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Archive for June, 2015

July Women’s History Events & Birthdays via National Women’s History Project

July Women’s History Events & Birthdays

In July we celebrate essential democratic anniversaries — the birth of the United States on July 4, 1776 and the birth of the Women’s Rights Movement on July 19-20, 1848.

On July 19-20, 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott spearheaded the first women’s rights convention in American History.  Over 300 women and men came to Seneca Falls, New York to protest the mistreatment of women in social, economic, political, and religious life.  This marked the first public meeting calling for women’s right to vote.

July Women’s History Events

  • July 2, 1979 – The Susan B. Anthony dollar is released
  • July 2, 1937 – Amelia Earhart’s plane is lost in the Pacific Ocean near Howland Island
  • July 2, 1964 – President Lyndon Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act; Title VII prohibits sex discrimination in employment
  • July 4, 1876 – Suffragists crash the Centennial Celebration in Independence Hall to present the Vice President with the “Declaration of the Rights of Women” written by Matilda Joselyn Gage
  • July 6, 1957 – Althea Gibson is the first African American woman player to win a Wimbledon title in women’s tennis singles
  • July 7, 1981 – President Reagan nominates Sandra Day O’Connor as the first woman Supreme Court Justice?
  • July 12, 1984 – Representative Geraldine Ferraro (D-New York) is chosen as the first female to run for Vice President of the United States on the Democratic Party ticket with Walter Mondale (D-Minnesota)
  • July 14, 1917 – 16 women from the National Women’s Party were arrested while picketing the White House demanding universal women’s suffrage; they were charged with obstructing traffic
  • July 19-20, 1848 – The Seneca Falls Convention, the country’s first women’s rights convention, is held in Seneca Falls, New York Women’s Rights Movement 
  • July 20, 1942 – The first class of Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) begins at Fort Des Moines, IA

