Elizabeth "Libba" Cotten (January 5, 1893 – June 29, 1987) was an American folk and blues musician. She was a self-taught left-handed guitarist who played a guitar strung for a right-handed player, but played it upside down. NPR stated "her influence has reverberated through the generations, permeating every genre of music."
Born Elizabeth Nevills in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Libba Cotten taught herself how to play the banjo and guitar at an early age. Although forbidden to do so, she often borrowed her brother's instruments when he was away, reversing the banjo and guitar to make them easier to play left-handed. Eventually she saved up the $3.75 required to purchase a Stella guitar from a local dry-goods store. Cotten immediately began to develop a unique guitar style characterized by simple figures played on the bass strings in counterpoint to a melody played on the treble strings, a method that later became widely known as "Cotten style." She fretted the strings with her right hand and picked with her left, the reverse of the usual method. Moreover, she picked the bass strings with her fingers and the treble (melody strings) with her thumb, creating an almost inimitable sound.
Ruth Crawford Seeger |
Libba married Frank Cotten when she was 15 (not a particularly early age in that era) and had one child, Lily. As Libba became immersed in family life, she spent more time at church, where she was counseled to give up her "worldly" guitar music. It wasn't until many years later that Cotten, due largely to a fortunate chance encounter, was able to build her immense talent into a professional music career. While working at a department store in Washington, D.C., Libba found and returned a very young and lost Peggy Seeger to her mother, Ruth Crawford Seeger. A month later, Cotten began work in the household of the famous folk-singing Seeger family.
Here’s “Freight Train” from above LP
The Seeger home was an amazing place for Libba to have landed entirely by accident. Ruth Crawford Seeger was a noted composer and music teacher while her husband, Charles, pioneered the field of ethnomusicology. A few years passed before Peggy discovered Cotten playing the family's gut-stringed guitar. Libba apologized for playing the instrument without asking, but Peggy was astonished by what she heard. Eventually the Seegers came to know Libba's instrumental virtuosity and the wealth of her repertoire.
Thanks largely to Mike Seeger's early recordings of her work, Elizabeth Cotten soon found herself giving small concerts in the homes of congressmen and senators, including that of John F. Kennedy. By 1958, at the age of sixty-two, Libba had recorded her first album, Elizabeth Cotten: Negro Folk Songs and Tunes (Folkways 1957, now reissued as Freight Train and Other North Carolina Folk Songs, Smithsonian Folkways 1989). Meticulously recorded by Mike Seeger, this was one of the few authentic folk-music albums available by the early 1960s, and certainly one of the most influential. In addition to the now well-recorded tune "Freight Train," penned by Cotten when she was only eleven or twelve, the album provided accessible examples of some of the "open" tunings used in American folk guitar. She played two distinct styles on the banjo and four on the guitar, including her single-string melody picking "Freight Train" style, an adaptation of Southeastern country ragtime picking.
As her music became a staple of the folk revival of the 1960s, Elizabeth Cotten began to tour throughout North America. Among her performances were the Newport Folk Festival, the Philadelphia Folk Festival, the University of Chicago Folk Festival, and the Smithsonian Festival. Her career generated much media attention and many awards, including the National Folk 1972 Burl Ives Award for her contribution to American folk music. The city of Syracuse, New York, where she spent the last years of her life, honored her in 1983 by naming a small park in her honor: the Elizabeth Cotten Grove. An equally important honor was her inclusion in the book I Dream a World: Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America, by Brian Lanker, which put her in the company of Rosa Parks, Marian Anderson, and Oprah Winfrey.
Cotten's later CDs, Shake Sugaree (Folkways, 1967), When I'm Gone (Folkways, 1979), and Elizabeth Cotten Live (Arhoolie 1089), continued to win critical acclaim. Elizabeth Cotten Live was awarded a Grammy for the Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording in 1985. She continued to tour and perform right up to the end of her life. Her last concert was one that folk legend Odetta put together for her in New York City, shortly before her death on June 29, 1987 at the Crouse Irving Memorial Hospital in Syracuse.
