Dorothy Carter

American musician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican musician
PlacesUnited States of America
isMusician
Work fieldMusic
Gender
Female
Death7 June 2003
The details

Biography

Dorothy Carter (born New York City, 1935, died June 7, 2003 in New Orleans) was an American musician. Carter performed contemporary, folk, traditional, medieval, and experimental music with a large collection of stringed instruments such as the hammered dulcimer, zither, psaltery, and hurdy-gurdy. She is regarded as an important figure in the genres of psychedelic folk music and medieval music revival.

Biography

Carter studied classical piano at age six. She later attended Bard College in New York, the London Royal Academy, and Guildhall School of Music in France.

In early the 1970s Carter was a member of the Central Maine Power Music Company with Robert Rutman and Constance Demby. She moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts where she continued to collaborate with Rutman, who played his sound sculptures on her second album. She regularly played concerts with Rutman's Steel Cello Ensemble, a collaboration that persisted for decades.

In the 1990s Carter returned to London and founded the all-female revival group Mediæval Bæbes with Katherine Blake of Miranda Sex Garden. The group's 1997 debut album, Salva Nos reached #2 on the classical music charts.

Carter later settled in New Orleans, residing in a live-in studio on the third floor of a warehouse building where she hosted salons. She died in 2003 of an aneurysm. She is survived by a son and daughter, Justin Carter of Los Angeles, California and Celeste Carter of Picayune, Mississippi and a grandson, Damien Helgason.

Appearances

  • 2000, Vancouver, BC. Dorothy Carter played hurdy-gurdy at the Vancouver Folk Music Festival. A recording can be heard on the Soundscapes 2000 album.

Discography

As Dorothy Carter

  • Troubadour (1976)
  • Waillee Waillee (1978)
  • Lonesome Dove (2000)
  • Dorothy Carter (2003)

With Mediæval Bæbes

  • Salva Nos (1997)
  • Worldes Blysse (1998)
  • The Best of the Mediæval Bæbes (1999, a compilation of tracks from the first two albums)
  • Undrentide (2000)
  • The Rose (2002)

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