July Birthdays

  • July 1, 1895 (1997) – Lucy Howorth, attorney, U.S. magistrate, legislator, suffragist, held positions in federal agencies during the 1930s and 1940s
  • July 1, 1904 (1998) – Mary Steichen Calderone, physician and sex educator, Medical Director of Planned Parenthood (1953-1964), principal founder and president of Sex Information and Education Council of the United States (1964)
  • July 1, 1915 (1979) – Jean Stafford, writer of short stories and novels, won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1970
  • July 1, 1916 – Olivia de Havilland, actress, winner of the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1946 and 1949, played Melanie in “Gone With the Wind”
  • July 1, 1931 – Leslie Caron, actress and dancer, starred in “An American in Paris” (1951) and “Gigi” (1958), wrote autobiography “Thank Heaven” in 2010
  • July 1, 1941 – Twyla Tharp, dancer and choreographer, widely-honored founder of Twyla Tharp Dance company (1965; merged with American Ballet Theatre in 1988), which expanded boundaries of ballet and modern dance
  • July 2, 1922 (1987) – Eleanor Leacock, cultural anthropologist, studied the Native North Americans, and issues of gender and class, racism, and poverty July 3, 1908 – author of 31 books on culinary arts, travel, and memoirs, founder of the Napa Valley Wine Library in California
  • July 4, 1898 (1997) –Dr. Pilar Barbosa de Rosario, historian and teacher, first woman to teach at University of Puerto Rico (1921), established the history and social studies departments there, named official historian of Puerto Rico in 1993
  • July 4, 1918 (2013) – Pauline Esther Friedman, also known as Abigail Van Buren, was an American advice columnist and radio show host who began the “Dear Abby” column in 1956
  • July 5, 1899 (1990) – Anna Hedgeman, civil rights activist and educator, first African American woman to serve in the cabinet of the New York mayor (1954-58), helped plan the 1963 March on Washington
  • July 7, 1861 (1912) – Nettie Stevens, biologist, discovered X and Y sex chromosomes
  • July 7, 1908 (1986) – Harriette Simpson Arnow, writer and educator, author of “The Dollmaker” (1954), writer with the Federal Writer’s Project of the WPA (1934-39)
  • July 7, 1915 (1998) – Margaret Walker, poet and novelist, her poem “For My People” (1942) won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award, wrote novel “Jubilee” in 1966
  • July 8, 1902 (1981) – Gwendolyn Bennett, Harlem Renaissance poet, short story writer and artist, wrote a column “The Ebony Flute” for the journal “Opportunity,” co-founder of “Fire!!” a literary journal
  • July 8, 1926 (2004) – Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, writer and lecturer, developed techniques for counseling the dying and their families
  • July 10, 1875 (1955) – Mary McLeod Bethune, educator, founder of the National Council of Negro Women, served as Minority Affairs Advisor to Franklin Delano Roosevelt
  • July 10, 1882 (1975) – Ima Hogg, Texas philanthropist, patron of the arts, supporter of mental health and child welfare organizations, and savior of many historic structures
  • July 10, 1891 (1982) – Edith Quimby, biophysicist, pioneer in the use of radiation in medicine and the development of standards for radiation protection
  • July 10, 1910 (1998) – Mary Bunting, microbiologst, president of Radcliffe College (1959-72), oversaw the integration of Radcliffe into Harvard, founded the Bunting Institute at Radcliffe which helped women return to careers after family obligations, first woman on the Atomic Energy Commission
  • July 10, 1933 (1989) – Jan DeGaetani, versatile mezzo-soprano and an outstanding teacher at the Aspen Music Festival and the Eastman School in Rochester
  • July 13, 1910 (1983) – Josefina Niggli, playwright, moved to North Carolina from Mexico after penning prize-winning short stories; wrote first novel, Mexican Village, in 1945, later wrote television scripts including “The Twilight Zone”
  • July 14, 1911 (1998) – Gertrude Goldhaber, physicist, an early researcher into nuclear structure and the properties of nuclei, the third woman to be elected to the National Academy of Sciences (1972)
  • July 14, 1916 (1988) – Muriel Snowden, civil rights worker, co-founded Freedom House (1949) with her husband in Boston as a community organization to promote self-sufficiency and social justice
  • July 15, 1899 (1990) – Estelle Ishigo, artist, joined her Japanese-American husband in a Wyoming internment camp during WWII, made sketches of her experience for the War Relocation Authority, published “Lone Heart Mountain” in 1972 chronicling her internment
  • July 15, 1923 (1995) – Connie Boucher, artist, helped start the charactermerchandising industry by licensing characters such as Charles Schulz’s “Peanuts” and Maurice Sendak’s “Where the Wild Things Are”
  • July 16, 1821 (1910) – Mary Baker Eddy, founded the Church of Christ, Scientist
  • July 16, 1862 (1931) – Ida B. Wells-Barnett, journalist, newspaper editor, crusader against lynching, and civil rights leader
  • July 16, 1907 (1990) – Barbara Stanwyck, actress, started as a dancer in the Ziegfeld Follies in 1922, worked on stage, and most notably in movies and television, highest paid woman in the United States in 1944
  • July 16, 1911 (1995) – Ginger Rogers, actress and dancer, partnered with Fred Astaire, won Academy Award for “Kitty Foyle” (1940)
  • July 17, 1898 (1991) – Berenice Abbott, photographer, artist, teacher, and writer, famous for her portraitures, documenting the architecture of New York, and science photography
