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Enter Karen Dalton who was an exemplar of this tradition but whose youth and fashion-model beauty led her to be viewed by New York’s revivalists as a peer. Whereas most of the folk singers the revivalists experienced in the 60's were either wizened oldsters or seemed like exotic anachronisms, Karen appeared to be one of their own. She managed to exist outside their preconceptions of the museum-piece folk they were familiar with.
Karen took the opportunity to play music just as she pleased, very much part of the authentic “folk” process of transmission and translation that had operated in this country for centuries. Like her predecessors in this tradition she drew on whatever material caught her fancy whether it was a farm laborer’s song she’d learned as a child or a Ray Charles’ tune she’d heard on a record the day before and every style. While the foundation was rural home-brewed music that base was informed by jazz, pop, big band blues - the music that Leadbelly and his generation of folk singers did not perform for the revivalist audience. The synthesis she produced was perplexing, mysterious and excitingly innovative to the folks involved in New York’s revivalist scene who were primarily playing traditional songs as faithful to the version they’d first heard on Harry Smith’s Anthology Of American Folk Music collection or in some hushed coffee house as possible. Within a few years the likes of Tim Hardin, Fred Neil and Bob Dylan would have evolved radically new styles starting from the folk base and gone on to varying degrees of fortune and fame.
Meanwhile Karen continued to exercise her artistry via her interpretation and revision of pre-existing material rather than writing and performing "original material" – that’s not what folk singers did. As folk revivalism moved towards more mainstream incarnations and folk-rock and found greater and greater commercial acceptance, folk singers per se were largely left behind or marginalized, playing coffee houses and college campuses and re-recording songs from their youth. And Dalton was left behind with them, her case seeming just a bit stranger in that she had seemed like an integral part of the revivalists’ circles that evolving artistically and commercially at an ever-hastening pace.
By the time Karen recorded her first two studio albums in the late 60’s and early 70’s the musical world had changed radically and her own oeuvre was an anomalous anachronism. She and her more successful friends in the music business made valiant attempts to build bridges to the new rock audience that’d arisen, trying to put her amazing voice and playing in a contemporary context on It’s So Hard To Tell Who’s Going To Love You The Best and especially In My Own Time. Both records are entirely enchanting, but they couldn’t present Karen on her own terms. Green Rocky Road and the live release Cotton Eyed Joe, present Karen Dalton without filters; an otherworldly voice and instrument, captured exactly the way she wanted..
Bob Dylan: (arriving in NYC) "My favorite singer in the place was Karen Dalton"
Tim Hardin: "An incredible broad"
Fred Neil: "The greatest female singer I have ever heard"
Devendra Banhart: “Without a doubt my favorite singer.”
Additional biographical info and photos available upon request. delmorerecordings@gmail.com
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