Collins, Judy

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Judy Collins

Singer, songwriter, pianist, guitarist

For the Record

Writings

Compostitons

Selected discography

Sources

For the past three decades, Judy Collinss clear, sweet soprano and meticulous phrasing have lent a classical elegance to the varied songs of her expansive repertoire. A major figure in the folk song revival of the 1960s, Collins began her vocal career singing traditional Anglo-American ballads, giving way to the urban protest songs that captured the eras idealism and unrest. As American folk music moved away from social protest themes, and gained more sophisticated musical arrangements (often combined with rock), the singer expanded her own repertoire, delivering folk-rock, pop, show, and cabaret tunes in addition to folk classics. Ignoring the criticisms of folk purists, the individualistic Collinss eclectic choices included the caustic theatre songs of Marat/Sade and Three Penny Opera, the introspective art-songs of Leonard Cohen, the bittersweet perceptions of composer Jacques Brel, and her own poetic, autobiographical ballads. Once observing that the search for material was her greatest challenge, the folksinger reflected: I think there is a music coming out of this culture, a real kind of tradition being written. What Im trying to do is find songs that are the key points of our civilization.

Growing up in Denver, Colorado, Collins enjoyed a close relationship with her father, a blind radio personality and bandleader. With his encouragement she began to take piano lessons at the age of 5; her prodigious talent led to years of discipline and solitude as she prepared for a career as a concert pianist (for much of that time she studied with conductor Antonia Brico, a former pupil of Jan Sibelius). In high school Collins rebelled against the rigors of her classical training, however, abandoning the piano, and picking out the folk tunes she had grown to love on an old guitar.

At 17 she made her singing debut before an international Kiwanis Club convention, having won the Denver chapters Star of Tomorrow contest. Despite her lack of formal voice training, Collins began to sing traditional folk music in local clubs in 1959. Her success led to frequent appearances on the national coffeehouse circuit, with regular performances in Chicago, Boston, and New York; while singing at the Village Gate in New York City she was approached by an Elektra Records executive, who soon signed her to a recording contract. Collinss first two albums, A Maid of Constant Sorrow and Golden Apples of the Sun, consisted of Anglo-American folk classics, but by the LP Judy Collins #3 the vocalist had turned to the work of contemporary song writers addressing social issues, like Bob Dylan, Tom Paxton, and Phil Ochs.

Her political consciousness stirred by friendships with such urban folksingers/songwriters (and heightened by concerts on restless college campuses), Collins

For the Record

Full name, Judy Marjorie Collins; born May 1, 1939, in Seattle, Wash.; daughter of Charles (a radio master of ceremonies and bandleader) and Marjorie (Byrd) Collins; married Peter A. Taylor (a university lecturer) in 1958 (divorced, 1966); children: Clark Collin Taylor. Education: Studied classical piano with musical conductor Antonia Brico; attended MacMurray College and University of Colorado.

Began classical piano training at age 5, made public debut at 13 with Denver Symphony; began playing guitar and singing folk music while in high school; folk performer in Denver coffee-houses and clubs, 1959; regular performer on national coffeehouse circuit and at colleges, universities, and political rallies throughout 1960s; recording artist, 1961; songwriter, late 1960s. Performances have included international tours, folk festivals, television specials, and annual Christmas concerts at Carnegie Hall. Made acting debut as Solveig in New York Shakespeare Festival production of Henrik Ibsens Peer Gynt, 1969. Has served on Newport Folk Festivals board of directors.

Awards: Grammy Award for recording Both Sides Now, 1968; Academy Award nomination for documentary Antonia: A Portrait of a Woman (as writer and co-director), 1974; silver medal from Atlanta International Film Festival; blue ribbon from American Film Festival in New York City.

