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Sarah
Ogan Gunning mastered one of this countrys genuine original
art forms, and she infused it with a message of tough vitality
as devastating and inspiring as her own life.
Gunning was born into a singing family which included
Aunt Molly Jackson and Jim Garland.
Her mother passed on a large collection of ballads,
hymns, love songs, and stories to her 15 children.
Sarahs father taught her spirituals and how to sing
them. But the
biggest influence on her life and her music may have come from
the fact that both her father and her first husband worked as
coal miners and were involved in the United Mine Workers of
America.
Sarah
Ogan Gunnings repertoire included original songs, well-known
mountain tunes to which she wrote original lyrics, and
spirituals, all sung a cappella-style.
I am a Girl of Constant Sorrow and I Hate the
Capitalist System capture both the style and content
that
made her unique. In
the 1930s and 40s she lived in New York City and sang with the
likes of Woody Guthrie, Pete
Seeger, and Burl Ives. Gunning
lived in obscurity for a while, and then re-surfaced during the
folk song popularization of the 1960s, when folklorist Archie
Green encouraged her to record her first album.
She began performing again, at venues such as Carnegie
Hall, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, and the Newport Folk
Festival. She died
in 1983 at a family songfest in Kentucky.

View
a clip from The Life of Sara Ogan Gunning, an Appalshop
film directed by Mimi Pickering.
Visit Appalshop's Web
site to find out how to order a copy.
Read
more about Sarah Ogan
Gunning.
Visit Folk
Legacy Records, the folks who recorded Sarah Ogan Gunning and
other musicians like her.
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