Cortelia Clark

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bornc.1906[1]
DiedDecember 24, 1969 (age c.63)
GenresBlues
Occupations
  • Musician
  • songwriter
Cortelia Clark
Bornc.1906[1]
DiedDecember 24, 1969 (age c.63)
GenresBlues
Occupations
  • Musician
  • songwriter
InstrumentGuitar
Years activec. 1955–1969

Cortelia Clark (c.1906 – December 24, 1969)[1][2][3] was an American blues singer and guitarist, known for his performances on the streets of Nashville. He won a Grammy Award for Best Folk Recording in 1967, for the album Blues in the Street, his only recording.[4][5]

Clark was born around 1906 in Chicago.[1] Sources give differing details over his loss of sight. Some state that he was blind from birth and from the age of 11 attended a school for the blind in Nashville, before starting to play and sing blues songs on street corners in the mid-1940s.[6] Others state that he lost his sight after an operation in the mid-1950s.[3] As well as performing on the street, he also sold shopping bags, on 5th Avenue between Church and Union Streets and at other locations.[7]

Around 1964, Mike Weesner, a student at Peabody College, made a demo tape of Clark at Globe Studio. This came to the attention of Bob Ferguson and Chet Atkins of RCA Nashville. Felton Jarvis, Elvis Presley's producer, was enlisted to produce the album. In December 1965, Weesner and Jarvis persuaded RCA to record Clark on the sidewalk, complete with prominently featured (but overdubbed) street noises and interactions with city dwellers.[5] Clark performed original songs and variations of familiar pop, country and blues songs, including the Everly Brothers' hit "Bye Bye Love", Blind Boy Fuller's "Truckin' My Blues Away", and "Walk Right In" as popularised by the Rooftop Singers.[4]

Despite the record selling fewer than 1,000 copies, Jarvis submitted it to the Recording Academy in the Folk category for 1966 record releases,[8] which it won (other nominees included Ravi Shankar; Peter, Paul and Mary; and Pete Seeger). However, the success had little impact on Clark, who continued to perform on the streets and was never recorded again.[4] He died in 1969 in a house fire in Nashville, after his kerosene heater exploded.[6][2]

Tributes

Discography

References

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