Katie Lee (singer)

Katie Lee
Born October 22, 1919
Tucson, Arizona, US
Genres Folk music
Occupation(s) Vocalist
writer
photographer
actor
activist
Instruments Vocals
guitar
Website katydoodit.com

Katie Lee (b. October 23, 1919 in Tucson, Arizona) is an Arizona folk singer, writer, actress, photographer and environmental activist.[1]

She graduated from the University of Arizona with a Bachelor of Fine Arts. After that, she went on to study with two of the most successful folksingers of the 1940s, Burl Ives and Josh White.

After joining a rafting trip in the Grand Canyon she became a regular on river trips on the Colorado River and joined the opposition to the construction of Glen Canyon Dam. In September and October 1955 she and[2] Tad Nichols and Frank Wright traveled thru- and documented parts of the Glen Canyon that later were to be submerged.

Artist and author

Her early albums of folk music, Life is Just a Bed of Neuroses (1960) and Songs of Couch and Consultation (1957) are long out of print, but six more recent CDs are still available.[3] She has also released three videos, including Love Song to Glen Canyon (DVD, 2007).

In 1964, Lee released an album on Folkways Records, entitled, Folk Songs of the Colorado River. In the 1980s she recorded a cassette-only release Colorado River Songs consisting of old songs popular among river runners on the Colorado River and the Grand Canyon, and some original compositions. This release was hailed by Edward Abbey and David Foreman among others. Colorado River Songs was expanded to include more songs and re-released in 1997 on CD. She has also released Glen Canyon River Journeys on CD, which mixes music and spoken word commentary, and is featured on the 2005 Smithsonian Folkways compilation album, Songs and Stories from Grand Canyon.

She has also written three books,Sandstone Seduction, Ten Thousand Goddam Cattle and All My Rivers Are Gone. Ten Thousand Goddam Cattle is a study of the music, stories, and poetry of the American cowboy. It was also recorded as an album.

Sandstone Seduction, a memoir, relates her continuing love affair with desert rivers and canyons, and reveals her Lady Godiva-style bicycle ride through downtown Jerome, Arizona, where she lives.

October 1, 2011 Katie Lee was inducted into the Arizona Music Hall of Fame.[4]

Family

Katie Lee met her first husband "Brandy" (Edwin Carl Brandelius Jr.) to whom her book "Sandstone Seduction" is dedicated, on a trip to Baja California.[5] Brandy was a war veteran, a race car driver and good friend of Turk Murphy. Katie Lee noted Brandy as the prime influence on finishing and publishing her first book "Ten Thousand Goddam Cattle." Brandy is the father of Jerilyn Lee Brandelius author of The Grateful Dead Family Album (and four other children) from his first marriage.

Literature about her

Chronicles of her adventures in Baja California appear in the book Almost An Island written by Bruce Berger. Lee presently lives in Jerome, Arizona.

References in popular culture

The song "Gunslinger" from Songs of Couch and Consulation was translated to Swedish in 1965 and was recorded by Per Myrberg as "Skjutgalen".

Utah Phillips praised Katie Lee and Songs of Couch and Consultation on the 1996 album The Past Didn't Go Anywhere on the track "Half a Ghost Town".

Her song "It Must Be Something Psychological" was featured in an episode of United States of Tara in 2010.

Her song "It Must Be Something Psychological" was featured in a Chilean, French, German, Turkish and Dutch commercial for the Axe brand of deodorants in 2012, and also in the UK and Ireland for its version, Lynx.

Her song "It Must Be Something Psychological" was used as the theme tune for the Sky Arts comedy series Psychobitches in 2013.

References

External links