  • July 17, 1908 (1987) – Carmelita Maracci, dancer, choreographer, and teacher,created a blend of ballet and Spanish dance techniques
  • July 18, 1892 (1980) – Doris Fleischman Bernays, first married woman to gain a U.S. passport in her maiden name (1925), writer and editor for the “New York Tribune,” and publicist
  • July 18, 1908 (1981) – Mildred Ryder, adopted the name “Peace Pilgrim” in 1953, a peace activist who was the first woman to walk the Appalachian Trail in one season, walked more than 25,000 miles promoting peace for 28 years
  • July 19, 1902 (1983) – Anna Marie Rosenberg, an assistant secretary of defense (1950 – 1953), served in many other government positions
  • July 21, 1856 (1913) -Louise Bethune, first American woman to work as an architect in 1881
  • July 21, 1905 (1996) – Diana Trilling, literary critic and author, compiled her feminist essays in“We Must March My Darlings” (1977)
  • July 21, 1938 – Janet Reno, first woman to serve as U. S. Attorney General (1993 – 2001, under President Clinton), attorney
  • July 22, 1849 (1887) – Emma Lazarus, poet, wrote “The New Colossus,” (1883), which was later inscribed on the Statue of Liberty: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free”
  • July 22, 1898 (1976) – Miriam Underhill, mountaineer and environmentalist, in first all-women ascent of the Matterhorn in 1932, developed “manless climbing,” which means all-women climbing groups
  • July 23, 1844 (1929) – Harriet Strong, agriculturist, inventor, patented water storage dams
  • July 23, 1892 (1984) – Icie Hoobler, biochemist and physiologist, first woman to head a local section of the American Chemical Society and to serve as its national president, Director of the Research Laboratory of the Children’s Fund of Michigan
  • July 23, 1917 (1984) – Barbara Deming, influential nonviolent activist, writer and poet, marched for peace, civil rights, women’s rights and lesbian and gay rights
  • July 23, 1928 (1999) – Ruth Whitney, ground-breaking editor of “Glamour” magazine for 31 years (1967 – 1998), among the first editors to introduce relevant social topics to a woman’s magazine, and decided to feature the first AfricanAmerican on the cover (1968)
  • July 24, 1920 (1998) – Bella Abzug, lawyer, political activist,U.S. Congressional Representative from New York (1973-77), initiated proposal for Women’s Equality Day
  • July 24, 1897 (1937) – Amelia Earhart noted aviation pioneer and author, first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, first person to fly solo across the Pacific from Hawaii to the mainland
  • July 27, 1891 (1980) – Myrtle Lawrence, sharecropper and labor organizer, worked within biracial Southern Tenant Farmers’ Union from 1936 to 1943, honored on the 1976 Bicentennial Freedom Train Exhibition
  • July 27, 1906 (1994) – Helen Wolff, editor and publisher, published many acclaimed translations under the imprint “A Helen and Kurt Wolff Book” at Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, founded Pantheon Books with her husband in 1942
  • July 28, 1879 (1966) – Lucy Burns, suffragist, formed National Woman’s Party with Alice Paul, picketed the White House for women suffrage and arrested 6 times
  • July 28, 1929 (1994) – Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, First Lady (1961-63), photographer and book editor, established White House Historical Association
  • July 29, 1896 (1986) – Maria L. de Hernandez, Mexican-American activist,helped found several community organizations
  • July 29, 1903 (1989) – Diana Vreeland, legendary fashion icon, born in Paris, columnist (1936) and then fashion editor at “Harper’s Bazaar” until 1962, editor in chief at “Vogue” from 1962 to 1971
  • July 29, 1905 (1994) – Mary Roebling, first woman president of a major bank (1937), first woman governor of theAmerican Stock Exchange (1958-1962), and helped establish the first nationally-chartered bank founded by women (1978)
  • July 29, 1932 – Nancy Kassebaum Baker, U.S. senator from Kansas (1978-1997), first woman to represent Kansas in the U.S. Senate, instrumental in creation of Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
  • July 29, 1936 – Elizabeth H. Dole,U.S. Senator from North Carolina (2003-2009), first woman to serve as U.S. Secretary of Transportation (1983-1987), also served as U.S. Secretary of Labor (1989-1990), becoming the first woman to hold two different cabinet positions under two different presidents, and she was also president of the American Red Cross (1991-1999)
  • July 30, 1939 – Eleanor Smeal, women’s rights activist, co-founder and president of the Feminist Majority Foundation (1987) and publisher of Ms. Magazine, president of National Organization for Women (1977-1982 and 1985-1987)
  • July 30, 1940 – Patricia Schroeder, U.S. Representative from Colorado (1973-1997), first woman to serve in U.S. Congress from Colorado, first woman on the House Armed Services Committee, promoted the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, president and CEO of the Association of American Publishers (1997-2008)
  • July 31, 1879 (1978) – Margarete Bieber,art historian and professor of art and archaeology, second female university professor in Germany (1919) before immigrating to the U.S., taught at Barnard College and Columbia University, published numerous academic texts, named to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1971
  • July 31, 1924 (2010) – Geraldine Hoff Doyle, possibly the model for the World War II “We Can Do It” poster which came tosymbolize Rosie the Riveters, women who worked in factories to support the war effort

