01-19-2010, 10:31 AM
|
#1
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: ontario, canada
Posts: 5,265
|
fare thee well, Kate. Kate McGarrigle has died.
|
|
|
01-19-2010, 09:46 PM
|
#2
|
Moderator
Join Date: May 2000
Posts: 16,001
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate
love that Rufus..not so much mum and auntie...
sad song!
|
|
|
01-19-2010, 10:02 PM
|
#3
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 618
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate
Folk singer Kate McGarrigle dies at 63 Posted: January 19, 2010, 8:30 AM by Ron Nurwisah
Montreal folk singer Kate McGarrigle has died at age 63. The singer had reportedly been battling clear-cell carcinoma.
Kate and her sister Anna were better known as the McGarrigle Sisters. The duo were inducted into the Order of Canada in 2003 and have released a number of albums in French and English. The two were famous for songs such as "Work Song," "Cool River," "Lying Song"* and "Heart Like a Wheel," which was the title song for a 1975 album by Linda Ronstadt.
The duo's 1976 debut in London resulted in one British critic saying they were among "the very best voices to be heard in popular music today."
Kate was also mother to musicians Rufus Wainwright and Martha Wainwright, whom she had with fellow folk singer and former husband Loudon Wainwright III.
CBC Radio host Jian Ghomeshi paid tribute to Kate. "RIP Kate McGarrigle. One of our greats. And matriarch of the Wainwright magic. Your music will live on," Ghomeshi wrote on his twitter feed.
The Daily Telegraph's Neil McCormick has some lovely words for Kate McGarrigle:
Being head of that dynasty might be enough to earn her a place in popular music history, but Kate was a wonderful musician in her own right, recording 10 albums with her sister Anne McGariggle. The sisters had high, thin voices but they weaved around each other in such tight, flowing harmony that the effect was completely magical and bewitching. Bi-lingual Canadians, their repertoire included traditional folk in English and French, and original songs of their own (which are striking enough to have been recorded by such artists as Linda Rondstadt, Maria Muldaur, Kirsty MacColl, Billy Bragg, Alison Moorer, Emmylou Harris, The Corrs, Annie Sophie Von Otter and Elvis Costello. And even her ex-husband, Loudon).
One Kate And Anna McGarrigle album in particular occupies a special place in my heart (and record collection). ‘Entre Lajeunesse et la sagesse’ was released in 1980, and is better known to (English speaking) admirers as The French Record. My editor used to play it in the offices of Hot Press, where I worked as a 19-year-old graphic designer, and I fell in love with it. I speak only high school French, and I really have no idea what these songs are about, but the album just worked its way into my consciousness and my heart.
A cute animated clip called Log Driver's Waltz (McGarrigle Sisters)
More on the link to the article below;
http://network.nationalpost.com/np/b...ies-at-63.aspx
|
|
|
01-19-2010, 10:47 PM
|
#4
|
Moderator
Join Date: May 2000
Posts: 16,001
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate
I knew she'd been fighting cancer. She seemed pretty frail at the Seeger event.
Very sad news.
|
|
|
01-20-2010, 07:07 AM
|
#5
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Canada
Posts: 6,862
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate
A lovely voice & a beautiful person has been silence.
|
|
|
01-20-2010, 09:22 AM
|
#6
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: ontario, canada
Posts: 5,265
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate
it was wonderful to hear Rufus describe the last hours with family around bedside...'she went out in a haze of song'...that's how i'd like to go
i never knew her ex, Loudon, married Suzzy Roche
another nice article, tells of why she and sis are not so well known by the masses
http://www.thestar.com/news/obituary...t-family-first
|
|
|
01-20-2010, 10:07 AM
|
#7
|
Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: NJ
Posts: 97
|
Kate McGarrigle, Canadian Singer and Songwriter, Dies at 63
Kate McGarrigle, a Canadian singer who, with her sister Anna, captivated critics and fellow musicians with warm harmonies and a style that drew on both folk traditions and the personalized approach of 1970s singer-songwriters, died on Monday at her home in Montreal. She was 63.
