Kate Wolf | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Kathryn Louise Allen |
Born | San Francisco, California, US | January 27, 1942
Died | December 10, 1986 San Francisco, California, US | (aged 44)
Genres | Folk, Country folk |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Vocalist, acoustic guitar, piano |
Years active | 1976–1986 |
Labels | Owl, Kaleidoscope, Rhino |
Website | katewolf.com |
Kate Wolf (born Kathryn Louise Allen; January 27, 1942 – December 10, 1986) was an American folk singer and songwriter.[1] Though her career was relatively short, she had a significant impact on the folk music scene. Her best-known compositions include "Here in California", "Love Still Remains", "Across the Great Divide", "Unfinished Life", “Green Eyes” and "Give Yourself to Love". She recorded six albums as a solo artist.[2] She was elected to the NAIRD Independent Music Hall of Fame in 1987.[1] Her songs have since been recorded by Nanci Griffith and Emmylou Harris (whose recording of "Love Still Remains" was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1999[3]).
Biography
Wolf was born in San Francisco to John Fred Allen (*1915) and Ernestine Ruth Allen, née Endicott (1918−1996). She began studying piano at 4 but quit at 16 because of her shyness.[1] During their senior year (1959–60) at Berkeley High School, Kathy Allen and her friend Marian Auerbach (now Shapiro) sang folk songs at the Berkeley High School Talent Shows (1957 and 1960). At age 19 she first met Saul Wolf, an architecture student at UC Berkeley; they married two years later.[4] They had two children, born in 1964 and 1967.[4]
In 1969 she became part of the Big Sur music community and developed rapidly as a guitarist and songwriter, influenced by such friends as Gil "Jellyroll" Turner and George Schroder.[1] In 1971, she parted from Saul Wolf on good terms and moved to Sonoma County. There she formed her first band, The Wildwood Flower, with Don Coffin, whom she later married.[4]
Her first album, Back Roads, released in 1976 on her own label, Owl Records,[2] was recorded in a living room with the band Wildwood Flower, and was "remarkably well done."[1] An important mentor, friend and touring companion was Utah Phillips.[5] In 1979, she separated from Don Coffin, and the Wildwood Flower folded, but guitarist and mandolin player Nina Gerber became her accompanist for the rest of her career.[4]
She married again in 1982 to Terry Fowler until her death in 1986. She died in December 1986, at age 44, after a long struggle with leukemia.[6] She is buried at a small church cemetery in Goodyears Bar, California. In 1987, the World Folk Music Association established the Kate Wolf Award to honor her memory.[7]
Discography
- Back Roads (1976) (billed as Kate Wolf and the Wildwood Flower)
- Lines on the Paper (1977) (billed as Kate Wolf and the Wildwood Flower)
- 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 (1988)
- An Evening in Austin (1988)
- Looking Back at You (1994)
- Carry It On (1996)
- Weaver of Visions – The Kate Wolf Anthology (2000)
- Live in Mendocino (2018)
A live performance by Kate Wolf in 1981, comprising seven songs on which she is accompanied by Nina Gerber and Ford James, is included in the 2024 album Bear's Sonic Journals: Sing Out!.
Wolf, 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 Wolf alone on the front cover. Her family has stated that Wolf did not consider these songs as representative of her work.[8]
Both Kilberg's We Walked by the Water and Wolf's own album Lines on the Paper are dedicated to Gil Turner, who Wolf and Coffin first met via Lionel Kilberg. Wolf subsequently recorded her own version of Turner's much-covered folk anthem "Carry It On".
A number of Wolf's albums were done in collaboration with Bill Griffin.