Please share this information with your networks, students, and colleagues.
Women’s Rights and Women’s Equality Day Resources

If you are going to participate in a 4th of July event, please consider reminding people that 2015 is the 95th anniversary of women in the United States winning the right to vote.  Consider making copies of the hand-out that you can download from our website Women’s Equality Day Brochure

Womyn Making Waves playlist June 28 2015 Host Gina

Queen Latifah / Baby Get Lost / The Dana Owens Album / 2004 / AEG Live/Creative Battery
India.Arie / Wonderful / Acoustic Soul / 2001 / Motown
Joan Osborne / If I Was Your Man / Righteous Love / 2000 / Interscope Records
Florence + The Machine / You’ve Got The Love / Lungs / 2009 / Universal Island Records Ltd.
Joss Stone / Don’t Cha Wanna Ride / Mind Body & Soul / 2004 / curve records
Ana Popovic / How’d You Learn to Shake it Like That? / Still Making History / 2007 / Eclecto Groove
Shaun Murphy / Kiss Me Like Whiskey / Lorettta / / unknown
Laura Rain / All Of Me / Closer / 2014 / LRC
Joanna Connor / Slipping Into Darkness / The Joanna Connor Band / / M.C. Records
Rufus feat. Chaka Khan / Dance with Me / Rufus Featuring Chaka Khan 1975 / 1975 / MCA
CeCe Peniston / Finally / FINALLY / 1992 / A&M
Natalie Cole / This Will Be (An Everlasting Love) / Inseperable / 2008 / Capitol
Melissa Etheridge / Meet Me in the Back / Never Enough / 1992 / Island
Natalia Zukerman / Ice Cream / Only One / 2006 / Talisman Records
Melissa ferrick / Welcome To My Life / Live at Union Hall Brooklyn NY / 2007 / Right On Records
Ani DiFranco / Shameless / Canon / 2007 / Righteous Babe Records
Tracy Chapman / Talking About A Revolution / Tracy Chapman / 1988 / Elektra
The Pretenders / Thin Line Between Love and Hate / Learning to Crawl / 1984 / Warner Bros.
Alabama Shakes / This Feeling / Sound & Color / 2015 / ATO Records
Alabama Shakes / Guess Who / Sound & Color / 2015 / ATO Records
Amy Winehouse / Valerie / Back to Black:B-Sides / 2007 / Universal
Gloria Estefan / Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying / Hold Me Thrill Me Kiss Me / 1994 / Sony Music
Maria Bello / Sweet Dreams (Are Made of These) / Duets Soundtrack / 2000 / Hollywood Records
Bjork / I’ve Seen it All / Selmasongs: Music From The Motion Picture “Dancer In The Dark”` / 2000 / Elektra
Tony Bennett & kd lang / Dream a Little Dream of Me / A Wonderful World / 2002 / Sony
Shania Twain (featuring Allison Krauss & Union Station) / Coat of Many Colors / Just Because I’m a Woman: The Songs of Dolly Parton / 2003 / Sugar Hill
Janiva Magness / Basass / Original / 2014 / Fathead Records