Cotten's legacy lives on not only in her own recordings but also in the many artists who continue to play her work.
(Edited
from Folkways & Wikipedia)
For “Elizabeth Cotten - Shake Sugaree (2004) (192kbps)” go here:
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1. Shake Sugaree (5:02) (vocal Brenda Evans)
2. Take Me Back To Baltimore (1:59)
3. Washington Blues (3:37)
4. I'm Going Away (3:25)
5. Fox Chase (3:42)
6. Ontario Blues (3:45)
7. Fare You Well, My Darling (2:03)
8. Untitled/Georgie Buck (3:01)
9. Mama, Nobody's Here But The Baby (0:53)
10. Mama, Nobody's Here But The Baby (1:37)
11. Look & Live, My Brother (1:52)
12. Jesus Lifted Me (2:08) (vocal Brenda Evans)
13. Jesus Is Tenderly Calling (1:39)
14. Buck Dance (1:52)
15. Ruben (2:13)
16. Oh, Miss Lulie Gal (1:31)
17. Can't Get A Letter From Down The Road (1:45)
18. Shoot That Buffalo (1:40)
19. Boatman Dance (1:48)
20. Hallelujah, It Is Done (1:34)
21. Holy Ghost, Unchain My Name (1:25)
22. Little Brown Jug (2:22)
23. Delia (2:12)
24. Ball The Jack (2:34)
25. Till We Meet Again (2:03)
26. When The Train Comes Along (2:45)
Elizabeth "Libba" Cotten wrote her well-known song "Freight Train" at the age of 11 and sang it for nearly 80 years. Through her songwriting, her quietly commanding personality, and her unique left-handed guitar and banjo styles, she has inspired and influenced generations of younger artists. Cotten was declared a National Heritage Fellow by the National Endowment for the Arts in 1984, and was recognized by the Smithsonian Institution as a "living treasure." She received a Grammy Award in 1985 when she was 90. These essential 1965-66 recordings include ten previously unreleased tracks. 26 tracks. 60 minutes. Reissued from Folkways 31003.
For “Elizabeth Cotten – Volume 3: When I'm Gone (1979 Folkways) @320” go here:
1. New Year's Eve 3:15
2. Praying Time Will Soon Be Over 3:10
3. Time To Stop Your Idling 2:30
4. Gaslight Blues 4:45
5. Jenny 2:40
6. Street Blues 2:10
7. Home Sweet Home 2:20
8. Freight Train 3:10
9. Casey Jones 1:45
10. Willie 5:05
11. Boddie's Song 2:15
12. Wilson Rag 4:50
13. When I'm Gone 4:40
The material chosen for this recording includes songs and tunes from her childhood, such as “Praying Time Will Soon Be Over” and original compositions like “When I’m Gone.” She accompanies herself on her guitar, strung in the usual right-handed way yet played left-handed, with the guitar upside down. This album showcases her unique style, described by Mike Seeger as “a synthesis of turn-of-the-century parlour music, blues, church songs, and a little ragtime.”
Recording Information:
1, 8, 10. 12: Recorded December 9, 1978, at Elizabeth Cotten's home in Syracuse, NY.
2: Recorded March 16, 1975, at the home of Mark and Sue Sandson, Arlington, VA.
3: Recorded November 17, 1974, at the home of Mark and Sue Sandson, Arlington, VA.
4, 6, 7, 9: Recorded January 23, 1970, near Accokeek, MD.
5: Recorded January 19, 1969, at the home of Ralph Rinzler, Washington, D.C.
13: Recorded January 13, 1979, at the home of Mark and Sue Sandson, Arlington, VA.
Maybe a second link is missing.
ReplyDeleteHello Bob
ReplyDeleteA live recording on Arhoolie in 1983...
https://krakenfiles.com/view/E8lTY5RoMH/file.html
Have fun !
Don Dan
https://www.youtube.com/c/DonDanMusicChannel
LINK FOR WHEN I'M GONE
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Thanks Don.
ReplyDelete