Elizabeth Cotten was born around 1893 outside of Chapel Hill, North Carolina. At a young age, she would borrow her brother's banjo, teaching herself how to play. Forced by financial circumstances to drop out of school in the third grade, she cleaned houses for 75 cents a month, eventually getting a 25-cent raise, to save up for a $3.75 Sears Roebuck Harmony Stella guitar. Elizabeth, being left-handed, played the right-handed guitar, upside down and backwards. Her signature alternating bass style, now known as "Cotten Picking," involved playing bass notes with her index finger and melody notes with her thumb.
Around age 12, she wrote her most famous song, "Freight Train." The song became popular during the revival of American folk music and British skiffle in the late 50s and early 60s. It was written about her hometown in North Carolina and dealt with many adult themes, including death and depression.
Elizabeth married Frank Cotten when she was 15 (not a particularly early age in that era) and had one child, Lily. As Elizabeth 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 Elizabeth, 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., Elizabeth found and returned a
very young and lost Peggy Seeger to her mother, Ruth Crawford Seeger. A
month later, Elizabeth began work in the household of the famous
folk-singing Seeger family, who gave her the nickname, "Libba".
The Seeger home was an amazing place for Elizabeth to have landed. 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 Elizabeth playing the family's gut-stringed guitar. Elizabeth apologized for playing the instrument without asking, but Peggy was astonished by what she heard. Eventually, the Seegers came to know Elizabeth's instrumental virtuosity and the wealth of her repertoire.
With help from the Seeger family, Elizabeth sued for copyright infringement and
eventually settled out of court in 1957, but, according to her
great-grandson, she only received a fraction of the royalties made off
the song.
1958, at the age of sixty-two, Elizabeth had recorded her first album, 'Elizabeth Cotten: Negro Folk Songs and Tunes', and in 1989 was reissued as 'Freight Train and Other North Carolina Folk Songs'. The album was 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 Elizabeth when she
was only eleven or twelve, the album provided accessible examples of some 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.
Elizabeth's later recordings, 'Shake Sugaree' from 1967 and 'When I'm and Gone' from 1979, continued to win critical acclaim. In 1984, her live album 'Elizabeth Cotten Live!', won her a Grammy Award
for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording, at the age of 90.
Elizabeth Cotten 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, here in New York City.
Elizabeth Cotten passed away in 1987, at the age of 94, leaving a permanent mark on the world of folk and blues music.
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| Elizabeth's mural in in Chapel Hill, North Carolina |
Elizabeth legacy lives on not only in her own recordings, but also in the many artists who continue to play her work. The Grateful Dead produced several renditions of "Oh, Babe, It Ain't No Lie" and "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad". Bob Dylan covered the ever-popular "Shake Sugaree," and "Freight Train.
In 2022, she was inducted into
the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
Today's freeloads are:
For the freeload, tell us who's your favorite Blues/Folk fingerpicker is.







Mississippi John Hurt. Thanks Babs
ReplyDeleteAin't no flies on Charlie Patton, though I'd pick Elizabeth Cotton. Eleanor Ellis oughta be better known than she is, IMAO.
ReplyDeleteI came to say Mississippi John Hurt, but Mumbles beat me to it.
ReplyDeletePlease enjoy this sweet tribute to EC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VqxtyM0SAw
C in California
Mississippi John Hurt is also my favorite. I've always wished, John and Elizabeth made an album together. They also would have made a cute couple.
ReplyDeleteJohn Fahey and Etta Baker, are no slouches, either.
Slightly more contemporary, but have been a huge Taj Mahal fan for decades.
ReplyDeleteAll great musicians but my favorite of more than 40 years is Blind Blake. Playing him drove my friends mad, but i loved it
ReplyDeleteSince I'm not superversed in the genre, I also go with Taj Mahal...
ReplyDeleteApart from Robert Johnson I'd say Blind Willie McTell & Son House.
ReplyDeleteI saw Elizabeth Cotten as a folksinger, I was walking past her and Michael Cooney sitting on straw bales during a Smithsonian festival on the mall, was that 1968? 1969? God, I tried for years to play freight train like i heard that day ! But Folk/Blues, I wish i'd have seen John Fahey or Jack Rose.
ReplyDeleteBen Chasny AKA Six Organs of Admittance
ReplyDeleteUnrelated:
Honorable mention because he was a favourite college professor of mine with a different name (Arthur) and a secret past I had no idea about until many years later: Harry Taussig -
"Fate is Only Once" / "Fate is Only Twice"
John Fahey. Not stricky Blues/Folk, but that was the basis for all the different directions he took.
ReplyDeleteFurry Lewis chosen by RevDocBaz
ReplyDeleteI don't know about favorites; that's always a little hard for me, in most musical and artistic realms. However, in this case, among the several friends I have who are good guitar players, Dave Nachmanoff stands out as a fingerpicker. Here's his song "Kindred Spirits," telling the LIbba Cotton story from a kid's perspective:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V70zQ_Mbi-I
D in California
I've always been partial to Mississippi John Hurt, not just in his playing but his demeanor.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I would correct, if I may. I reside in the small town abutting Chapel Hill where Elizabeth Cotton called home and we in Carrboro are proud to call her one of our own. Carrboro, not "just outside of Chapel Hill," is home to a long tradition of music and the arts. I'm within walking distance of the mural pictured above. --Muzak McMusics
Link
ReplyDeletehttps://workupload.com/file/zE9Zv4CabfL
Mississippi John Hurt
ReplyDeleteBy the way, this was a really informative overview of an artist I had never heard of before...
ReplyDeleteJohn Hurt for his thumb, I guess. I grew up with Ry Cooder, though... he stole from everybody and transcended his influences.
ReplyDeleteDoes Leo Kottke count?
ReplyDeleteSure, why not?
DeleteBert Jansch, master of hypnotic circular patterns.
ReplyDelete