Womyn Making Waves playlist June 21 2015 host Niecey Shizen-ji

Indigo Girls / Closer to Fine / Retrospective / 2000 / Epic
Ani DiFranco / Up Up Up Up Up Up / Up Up Up Up Up Up / 1999 / Righteous Babe
Ani DiFranco / Know Now Then / Up Up Up Up Up Up / 1999 / Righteous Babe
Cris Williamson & Tret Fure / Little World Spinning Blue / Postcards from Paradise / 1994 / Olivia Records
Cris Williamson & Tret Fure / My Father’s Hands / Postcards from Paradise / 1994 / Olivia Records
Dar Williams / Iowa / Mortal City / 1996 / Razor & Tie
Barbara Higbie / St. Anne’s Reel/Tip the Canoe / Alive in Berkeley / 2007 / Slow Baby Records
Alix Dobkin / Tje Woman in YOur Life is You / Living With Lavender Jane / 1998 / Wax Works
Jamie Anderson / No CLoset / Center of Balance / 1992 / Tsunami Records
God-Des & She / Inside Your Eyes / Stand Up / 2007 / GOd-Des & She Music
Ferron / Girl on a Road / Driver / 1994 / Earthbeat Records
Teresa Trull & Barbara Higbie / Getting some Fun out of Life / Playtime / 1997 / Slow Baby Records
Holly Near / Singing For Our Lives / Solidarity Songs for Tim DeChristopher’s Trial / 2011 / Peaceful Uprising
Ani DiFranco / Not a Pretty Girl / So Much Shouting So Much Laughter / 2002 / Righteous Babe
Tegan & Sara / This is Everything / 5 Songs from the Phoenix / 2005 / vapor
Indigo Girls / Power of Two / Retrospective / 2000 / Epic
Indigo Girls / Least Complicated / Retrospective / 2000 / Epic
Jamie Anderson / Drive All Night / Drive All Night / 1999 / Tsunami Records
Toshi Reagon / Darling / The Righteous Ones / 1999 / Razor & Tie
The Butchies / She’s So Lovely / Make Yr Life / 2004 / Yep Roc
Tribe 8 / Wrong Bathroom / Snarkism / 1996 / Alternative Tentacles
Luci Blue Tremblay / So Lucky/Limited Vision / Lucie Blue Tremblay / 1986 / Maggie & Shanti Musique Inc. Canada
Cris Williamson & Tret Fure / The Stones from Helen’s Field / Postcards from Paradise / 1994 / Olivia Records

Womyn Making Waves playlist June 14 2015 host Renee Angelah

En Vogue / My Lovin’ (You’re Never Gonna Get It) / Funky Divas / 1992 / eastwest
Whitney Houston / Million Dollar Bill / I Look to You / 2009 / Arista
Faith Evans / Extraordinary / Incomparable / 2014 / BMG Rights Management
Corinne Bailey Rae / Put Your Records on / Corinne Bailey Rae / 2006 / EMI
Mariah Carey / Infinity / Infinity (single) / 2015 / Legacy
Jill Scott / Fool’s Good / Fool’s Gold (Single) / 2015 / Blues Babe Records
Jennifer Hudson / spotlight / Jennifer Hudson / 2008 / Arista
Aretha Franklin / respect / I Never Loved a Man the Way I Loved You (Mono) / 1967 / Rhino Atlantic
Nina Simone / I wish I knew how it would feel to be free / Silk and Soul / 1967 / RCA
Nneka / My Love, My Love / My Fairy Tales / 2015 / Bushqueen Music (dist. Co-Sign)
Nneka / My Love, My Love (Reprise) / My Fairy Tales / 2015 / Bushqueen Music (dist. Co-Sign)
Janet Jackson / Got ’til It’s Gone / The Velvet Rope / 1997 / Virgin
Ms. Jody / Talkin’ Bout My Good Thang / Talkin’ Bout My Good Thang / 2015 / Ecko Records
Dolly Parton / home / Blue Smoke / 2014 / Sony Masterworks
Sena Ehrhardt / Live my life / Live My Life / 2014 / Blind Pig Records
Sena Ehrhardt / Chilled to the Bone / Live My Life / 2014 / Blind Pig Records
Joni Mitchell / Big yellow taxi / Ladies Of The Canyon / 1970 / Warner Bros.
Carly Simon / You’re so Vain / No Secrets / 1972 / Elektra
Thelma Houston / Don’t leave me this way / Any Way You Like It / 1976 / Motown
Donna Summer / Bad girls / Bad Girls / 1979 / ISLAND MERCURY

