The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Singer influenced key figures in rock ‘n’ roll

Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s unique gospel sound featured electric guitar.

- By Melissa Ruggieri mruggieri@ajc.com

When Sister Rosetta Tharpe was announced as the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2018 Early Influence award recipient, the music industry cheered, but also had another response: It’s about time.

The singer-musician born in Cotton Plant, Ark., in 1915 is often referred to as “the godmother of rock ‘n’ roll.”

Her 1938 hit, “Rock Me,” made her instantly memorable — a black woman who sang gospel music infected with the howls and scrapes of her distorted electric guitar.

Tharpe’s work throughout the 1940s busted boundaries. Her visceral version of the Negro spiritual “Down by the Riverside” in 1944 was entered into the National Recording Registry of the U.S. Library of Congress in 2004. As well, she recorded the first gospel song to translate to the R&B charts (then called “race” charts) with 1945’s “Strange Things Happening Every Day.”

But along with her own groundbrea­king work, she also was an integral inspiratio­n to a musician who would become one of the pillars of early rock ‘n’ roll/soul — Macon native Little Richard.

In 1947, Tharpe overheard then-14-year-old “Lil’ Richard” Penniman singing her gospel songs before she took the stage at Macon City Auditorium. She invited him to open her show — much to the dismay of the local concert promoter — and was so impressed that she paid him for his performanc­e.

The experience convinced the young artist to pursue a music career profession­ally.

Tharpe’s work also provided a blueprint for Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis, who all cited her influence.

Tharpe’s career continued to bloom in the 1950s. She regularly sold out arenas, and in 1951, more than 25,000 fans attended her on-stage wedding to manager Russell Morrison at Griffith Stadium in Washington, D.C. It was her third marriage.

But music changed by the beginning of the 1960s, and Tharpe’s brand of guitar-heavy gospel-blues slipped out of significan­ce. Rather than quit, she took her electric guitar to England, where she cultivated new fan bases in London and Liverpool.

Tharpe suffered a stroke in 1970 and developed diabetes, which led to the amputation of one of her legs. On Oct. 9, 1973, she experience­d another stroke while waiting to begin a recording session in Philadelph­ia and died at the age of 58.

While Tharpe doesn’t always receive the musical recognitio­n befitting her influence, she was

honored posthumous­ly by the U.S. Postal Service in 1998 with a 32-cent commemorat­ive stamp.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Sister Rosetta Tharpe, guitarplay­ing American gospel singer, gives an impromptu performanc­e in 1957 in a lounge at London Airport, following her arrival from New York.
AP PHOTO Sister Rosetta Tharpe, guitarplay­ing American gospel singer, gives an impromptu performanc­e in 1957 in a lounge at London Airport, following her arrival from New York.

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