One of the most influential gospel artists of all time, Sister Rosetta Tharpe turned the electric guitar into an instrument of praise. In the process, she became an international gospel artist, broke down barriers for women in instrumental music and was among the first to alert major record companies to the power and popularity of gospel singing.

Born Rosetta Atkins on March 20, 1915, in Cotton Plant, Arkansas, Rosetta was raised in the Church of God in Christ (COGIC). She and her mother, an evangelist named Katie Bell Nubin, moved to Chicago in the 1920s. There they sang and played spirituals and hymns on street corners and at “Fortieth,” the city’s largest COGIC church, pastored by Bishop William Roberts. Rosetta accompanied her mother on guitar and mandolin, two instruments that were unusual for black women of her era to play. Her ability to pluck individual notes at a quick tempo to fill pauses between lyric lines caught the attention of many who came to Fortieth just to hear her.


Release

Precious Memories

Singing In My Soul

The Best of Sister Rosetta Tharpe


Videos

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