[Deathwatch] Odetta Holmes, folk singer, 77
Deathwatch Central
cdw at slick.org
Wed Dec 3 07:37:31 PST 2008
Many thanks to a long-time subscriber and supported for this one...
Civil rights beacon Odetta dead at 77
WASHINGTON (Reuters) Odetta, the deep-voiced folk singer whose
ballads and songs became for many a soundtrack to the American civil
rights movement, has died at age 77, her manager said on Wednesday.
Douglas Yeager said Odetta passed away late Tuesday at Lenox Hill
Hospital in New York, after a decade-long fight with chronic heart
disease and pulmonary fibrosis in her lungs.
"May Odetta's luminous spirit and volcanic voice from the heavens live
on for the ages," Yeager said in a statement. "Her voice will never
die."
Odetta Holmes, born in Birmingham, Alabama, on December 31, 1930, told
the Times in a 2007 interview the music of the Great Depression,
particularly the prison songs and work songs from the fields of the
deep South, helped shape her musical life.
While she recorded several albums and sang at New York's Carnegie Hall
among other prominent venues, Odetta is perhaps best remembered by most
Americans for her brief performance at the August 1963 march on
Washington, a pivotal event in the civil rights movement at which she
sang the song "O Freedom."
The Times said Rosa Parks, the woman who launched the boycott of
segregated buses in Montgomery, Alabama, was once asked which songs
meant the most to her. "All the songs Odetta sings," was Parks' reply.
Odetta, who moved from Alabama to Los Angeles with her mother in 1937,
earned a music degree from Los Angeles City College. But she told the
Times her training in classical music and musical theater "was a nice
exercise, but it had nothing to do with my life."
She said she found her true voice by listening to blues, jazz and folk
music from the African-American and Anglo-American traditions.
Odetta began singing professionally in a West Coast production of the
musical "Finian's Rainbow," but said she found a stronger calling in
the coffeeshops and nightclubs of San Francisco.
Her first solo album, "Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues," influenced
another American folk legend -- Bob Dylan. "The first thing that turned
me on to folk singing was Odetta," Dyland said in a 1978 interview with
Playboy magazine.
In that album, Dylan said he heard "something vital and personal. I
learned all the songs on that record," which included "Mule Skinner,"
"Jack of Diamonds" and "Water Boy."
In the early days of the civil rights movement, Odetta said her songs
channeled "the fury and frustration that I had growing up" in
segregated America. The many benefits she headlined helped underwrite
the movement's work.
While Odetta's career cooled and her performances and recordings became
fewer after the late 1960s, she retained her vocal and dramatic power
even late in life. "Odetta's voice is still a force of nature," critic
James Reed of the Boston Globe wrote of a December 2006 performance.
She remained "a majestic figure in American musician, a direct gateway
to bygone generations that feel so foreign today," Reed wrote.
Many thanks to Deathwatch Central for posting this obituary
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