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Kate Wolf

 
Artist: Kate Wolf
  • Born: January 27, 1942, San Francisco, CA
  • Died: December 10, 1986
  • Active: '70s, '80s
  • Genres: Folk
  • Instrument: Vocals, Piano, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Weaver of Visions: The Kate Wolf Antholgy," "Poet's Heart," "Gold in California, Vols. 1 & 2: A Retrospective of Recordings 1975-1985"
  • Representative Songs: "Brother Warrior," "Carolina Pines," "Like a River"

Biography

Although she was a significant presence on the folk scene between the late '70s and mid-'80s, it's difficult to categorize Kate Wolf as a folk performer (though that is ultimately the broad category that suits her best). Although she largely employed acoustic instrumentation, she really owed more to the contemporary singer/songwriter movement than folk-based traditions. While it's easy to imagine her music appealing to fans of, say, Joni Mitchell, she never made the slightest impact on the rock audience, and barely drew from rock elements at all in her own work. Her music also had a strong country flavor, though not of the Nashville variety. Her fusion of country, folk, and singer/songwriter influences helped point the way for later country-folk-pop performers such as Nanci Griffith and Mary-Chapin Carpenter.

The appeal of Wolf's music is broad -- folk, pop, and rootsy country fans can all find something to like -- yet elusive. Her songs are not necessarily immediately striking upon first listen, and her body of work, if taken more than an album at a time, can justifiably be described as rather heterogenous. Her style is one that tends to grow on listeners over time, as Wolf is not about flash. Her songs, characterized by a strong narrative thread, are about the ebbs and flow of adult life, in terms that are neither overly sentimental nor mundane. She describes family, romance, and the rural life of her native Northern California with fine (though not studious) detail, projecting a sort of reserved sensitivity with her lower-than-average vocals. Hers is a voice of wisdom, comfort, and independence. If those aren't the most exciting things around, there are few other performers who convey such consistent warmth and dignity, making listeners she never met personally feel as if they were hearing letters from a friend.

Wolf didn't get her recording career going until the mid-'70s, by which time she was well into her thirties. Prior to emerging as a solo artist, she had headed the band Wildwood Flower (who backed her on her first two albums), and organized folk concerts and festivals in Northern California. Very much a self-starter, her first two albums were released on her own Owl label; thereafter, her catalog was handled by Kaleidoscope.

Over the next few years, Wolf built a strong following on the folk circuit with a series of fairly similar but remarkably consistent albums. Her recordings always benefited from first-rate instrumental support from various small bands; guitarist Nina Gerber was her most important associate in this regard. She was still at her peak when her life was tragically cut short by leukemia in 1986.

Rhino Records has reissued all of Wolf's albums on CD; in addition to the five studio discs, there are several collections of live and previously unreleased material. It's a bit much all in one gulp for most listeners, though there is an undisputed audience for her more marginal work. Neophytes are advised to start with the two-CD Gold in California set, a career-spanning retrospective of some of her best songs. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Kate Wolf
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Kate Wolf
Birth name Kathryn Louise Allen
Born January 27, 1942(1942-01-27)
Died December 10, 1986 (aged 44)
Genres Folk
Occupations Musician, Songwriter
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1976–1986
Labels Owl, Kaleidoscope, Rhino
Website www.katewolf.com

Kate Wolf (Kathryn Louise Allen) (January 27, 1942 – December 10, 1986) was an American folk singer and songwriter. Though her career was relatively short, she had a significant impact on the folk music scene, and many musicians continue to cover her songs. Her best-known compositions include "Here in California", "Love Still Remains", "Across the Great Divide", "Unfinished Life", and "Give Yourself to Love".

Born in San Francisco, California, she started her music career in the band Wildwood Flower before recording ten records as a solo artist. Her songs have since been recorded by artists such as Nanci Griffith and Emmylou Harris (whose recording of "Love Still Remains" was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1999).

She died in 1986, at age 44, after a long battle with leukemia.

Contents

Discography

  • Back Roads (1976)
  • Lines on the Paper (1977)
  • Safe at Anchor (1979)
  • Close to You (1980)
  • Give Yourself to Love (1982)
  • Poet's Heart (1985)
  • Gold in California – A Retrospective of Recordings (1986)
  • The Wind Blows Wild (1987)
  • An Evening in Austin (1988)
  • Looking Back at You (1994)
  • Carry It On (1996)
  • Weaver of Visions – The Kate Wolf Anthology (2000)

NOTE: Kate (along with fellow musician Don Coffin to whom she was married at the time) also appears on the 1973 album We Walked by the Water by folksinger Lionel Kilberg. This album was re-released in 1995 under the title Breezes and credited to Kate alone on the front cover. Her family was not thrilled about this and have explicitly gone on record as stating that Kate did not consider this album to be representative of her work.[1]

Interestingly, both We Walked by the Water and Kate's own album Lines on the Paper are dedicated to the late Gil Turner, who Kate and Don first met via Lionel Kilberg. Kate subsequently recorded her own version of Gil's much-covered folk anthem "Carry It On".

Music festival

Kate Wolf's music is celebrated each year at the Kate Wolf Memorial Music Festival, held at the Black Oak Ranch in Laytonville, California. Many thousands of guests attend this outdoor festival, which is regularly headlined by popular folk musicians such as Nina Gerber and Greg Brown. The festival traditionally closes with Kate's song, "Give Yourself to Love".

Tributes and covers

  • Australian singer-songwriter Eric Bogle wrote "Katie and the Dreamtime Land", one of his most popular songs, as a tribute to Wolf.
  • Greg Brown wrote and performed "Kate's Guitar", which is available on his 2004 album, In the Hills of California, recorded live at the Kate Wolf Memorial Music Festival.
Treasures Left Behind
  • In 1998, a tribute album entitled, Treasures Left Behind: Remembering Kate Wolf, was released by Red House Records. The album contains Kate Wolf songs performed by various artists, and the booklet contains tributes and remembrances about her.
Track listing
  1. "Give Yourself to Love" (Kathy Mattea)
  2. "These Times We're Living In" (Dave Alvin)
  3. "Friend of Mine" (Nanci Griffith)
  4. "Sweet Love" (John Gorka)
  5. "Here in California" (Lucinda Williams)
  6. "Like a River" (Peter Rowan & The Rowan Brothers)
  7. "Carolina Pines" (Cris Williamson & Tret Fure)
  8. "See Here, She Said" (U. Utah Phillips)
  9. "In China, or a Woman's Heart" (Rosalie Sorrels)
  10. "Tequila and Me" (Greg Brown & Ferron)
  11. "Back Roads" (Nina Gerber)
  12. "Cornflower Blue" (Eric Bogle)
  13. "Love Still Remains" (Emmylou Harris)
  14. "Thinking About You" (Terry Garthwaite)

References

External links


 
 
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