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Elizabeth Cotten

Elizabeth "Libba" Cotten (née Nevills; January 5, 1893 – June 29, 1987)[1][2][3] was an influential American folk and blues musician. She was a self-taught left-handed guitarist who played a guitar strung for a right-handed player, but played it upside down.[4] This position meant that she would play the bass lines with her fingers and the melody with her thumb. Her signature alternating bass style has become known as "Cotten picking".[5] NPR stated "her influence has reverberated through the generations, permeating every genre of music."[6]

Elizabeth Cotten

Elizabeth Nevills

(1893-01-05)January 5, 1893
Carrboro, North Carolina, U.S.

June 29, 1987(1987-06-29) (aged 94)
Syracuse, New York, U.S.

  • Musician
  • songwriter

Her album Folksongs and Instrumentals with Guitar (1958), was placed into the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress, and was deemed as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The album included her signature recording "Freight Train", a song she wrote in her early teens.[7] In 1984, her live album Elizabeth Cotten Live!, won her a Grammy Award for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording, at the age of 90.[8] That same year, Cotten was recognized as a National Heritage Fellow by the National Endowment for the Arts.[9] In 2022, she was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as an early influence.[10]

Early life[edit]

Cotten was born in 1893[11] to a musical family near Chapel Hill, North Carolina,[11] in an area that would later be incorporated as Carrboro. Her parents were George Nevill (also spelled Nevills) and Louisa (or Louise) Price Nevill. Elizabeth was the youngest of five children. She named herself on her first day of school, when the teacher asked her name, because at home she was only called "Li'l Sis".[12] By the age of eight, she was playing songs. At age nine, she was forced to quit school and began work as a domestic worker.[13] At the age of twelve, she had a live-in job at Chapel Hill. She earned a dollar a month, that her mother saved up to buy her first guitar.[14][15] The guitar, a Sears and Roebuck brand instrument, cost $3.75 (equivalent to $127 in 2023).[14] Although self-taught, she became proficient at playing the instrument,[16] and her repertoire included a large number of rags and dance tunes.[13]


By her early teens, she was writing her own songs, one of which, "Freight Train", became one of her most recognized.[17] She wrote the song in remembrance of a nearby train that she could hear from her childhood home.[13] The 1956 UK recording of the song by Chas McDevitt and Nancy Whiskey was a major hit and is credited as one of the main influences on the rise of skiffle in the UK.[18]


Around the age of 13, Cotten began working as a maid along with her mother. On November 7, 1910, at the age of 17, she married Frank Cotten.[19] The couple had a daughter, Lillie, and soon after Elizabeth gave up guitar playing for family and church. Elizabeth, Frank and their daughter Lillie moved around the eastern United States for a number of years, between North Carolina, New York City, and Washington, D.C., finally settling in the D.C. area. When Lillie married, Elizabeth divorced Frank and moved in with her daughter and her family.

Rediscovery[edit]

Cotten retired from playing the guitar for 25 years, except for occasional church performances. She did not begin performing publicly and recording until she was in her 60s. She was discovered by the folk-singing Seeger family while she was working for them as a housekeeper.


While working briefly in a department store, Cotten helped a child wandering through the aisles find her mother. The child was Peggy Seeger, and the mother was the composer Ruth Crawford Seeger. Soon after this, Cotten again began working as a maid, this time for Ruth Crawford Seeger and Charles Seeger, and caring for their children, Mike, Peggy, Barbara, and Penny. The Seeger family kids, who were too young to pronounce "Elizabeth", began calling her "Libba", and she embraced that nickname later in life.[20] While working with the Seegers (a voraciously musical family that included Pete Seeger, a son of Charles from a previous marriage), she remembered her own guitar playing from 40 years prior and picked up the instrument again and relearned to play it, almost from scratch.[14]

Guitar style[edit]

Cotten began writing music while toying with her older brother's banjo. She was left-handed, so she played the banjo in reverse position. Later, when she transferred her songs to the guitar, she formed a unique style, since on a 5-string banjo the uppermost string is not a bass string, but a short, high-pitched string which ends at the fifth fret. This required her to adopt a unique style for the guitar. She first played with the "all finger down strokes" like a banjo.[14] Later, her playing evolved into a unique style of fingerpicking. Her signature alternating bass style is now known as "Cotten picking". Her fingerpicking techniques have influenced many other musicians.[26]