WMW Playlist 2015 June 7

Sarah Jones / Freckles / Music to My Dreams / 2014 / Self Released
Romy / Fairytales / Unbound / 2014 / Romy Music
Rachel Garlin / Up On the Ladder in Boots / Wink at July / 2015 / Tactile
Rachael Sage / Barbed Wire / Blue Roses / 2014 / MPress Records
Puss n Boots / GTO / No Fools, No Fun / 2014 / Blue Note
Nancy Wright / Lovely Pretender / Putting Down Roots / 2015 / Direct Hit Records
Lynne Hanson / Good Intentions / River of Sand / 2014 / MAPL
Ingrid Michaelson / Stick / Lights Out / 2014 / Cabin 24/Red/Mom + Pop
Dolly Parton / Try / Blue Smoke / 2014 / Sony Masterworks
Catie Curtis / Orion / Flying Dream / 2014 / CD Baby
Holly Near & Ronnie Gilbert / Beloved Comrade / Lifeline Extended (Disc 2) / 2002 / Appleseed Records
HARP Holly Near, Arlo Guthrie, Ronnie Gilbert, Pete Seeger / Mothers, Daughters, Wives / HARP: A Time to Sing / 2001 / Appleseed Records
HARP Holly Near, Arlo Guthrie, Ronnie Gilbert, Pete Seeger / Singing for Our Lives / HARP: A Time to Sing / 2001 / Appleseed Records
Ronnie Gilbert, Leon Bibb, Robert De Cormier / It Could Be a Wonderful World / It Could Be a Wonderful World / 1959 / Motivation Music
Holly Near & Ronnie Gilbert / Women’s Medley / Lifeline Extended (Disc 2) / 2002 / Appleseed Records
Buffy Sainte-Marie / Power in the Blood / Power in the Blood / 2015 / True North
Buffy Sainte-Marie / We Are Circling / Power in the Blood / 2015 / True North
Beth Hart / Mama,This One’s for You / Better Than Home (Deluxe Edition) / 2015 / Provogue/Concord
Beth Bombara / Thunder and Lightning / Beth Bombara / 2015 / All the Right Pills
Peggy Seeger / Flowers By the Roadside / Everything Changes / 2014 / Signet
Indigo Girls / Southern California Is Your Girlfriend / One Lost Day / 2015 / Vanguard
Indigo Girls / Elizabeth / One Lost Day / 2015 / Vanguard
Brindl / Siren / Love It Up / 2014 / Moxi
Heather Pierson Acoustic Trio / Still She Will Fly / Still She Will Fly / 2015 / Vessel
Gemma Ray / Motorbike / Milk For Your Motors / 2014 / Bronze Rat Records
Corinne West / Audrey Turn the Moon / Starlight Highway / 2015 / Corinne West
Rory Block / Special Rider Blues / Hard Luck Child:a tribute to Skip James / 2014 / Stony Plain Music
Nancy Wright / Funking It Up / Putting Down Roots / 2015 / Direct Hit Records

Ronnie Gilbert, Radical Musician, Has Died at the Age of 88

Ronnie

Folk heaven has gained a new star, who is, I’m certain, shining red and bright in the skies.

Ronnie Gilbert has died of natural causes Saturday at the age of 88 at a retirement community in the San Francisco Bay Area suburb of Mill Valley, said her longtime partner, Donna Korones.

Ronnie is best known as being one quarter of the Weavers, whose other members were Pete Seeger, Lee Hays and Fred Hellerman The Weavers helped spark a national folk revival by churning out hit recordings of “Goodnight Irene,” ”Tzena Tzena Tzena,” ”On Top of Old Smokey,” ”If I Had A Hammer,” ”Kisses Sweeter Than Wine” and “Wimoweh.”

The group was extremely popular before they were targeted by anti-communists and blacklisted during the Red Scare. In 1950 Pete Seeger, one of the members of the Weavers, was targeted by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee as a communist and later three of the four members of the Weavers were accused of being communists.

