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If I Could Be the Rain

379.4K streams

379,353

Folk Songs of Idaho and Utah

82.7K streams

82,741

Strangers In Another Country

38.5K streams

38,468

Misc. Abstract Record No.1

20.1K streams

20,074

Borderline Heart

17K streams

16,954

No Closing Chord - The Songs of Malvin...

7.7K streams

7,743

The Lonesome Roving Wolves

5.6K streams

5,572

Report From Grimes Creek

5K streams

4,994

What Does It Mean To Love?

2.3K streams

2,331

Live At The Great American Music Hall

Biography

Rosalie Sorrels was a collector and performer of traditional American folk songs, but in all her music, traditional and original, there was a deeply personal vein. Sorrels' music was about loss and survival. When she was 16, she had an illegal abortion; when she was 17, she gave up a child for adoption. She married and had five children, left her husband, and struggled to raise her family alone, and then saw her eldest child take his own life. Finally, she suffered a cerebral aneurysm in 1988. Through all her suffering, Sorrels found solace in her ability to make music, an ability that enraptured audiences for years. Sorrels' musical career began in the 1950s, when, as a way of alleviating the tedium of domestic life, she took a class on American folk songs while living in Salt Lake City. Work for that class resulted in her first album, Folksongs of Idaho and Utah. Her subsequent albums mixed traditional and original material; always sung with great passion and personal feeling, they became increasingly autobiographical. Among her many albums were Be Careful, There's a Baby in the House (1990) and Report from Grimes Creek (1991) for the Green Linnet label. Known for her storytelling as well as her songs, Sorrels played virtually every major folk festival in the U.S. during her career. Continuing to tour and record into the 2000s, she died in 2017 at the age of 83. ~ Leon Jackson, Rovi