(1958)

Folksongs and Instrumentals with Guitar

Vol. 2: Shake Sugaree (1967)

Vol. 3: When I'm Gone (1979)

Masters of the Country Blues: Elizabeth Cotten and Jesse Fuller (1960)

Me and Stella: A Film about Elizabeth Cotten (1976)

Elizabeth Cotten Portrait Collection (1977–1985)

Homemade American Music (1980)

Libba Cotten: An Interview and Presentation Ceremony (1985)

Elizabeth Cotten with Mike Seeger (1994)

Legends of Traditional Fingerstyle Guitar (1994)

Mike Seeger and Elizabeth Cotten (1991)

Jesse Fuller and Elizabeth Cotten (1992)

The Downhome Blues (1994)

John Fahey, Elizabeth Cotten: Rare Performances and Interviews (1969 & 1994)

Rainbow Quest with Pete Seeger. Judy Collins and Elizabeth Cotten (2005)

Elizabeth Cotten in Concert, 1969, 1978, and 1980 (1969 & 2003)

The Guitar of Elizabeth Cotten (2002)

In 1980, 1982, and 1987, Cotten was nominated for a in the Traditional Blues Female Artist category.[27]

Blues Music Award

Cotten was a recipient of a 1984 awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts, which is the United States government's highest honor in the folk and traditional arts.[28]

National Heritage Fellowship

In 1985, she won the in the Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording category for Elizabeth Cotten Live![29]

Grammy Award

In 1986, she was nominated for a in the Best Traditional Folk Recording category for her 20th Anniversary Concert album.[29]

Grammy Award

In 2022, Cotten was posthumously inducted into the in the Early Influence category.[17][30]

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

In 2023, Cotten was named 36th best guitarist of all time by Rolling Stone.

[31]

Bastin, Bruce (1986). Red River Blues. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.

Cohen, John; Marcus, Greil (2001). There Is No Eye: John Cohen Photographs. New York: PowerHouse Books.

Cohn, Lawrence (1993). Nothing but the Blues: The Music and the Musicians. New York: Abbeville Press.

Conway, Cecilia (1995). African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.

Escamilla, Brian (1996). Contemporary Musicians: Profiles of the People in Music. Vol. 16.

Harris, Sheldon (1979). Blues Who's Who. New York: Da Capa Press.

Hood, Phil (1986). Artists of American Folk Music: The Legends of Traditional Folk, the Stars of the Sixties, the Virtuosi of New Acoustic Music. New York: Quill.

Menconi, David (2020). Step it Up and Go. University of North Carolina Press.  978-1-4696-5935-0.

ISBN

Santelli, Robert (2001). American Roots Music. New York: Harry N. Abrams.

Seeger, Mike. Liner notes accompanying Freight Train and Other North Carolina Folk Songs and Tunes, by Elizabeth Cotten. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Folkways, 1989 reissue of the 1958 album Folksongs and Instrumentals with Guitar.

Smith, Jessie Carney (1993). Epic Lives: One Hundred Black Women Who Made a Difference. Detroit: Visible Ink Press.

Smith, Jesse Carney, ed. (1992). Notable Black American Women. Detroit: Gale Research.

Veirs, Laura (January 16, 2018). Libba. Chronicle Books.  978-1-4521-4857-1.

ISBN

Wenberg, Michael (2002). Elizabeth's Song. (Children's book.) Hillsboro, Oregon: .

Beyond Words Publishing

Elizabeth Cotten

at AllMusic

Elizabeth Cotten

discography at Discogs

Elizabeth Cotten

Cotten discography at Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

for the WGBH series Say Brother

"Interview with Blues and Folk Singer Elizabeth Cotten"

Clip of Cotten performing in 1969

Elizabeth Cotten

Elizabeth Cotten Freight Train

Archived January 8, 2021, at the Wayback Machine

North Carolina Highway Marker for Elizabeth Cotten