her training in classical music and musical theater was "a nice exercise, but it had nothing to do with my life," she said.

"The folk songs were — the anger," she emphasized.

In a 2005 National Public Radio interview, she said: "School taught me how to count and taught me how to put a sentence together. But as far as the human spirit goes, I learned through folk music."

In 1950, Odetta began singing professionally in a West Coast production of the musical "Finian's Rainbow," but she found a stronger calling in the bohemian coffeehouses of San Francisco. "We would finish our play, we'd go to the joint, and people would sit around playing guitars and singing songs and it felt like home," she said in the 2007 interview with The Times.

She began singing in nightclubs, cutting a striking figure with her guitar and her close-cropped hair. (She noted late in life that she was one of the first black performers in the United States to wear an "Afro" hairstyle — "they used to call it 'the Odetta,'" she said.)

Her voice plunged deep and soared high, and her songs blended the personal and the political, the theatrical and the spiritual. Her first solo album, "Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues," resonated with an audience hearing old songs made new.

"The first thing that turned me on to folk singing was Odetta," Bob Dylan said, referring to that record, in a 1978 interview with Playboy. He said he heard "something vital and personal. I learned all the songs on that record." It was her first, and the songs were "Mule Skinner," "Jack of Diamonds," "Water Boy," "'buked and Scorned."

Her blues and spirituals led directly to her work for the civil-rights movement. They were two rivers running together, she said in her interview with The Times. The words and music captured "the fury and frustration that I had growing up." They were heard by the people who were present at the creation of the civil rights movement, people who "heard on the grapevine about this lady who was singing these songs." She played countless benefits; the money she raised underwrote the work of keeping the movement alive.

Her fame hit a peak in 1963, when she marched with Martin Luther King in Selma and performed for President John F. Kennedy. But after King was assassinated in 1968, the wind went out of the sails of the civil-rights movement and the songs of protest and resistance that had been the movement's soundtrack. Odetta's fame flagged for years thereafter. She recorded fewer records, although she performed on stage as a singer and an actor, during the 1970s and 1980s. She revived her career in the 1990s, and thereafter appeared regularly on "A Prairie Home Companion," the popular public-radio show. In 1999 she recorded her first album in 14 years, and that year President Bill Clinton awarded her the National Endowment for the Arts Medal of the Arts and Humanities from. In 2003 she received a "Living Legend" tribute from the Library of Congress and the Kennedy Center Visionary Award.

Odetta was married three times: to Don Gordon, to Gary Shead, and, in 1977, to the blues musician Iverson Minter, known professionally as Louisiana Red. The first marriages ended in divorce; Mr. Minter moved to Germany in 1983 to pursue his performing career.

She was singing and performing well into the 21st century, and her influence stayed strong through the decades.

In April 2007, half a century after Mr. Dylan heard her, she was onstage at a Carnegie Hall tribute to Bruce Springsteen. She turned one of his songs, "57 Channels," into a chanted poem, and Mr. Springsteen came out from the wings to call it "the greatest version" of the song he had ever heard.

Reviewing a December 2006 performance, James Reed of the Boston Globe wrote: "Odetta's voice is still a force of nature — something commented upon endlessly as folks exited the auditorium — and her phrasing and sensibility for a song have grown more complex and shaded."

The critic called her "a majestic figure in American music, a direct gateway to bygone generations that feel so foreign today."


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