Kate McGarrigle, right, with her sister Anna in 1990.
The cause was clear-cell sarcoma, a form of cancer, said Barry Taylor, the manager for Ms. McGarrigle’s son, the singer Rufus Wainwright.
Born in Montreal and raised in St.-Sauveur-des-Monts, a small town about 50 miles north, Ms. McGarrigle absorbed a range of musical traditions around a musical hearth. Her father, Frank, was of Irish-Canadian stock and steeped in Stephen Foster and turn-of-the-century parlor songs; from her mother, Gaby, she and her two elder sisters — the oldest McGarrigle sister, Jane, was a church organist — learned old songs in French.
“Music was always there at home,” Kate McGarrigle said in a 1997 interview in Sing Out! magazine. “At parties, somebody would get up and sing, and my father would accompany them and sing the harmony. There were lots of friends and uncles and each would get up and give their big song.”
In the 1960s Kate, Anna and two boyfriends formed the Mountain City Four, which became one of Montreal’s leading folk groups. Kate — 14 months younger than Anna — also studied engineering and science at McGill University, and in 1970 she moved to New York City for a career as a musician. In 1974 Warner Brothers signed Kate and Anna to a recording contract. Their first album, “Kate and Anna McGarrigle,” was released in 1976.
Critics were immediately smitten. “Their voices have a plaintive allure full of light vibrato and husky emotionalism, and they blend together exquisitely in harmonies,” John Rockwell wrote in The New York Times. Rolling Stone’s review declared, “Not since Carole King’s ‘Tapestry’ has the female voice been recorded with such unblemished intimacy.”
But with Kate pregnant, the McGarrigles did not tour for more than a year after the album was released, and however many accolades they received from critics, their songs did not fit radio playlists. They released 10 albums, most recently “The McGarrigle Christmas Hour” (Nonesuch) in 2005, but their biggest commercial success came when other singers recorded their songs, most notably Linda Ronstadt (Anna’s “Heart Like a Wheel”) and Maria Muldaur (Kate’s “Work Song”).
Love and family life were central themes in both women’s music, and their songs often addressed romance’s place in the quotidian details of life. Kate McGarrigle’s 1990 song “I Eat Dinner” contemplates love lost among the leftovers, and both sisters’ “Matapedia,” from 1996, is based on a real event in Kate’s life, when an old flame saw her 17-year-old daughter, Martha, and mistook her for her mother.
Martha, like Rufus, has become a noted singer and songwriter. Their father is the singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III, who was married to Ms. McGarrigle in the 1970s. That marriage ended in divorce. Both children survive her, as do her two sisters and a grandson.
The McGarrigle sisters rarely toured, but when they performed it often became a family affair, with musical friends and relatives sitting in. Their 1998 album “The McGarrigle Hour” (Hannibal) was based around this model, with Ms. Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris and Martha, Rufus and Loudon Wainwright. For a number of years the McGarrigle sisters performed a Christmastime show at Carnegie Hall, and Kate’s final concert was another family Christmas show, at the Royal Albert Hall in London on Dec. 9.
“They were brought up in a very close-knit and somewhat old-fashioned way,” Rufus Wainwright said of his mother and aunt in a telephone interview on Tuesday, “a nice ‘Waltons’ way, and so they could never be too far away from each other.”
|
|
|
01-20-2010, 01:00 PM
|
#8
|
Moderator
Join Date: May 2000
Posts: 16,001
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate. Kate McGarrigle has died.
|
|
|
01-20-2010, 06:48 PM
|
#9
|
Guest
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate. Kate McGarrigle has died.
So sad to learn of her passing
Heart Like a Wheel:
|
|
|
01-21-2010, 10:35 AM
|
#10
|
Moderator
Join Date: May 2000
Posts: 16,001
|
Re: fare thee well, Kate. Kate McGarrigle has died.
|
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:07 PM.
|