Addresses: Office c/o Charles R. Rothschild Productions, Inc., 330 East 48th St., New York, N.Y. 10010.

became a regular performer at political rallies throughout the decade, protesting racial inequality and the Vietnam War. (Her political causes have since included ecology, endangered species, and abortion rights.) Still, despite her critical and popular acclaim, Collins felt limited by the conventions of folk music, and her 1966 album In My Life showed the singers burgeoning sense of artistic adventure. A Beatle ballad, a medley of theatre songs with orchestra and full chorus, two idiosyncratic Cohen pieces (one an operatic monologue of a potential suicide) were among its offeringsan eclectic mix that Collins pursued in subsequent albums. She advanced the careers of unknown songwriters like Joni Mitchell, Randy Newman, Sandy Denny, and Robin Williamson along the way.

Beginning to write songs of her own by the end of the decade, Collins also resumed playing the piano, in accompaniment, as an alternative to her six- and twelve-string guitars. The vocalists first gold album, Wildflowers, was released in 1967, and contained the Grammy-winning cut Both Sides Now (written by Mitchell). A succession of top-selling LPs followed, with Whales and Nightingales introducing Collinss next surprising big hitan a cappella rendition of the spiritual Amazing Grace.

Through the seventies, eighties, and beyond, Collins has continued to forge her personal style and repertoire, tending towards pop, art-songs, and show tunes; in 1975 she had another hit single with Stephen Sondheims Send in the Clowns. Her increased sophistication has brought with it charges of inaccessibility, however: already known for her careful diction and sense of emotional control, Collins began to be perceived as too stately and chilly. Collins distances herself from the material and her audience, wrote Alanna Nash in a Stereo Review critique of the 1984 album Home Again, as if shes more concerned with delivering a recital than doing any kind of real communication. Others have found Collinss idiosyncratic selection of material offputtinga complaint turned on its head by admirers, who see the performers independence as one of her greatest virtues. A People music reviewer suggested that when Collins effects the right balance of the popular and the experimental, as in the album The Times of Our Lives, her recordings are as warm and affecting as ever. Collins voice sounds as sweet, clear, and lovely as it did on 1961s A Maid of Constant Sorrow, determined People critic Ralph Novak in his review of Home Again. She also still seems to be an extraordinarily adventuresome singer and one who never coasts; theres a lot to be said for such musical integrity.

Writings

Trust Your Heart (autobiography), Houghton, 1987. (With illustrator Jane Dyer)

My Father (childrens picture book), Little, Brown, 1989.

Compostitons

Has written, arranged, and adapted numerous songs, including Since Youve Asked, My Father, Secret Gardens, Born to the Breed, Wedding Song, and Shoot First.

Selected discography

A Maid of Constant Sorrow, Elektra, 1961.

Golden Apples of the Sun, Elektra, 1962.

Judy Collins #3, Elektra, 1963.

The Judy Collins Concert, Elektra, 1964.

Judy Collins Fifth Album, Elektra, 1965.

In My Life, Elektra, 1966.

Wildflowers, Elektra, 1967.

Who Knows Where the Time Goes, Elektra, 1968.

Recollections: The Best of Judy Collins, Elektra, 1969.

Whales and Nightingales, Elektra, 1970.

Living, Elektra, 1971.

Colors of the Day: The Best of Judy Collins, Elektra, 1972.

True Stories and Other Dreams, Elektra, 1973.

Judith, Elektra, 1975.

Bread and Roses, Elektra, 1976.

So Early in the Spring: The First Fifteen Years, Elektra, 1977.

Hard Time for Lovers, Elektra, 1979.

Running for Life, Elektra, 1980.

The Times of Our Lives, Elektra, 1982.

Home Again, Elektra, 1984.

Trust Your Heart, Gold Castle, 1987.

Sanity and Grace (live album), Gold Castle, 1989.

Sources

Books

The New Rolling Stone Record Guide, edited by Dave Marsh and John Swenson, Random House, 1983.

The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll, edited by Jon Pareles and Patricia Romanowski, Summit Books, 1983.

Simon, George T., and others, The Best of the Music Makers, Doubleday, 1979.

Periodicals

New York Times Book Review, November 29, 1987.

People, June 9, 1980; April, 19, 1982; November 12, 1984; December 11, 1989.

Stereo Review, August 1980; April 1985.

Nancy Pear

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