Thursday, 2 July 2026

Janette Carter born July 2, 1923


Janette Carter (July 2, 1923 – January 22, 2006), was the last surviving member of country's immortal Carter Family, championing the cause of traditional American roots music into the 21st century. 

Janette Carter was born in Maces Springs, Virgina and was the youngest daughter of A.P. and Sara Carter Jeanette learned autoharp from her mother and at age twelve began appearing with the Family who signed with RCA Victor producer/talent scout Ralph Peer in 1927. Over the course of classics like "Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow," "Keep on the Sunny Side," and "No Depression," the Carters introduced the pure, poignant harmonies and intricate melodies that would define country & western for decades to follow, establishing the trio as the most influential group in roots music history. 

Three Carter recording sessions took place in Charlotte. The first two were arranged by RCA Victor in May of 1931; the final session was undertaken in June of 1938 for Decca Records. Twenty-nine sides were recorded in all.Despite their commercial success A.P. and Sara Carter divorced in 1932. Seven years later, Sara married A.P.'s cousin Coy Bayes and relocated to California, taking her children with her. The year 1938 proved to be especially successful for the Carters. 

They were hired by Consolidated Drug Trade Products—the Chicago-based maker of Peruna tonic, Kolorbak hair dye, and Radio Girl perfume—and sent to Texas where they broadcast daily over high-wattage border radio stations just inside Mexico. The border stations reached much of North America and introduced the Carters to hundreds of thousands of new fans. By the late 1930s Jeanette and her bother Joe were regularly adding their voices to the Carter Family broadcasts on border radio and over WBT. Along the way she helped her father gather traditional tunes from rural singers. A. P. would write down the words and Janette would commit the tunes to memory. “She was my tape recorder,” A. P. is quoted as saying proudly.

A.P. & Sara Carter with Janette and Joe

When not broadcasting on border radio, Consolidated Drug brought the Carter Family back to powerful 50,000-watt WBT in Charlotte. A Charlotte Observer radio listing for June 1939 indicates that the Carters were then broadcasting a “farm time” show with announcer Grady Cole each weekday morning, and a second half-hour program every afternoon. This schedule seems to have continued into early 1940 when the family returned to Texas for more broadcasts and transcriptions. Historians report that the family returned to Charlotte in late 1941 or early 1942 for a final six months of work for WBT. It was then that the Carter Family concluded its recording career, but in 1952 both A.P. and Sara agreed to a comeback, enlisting Janette and her brother Joe before signing to the Acme label to record some 100 songs over the next four years.  

                                  

Following her father's 1960 death, Janette, who was at the time an elementary school cook, dedicated her life to preserving their music and legacy, hosting informal music programs at A.P.'s Poor Valley, Virgina, retail store. Although she never earned the commercial or critical acclaim awarded her sister June Carter Cash, Janette also mounted a solo career, in 1972 releasing her debut LP, Storms Are on the Ocean, on the tiny Birch label. Howdayadoo followed on Traditional Records a year later. 

In 1976 she established the Hiltons, VA-based Carter Family Fold, a nonprofit amphitheater and museum site built from old railroad ties and school bus seats dedicated to the old-time music of rural Appalachia. Despite the Fold's strict adherence to traditional acoustic music, Janette eventually eased her restrictions in order to allow her brother-in-law Johnny Cash to play an electric set. 

She directed the centre and served as master of ceremonies and performer at the Saturday night shows, often accompanied by her brother Joe. She toured in the United States and abroad, appeared on radio and TV and was recognized as a living musical treasure. But by all accounts she remained an unaffected country woman who called everybody, including former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, “honey.”

Carter told a Washington Post reporter in 1989 that a visitor to the center had once asked her what she was striving for. “That’s when it hit me,” she said. “I’m not striving for anything. I’ve reached it.” Carter continued hosting weekly concerts at the Fold into her eighties, and in 2004 the Bear Family label assembled Deliverance Will Come, compiling the entirety of her slim solo output. For a long time she battled Parkinson's disease and other illnesses, then after a fall she was taken to the Holston Valley Medical Center, Kingsport, Tennessee,  where she died on January 22, 2006 at the age of 82 years.

She was 82 years old. She was buried next to her mother, Sara Carter Bayes, and her brother, Joe, at the Mount Vernon United Methodist Church Cemetery in Maces Spring.

Carter is a recipient of a 2005 National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts, which is the United States' highest honour in the folk and traditional arts, in recognition for her lifelong advocacy for the performance and preservation of Appalachian music.

(Edited from AllMusic, Wikipedia, History South & Masters of Traditional Arts)

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

For "Janette Carter – Deliverance Will Come (2004 Bear Family)" go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/8bm4EvK5

Bury Me Beneath The Willow
Lonesome Street
Listen To The Mockingbird (instrumental)
I Ain't Gonna Work Tomorrow
Sinking In The Lonesome Sea
I Found Jesus
Storms Are On The Ocean
Neath The Shade Of A Beautiful Pine
Red Wing (instrumental)
Little Moses
In The Shadow Of Clinch Mountain
Joy, Joy, Joy
Howdayado!
Little Rosewood Casket
Wayworn Traveller
Take-Me-Back Blues
Johnny Doesn't Live Here Anymore
Waltz, Kitty, Waltz
Lonesome Pine Special
Give Him One More As He Goes
Heartbreaking Waltz
Dark And Stormy Weather
My Native Home
Little Moses
Kissin' Is A Crime
My Dixie Darlin'
Sea Of Galilee
I'm Leaving You
I'm Missing You (& J.E. MAINER)
Johnny Doesn't Live Here Anymore
The Storms Are On The Ocean

Here's an album I found on "Allen`s archive of early and old country music" blog which has been dormant since October 2000.

For "Janette and Joe Carter and Dale Jett - Live! at The Carter Fold (1984 Poor Valley)" go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/HMM4e76p

1 Carter's Melody
2 Lonesome
3 Morning Sunlight
4 You've Been A Friend To Me
5 Breezes
6 Wildwood Flower
7 Amazing Grace
8 Through The Eyes Of An Eagle
9 Hog Call - Lost Indian
10 Old Holston

And found this one on YouTube @ 192

For "Janette Carter – Bouquet Of Dandelions (Not On Label)" go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/8qGpPJJx

1. Mama's Boy
2. Rita And Dale
3. If Only I Were A Child Again
4. Amazing Grace
5. A Kind, Gentle Man
6. Just The Right Size
7. Sara Lee
8. My Memories
9. Bouquet Of Dandelions
10. My Appalachian Mountain Home
11. Wildwood Flower

A self release by Janette possibly during 2003/04 on tape. DIY at best. Sounds like it was recorded in a living room. No fireworks. No vocal runs. Just... faith. And maybe a shaky note or two. But that's why it works. (Bandcamp notes) Re-issued Jan 2025 as CDR