The History Channel writes: “The Weavers enjoyed a significant comeback in the late 1950s, but the group never shook its right wing antagonists. On the afternoon of January 2, 1962, in advance of a scheduled appearance on The Jack Paar Show, the Weavers were told by NBC officials that their appearance would be canceled if they would not sign a statement disavowing the Communist Party. Every member of the Weavers refused to sign.

Besides being a symbol for the Left and Labor, Ronnie Gilbert was a feminist and lesbian icon. I saw Ronnie Gilbert perform with Holly Near in the 1980’s when she was in her 50’s and she was amazing. She and Holly filled the space with electric energy.

The way the story goes, in 1974, Holly Near, who had grown up with the Weavers’ music, released A Live Album, which she dedicated to Gilbert. “I had never heard of Holly Near,” Gilbert told interviewer Kate Weigand in 2004. “One usually asks permission of somebody when they’re going to do that. Holly Near never asked me for permission. Later, when I asked her, ‘How come you never asked me?’ she said, “Well, the truth is, I didn’t know you were alive.” Once Near found out Gilbert was alive and well, the two women began performing together frequently, starting in the 1980s. Their 1983 concert tour was recorded for the album Lifeline Extended, and a series of shows they did with Seeger and Arlo Guthrie is on the album H.A.R.P.: A Time to Sing

holly and ronnie

Ronnie Gilbert’s memoir, “Ronnie Gilbert: A Radical Life in Song,” which is the same title of a one-woman show she performed for years, will be published in the fall.

She is survived by her daughter, Lisa, and Korones, her partner of 30 years.

Womyn Making Waves Playlist 5/31/15 host Gina

Ani DiFranco / Here for Now / Canon / 2007 / Righteous Babe Records
The Story / The Still Point / Angel in the House / 1993 / Elektra
10,000 Maniacs / City of Angels / In My Tribe / 1987 / Rhino/Elektra
Kd Lang / Helpless / Recollection / 2010 / Nonesuch
January May / The Road / Troublemade / 2015 / Crowd Control Records
Shaun Murphy / Kiss Me Like Whiskey / Loretta / 2015 / Self Released
Bonnie Raitt / Slow Ride / Luck of the Draw / 1991 / Capitol Records
Queen Latifah / I’m Gonna Live Till I Die / Trav’lin’ Light / 2007 / Verve
Etta James / I Want A Sunday Kind Of Love / Love Songs / 2002 / MCA
Norah Jones / The Nearness of You / Come Away With Me / 2002 / Blue Note
India Arie / Always in My Head / Acoustic Soul / 2001 / Motown
Joan Osborne / My Love is Alive / Righteous Love / 2000 / Interscope Records
Rufus feat. Chaka Khan / Tell Me Something Good / The Very Best of Rufus Featuring Chaka Khan / 1982 / MCA
Dido / Thank You / No Angel / 1999 / Arista
Alabama Shakes / Don’t Wanna Fight / Sound & Color / 2015 / ATO Records
Paula Cole / I Don’t Want To Wait / This Fire / 1996 / Warner Bros.
Annie Lennox / Train in Vain / Medusa / 1995 / Big arista
Donna Lewis / Walk on By / Brand New Day / 2015 / Acme Tracks
Diana Krall / ‘Deed I Do / Live in paris / 2002 / Verve
Lisa Hilton / Gold on the Ceiling / Horizons / 2014 / Ruby Slippers Productions
Sheryl Crow / We Do What We Can / Tuesday Night Music Club / 1993 / UMG
Melissa Ferrick / This Is Love / Freedom / 2000 / What Are Records
Natalia Zukerman / Favorite Shirt / Brand New Frame / 2008 / Weasel Records
Danielle Taylor / Date Night / The Chase / 2014 / Danielle Taylor Music
Joan Osborne / War / How Sweet It Is / 2002 / Compendia
Lorraine Bowen / Julie Cristie / Better Than Chocolate Soundtrack / 1999 / WILL/lakeshore records
Alison Krauss / 9 To 5 / Just Because I’m a Woman / 2003 / Sugar Hill

New Buffy St. Marie Album (via Vogue)

Buffy Sainte-Marie on Her New Album and Legacy as a Native American Activist

for the rest of the story