Legacy
Music festival
Wolf's music was celebrated each year toward the end of June at the Kate Wolf Memorial Music Festival held at Black Oak Ranch in Laytonville, California. Several thousand guests attended this outdoor festival, which was regularly headlined by popular folk musicians such as Nina Gerber and Greg Brown. The festival traditionally closed with Wolf's song "Give Yourself to Love".[3]
The 25th annual Kate Wolf Music Festival was scheduled for June 2020, then postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It took place 2 years later, as a 4-day festival, rescheduled to June 23–26, 2022. According to the promoters, Back Road Productions, 2022 was the final Kate Wolf Music Festival.[citation needed]
Tributes and covers
- American folk duo Buskin and Batteau wrote "Never Cry Wolf" as a tribute to Wolf.[9]
- Scottish-born Australian singer-songwriter Eric Bogle wrote "Katie and the Dreamtime Land" as a tribute to Wolf.
- Greg Brown wrote and performed "Kate's Guitar", which is on his 2004 album In the Hills of California, recorded live at the Kate Wolf Memorial Music Festival.
- 'Gaelic Americana' singer Kyle Carey covered Wolf's song "Across the Great Divide" which is on her 2014 album North Star.
- "Across the Great Divide" is the first track on Nanci Griffith's 1993 cover album called Other Voices, Other Rooms. She is accompanied by Emmylou Harris.
- Klezmer revival folk musicians Daniel Kahn and Sarah Mina Gordon premiered a Yiddish-language cover of Wolf's "Telluride" at the Yiddish Book Center's YidStock Klezmer Festival in July 2019.
- Songwriter, Joel Koosed, upon hearing on the radio of Wolf's death, wrote "Goodbye, Kate Wolf."
- In 1998, a tribute album titled Treasures Left Behind: Remembering Kate Wolf was released by Red House Records. The album contains Wolf songs performed by various artists and the booklet contains tributes and remembrances about her.
Track listing:- "Give Yourself to Love" (Kathy Mattea)
- "These Times We're Living In" (Dave Alvin)
- "Friend of Mine" (Nanci Griffith)
- "Sweet Love" (John Gorka)
- "Here in California" (Lucinda Williams)
- "Like a River" (Peter Rowan & The Rowan Brothers)
- "Carolina Pines" (Cris Williamson & Tret Fure)
- "See Here, She Said" (U. Utah Phillips)
- "In China, or a Woman's Heart" (Rosalie Sorrels)
- "Tequila and Me" (Greg Brown & Ferron)
- "Back Roads" (Nina Gerber)
- "Cornflower Blue" (Eric Bogle)
- "Love Still Remains" (Emmylou Harris)
- "Thinking About You" (Terry Garthwaite)
- In 2002, Will Oldham under the name Bonny Billy and Rainywood (who would later become Brightblack Morning Light) released a Kate Wolf tribute split single. Oldham covered Wolf's "Brother Warrior" while Rainywood covered Wolf's "Cornflower Blue". The single was issued by Oldham's Palace Records through Drag City Records.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e "Kate Wolf", pp. 533–534, in All Music Guide, 2nd edition (1994), edited by Michael Erlewine. San Francisco: Miller Freeman Books. OCLC 989591409.
- ^ a b "Kate Wolf Discography". katewolf.com. February 15, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2017.
- ^ a b "Kate Wolf: Give Yourself to Love". Legacy.com. December 10, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
- ^ a b c d Wolf, Max; Keller, Jamie. "Kate Wolf Biography". katewolf.com. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ "Folksinger Utah Phillips to perform at the Arboretum June 21". UC Santa Cruz News. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
- ^ "Kate Wolf, 44; Folk Singer, Songwriter". Los Angeles Times. December 14, 1986. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
- ^ Noble, Richard E. (2009). Number #1 : the story of the original Highwaymen. Denver: Outskirts Press. p. 143. ISBN 9781432738099. OCLC 426388468.
- ^ "Breezes". Official Kate Wolf Website. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
- ^ "Buskin and Batteau", World Folk Music Association.
External links
- American folk singers
- American women folk singers
- American women singer-songwriters
- Singer-songwriters from California
- 20th-century American singer-songwriters
- 20th-century American women singers
- Musicians from the San Francisco Bay Area
- Musicians from Berkeley, California
- Singers from San Francisco
- Songwriters from San Francisco
- People from Sonoma County, California
- Deaths from leukemia in California
- 1942 births
- 1986 deaths