Karen Dalton

Artist

Birthday July 19, 1937

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Bonham, Texas, United States

DEATH DATE 1993, Hurley, New York, United States (56 years old)

Nationality United States

#43383 Most Popular

1937

Karen J. Dalton (born Jean Karen Cariker; July 19, 1937 – March 19, 1993) was an American country blues singer, guitarist, and banjo player.

1960

She was associated with the early 1960s Greenwich Village folk music scene, particularly with Fred Neil, the Holy Modal Rounders, and Bob Dylan.

Although she did not enjoy much commercial success during her lifetime, her music has gained significant recognition since her death.

Artists like Nick Cave, Devendra Banhart, and Joanna Newsom have noted her as an influence.

Dalton was born Jean Karen Cariker in Bonham, Texas, but was raised in Enid, Oklahoma.

She also lived in Stillwater, Oklahoma, and Lawrence, Kansas.

With two divorces behind her at the age of 21, Dalton left Oklahoma and arrived in Greenwich Village, New York City in the early 1960s.

She brought her twelve string guitar, long-neck banjo, and at least one of her two children with her.

According to her daughter Abralyn Baird, at that point Dalton had lost two of her bottom teeth breaking up a fight between two of her boyfriends.

Dalton quickly became entrenched in the Greenwich Village folk musical scene of the 1960s.

She played alongside big names of the time, including Bob Dylan (who occasionally backed her up on harmonica), Fred Neil, Richard Tucker, and Tim Hardin.

She covered many of their songs in her own performances.

Dylan later wrote that "Karen had a voice like Billie Holiday and played guitar like Jimmy Reed.” She was among the first to sing Hardin's "Reason to Believe". She later married Tucker, with whom she sometimes played as a duo, and in a trio with Hardin.

While Dalton was a regular at famous folk venue Café Wha? and performed at benefit concerts for civil rights groups, she was a reluctant performer and refused to perform her own songs.

Combined with her use of alcohol and heroin, recording her music and touring was particularly hard.

Dalton moved to Colorado with husband Richard Tucker and daughter Abralyn (Abbe) and lived there for a while in the 1960s, in a small mining cabin in Summerville.

Eventually she moved back to New York via Los Angeles, and then to Woodstock, New York.

Dalton was "not interested in playing the music industry's games in an era when musicians had little other choice," as bass player and producer Harvey Brooks noted.

She often responded in anger when producers attempted to change her music while recording.

1962

Two recordings from 1962 and 1963, previously owned by Karen's friend Joe Loop who ran the little club "The Attic" in Boulder in the early 60's, were released on Megaphone in 2007 and 2008 as live album Cotton Eyed Joe and the home-recorded album ''Green Rocky Road.

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1969

At first, producer Nick Venet was unsuccessful in recording her first album, It's So Hard to Tell Who's Going to Love You the Best (Capitol, 1969).

It wasn't until he invited Fred Neil to a session that they were able to come away with recordings.

Even then, Venet and Neil were only successful by tricking Dalton into thinking the tape wasn't rolling.

Dalton cut most of the tracks with one take, and all in one night.

The record features songs from Neil, Hardin, Jelly Roll Morton, and Eddie Floyd & Booker T. Jones.

1971

Dalton's second album, In My Own Time (1971), was recorded at Bearsville Studios (which was set up by Bob Dylan's manager, Albert Grossman) and originally released by Woodstock Festival promoter Michael Lang's label, Just Sunshine Records.

The album was produced and arranged by Harvey Brooks, who played bass on it.

Piano player Richard Bell guested on the album.

Its liner notes were written by Fred Neil and its cover photos were taken by Elliott Landy.

Dalton brought her two teenage children, her dog, and her horse from Oklahoma to feel more at ease with recording.

1996

It was re-released by Koch Records on CD in 1996.

1997

It's So Hard to Tell Who's Going to Love You the Best was re-released on Koch Records in 1997, in collaboration with New York-based radio DJ and Karen Dalton fan Nicholas Hill, and with liner notes by Peter Stampfel.

1999

In 1999 the French label Megaphone music did a European re-release of the same album, which included a bonus DVD featuring rare performance footage of Dalton and a French TV feature on Karen Dalton from 1970.

2006

In My Own Time was re-released on CD and LP on November 7, 2006 by Light in the Attic Records.

2015

The compilation tribute album, Remembering Mountains: Unheard Songs by Karen Dalton, was released in 2015 by folk label Tompkins Square.

In similar fashion to Wilco and Billy Bragg’s adaptions of Woody Guthrie songs in Mermaid Avenue, the album features adaptations of Dalton's work by artists including Patty Griffin, Lucinda Williams, Josephine Foster, Sharon Van Etten, and Julia Holter.

The songs feature lyrics and poems Dalton wrote before her death, which were in the care of her friend, folk guitarist Peter Walker.

Dalton's bluesy, world-weary voice is often compared to jazz singer Billie Holiday, though Dalton loathed the comparison and said Bessie Smith was a greater influence.

Dalton sang blues, folk, country, pop, Motown—making over each song in her own style.