| Folk singer known as "The Voice of the Civil Rights Movement" |
LA Times Daily |
05 Aug 2025 |
| American singer called 'The Voice of the Civil Rights Movement' |
|
|
| Martin Luther King Jr. called her "The Queen of American Folk Music" |
Wall Street Journal |
01 Feb 2025 |
| Folk-blues singer |
Thomas Joseph |
23 Nov 2024 |
| Singer who famously duetted with Harry Belafonte on There's a Hole in My Bucket |
|
|
| One-named singer whom MLK Jr. called "the queen of American folk music" |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
Commuter |
14 May 2024 |
| One-named folk singer |
Eugene Sheffer |
02 Sep 2023 |
| Folk singer from Birmingham |
Wall Street Journal |
01 Jul 2023 |
| Folk/blues singer |
Eugene Sheffer |
24 Apr 2023 |
| Folk singer admired by Dr. King |
Newsday |
22 Jul 2022 |
| Singer called “The Voice of the Civil Rights Movement” |
Wall Street Journal |
14 May 2022 |
| “Gonna Let It Shine” singer |
New York Times |
19 Dec 2021 |
| Folk-blues singer |
Eugene Sheffer |
20 Nov 2021 |
| "The Voice of the Civil Rights Movement" |
Universal |
05 Nov 2021 |
| One-named folk singer |
LA Times Daily |
01 Oct 2021 |
| One-named folk singer |
The Washington Post |
01 Oct 2021 |
| Singer whom M.L.K. Jr. called the 'queen of American folk music' |
New York Times |
08 Aug 2021 |
| Singer awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1999 |
Wall Street Journal |
04 Feb 2021 |
| She sang at the march where Martin Luther King Jr. made his “I Have a Dream” speech |
Wall Street Journal |
29 Aug 2020 |
| Folk-blues singer |
Thomas Joseph |
16 May 2020 |
| One-named folk singer |
The Washington Post |
06 Mar 2019 |
| One-named folk singer |
LA Times Daily |
06 Mar 2019 |
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| Martin Luther King, Jr., called her the "Queen of American Folk Music" |
The New Yorker |
15 Oct 2018 |
| One-named folk singer |
New York Times |
27 Apr 2018 |
| 2003 self-titled folk album |
LA Times Daily |
20 Apr 2018 |
| 2003 self-titled folk album |
The Washington Post |
20 Apr 2018 |
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| 2003 self-titled folk album |
|
|
| "The queen of American folk music" |
USA Today |
18 Dec 2017 |
| Folkie who 'sang us into freedom,' per Maya Angelou |
The Chronicle of Higher Education |
06 Oct 2017 |
| Folkie who "sang us into freedom," per Maya Angelou |
|
|
| "The queen of American folk music" |
|
|
| Folk music icon |
Wall Street Journal |
10 Sep 2016 |
| "Queen of American folk music" |
Universal |
18 Apr 2016 |
| Folk singer and civil rights activist usually referred to by her first name |
|
|
| Civil rights activist and folksinger |
|
|
| Single-named folk singer from Alabama |
|
|
| Martin Luther King Jr. called her "the queen of American folk music" |
|
|
| 2003 self-titled folk album |
|
|
| Dr. King's "queen of American folk music" |
|
|
| Husky-voiced folk singer |
|
|
| Singer called "the Voice of the Civil Rights Movement" |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| Folk-singing civil rights activist |
|
|
| 1965 singer of Dylan songs |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| Single-named folk singer from Alabama |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| One-named folkie |
|
|
| Husky-voiced folk singer |
|
|
| "Glory, Glory" singer |
|
|
| One-named singer of folk and blues |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| Singer who influenced Bob Dylan and Janis Joplin |
|
|
| One-named Alabaman folk singer |
|
|
| "Blues Everywhere I Go" singer |
|
|
| "___ Sings Dylan" (1965 folk album) |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| One-named singer of 37-Down |
|
|
| Folk singer who influenced Dylan |
|
|
| Folk singer who influenced Dylan |
|
|
| "Gonna Let It Shine" singer |
|
|
| Folk singer from Birmingham |
|
|
| Folk singer from Birmingham |
|
|
| Singer who influenced Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, and Janis Joplin |
|
|
| Folk-blues singer |
|
|
| Singer given a 1999 National Medal of Arts |
|
|
| Single-named folk singer |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| One-name folk singer |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| "__ Sings Folk Songs": 1963 Grammy nominee |
|
|
| Folk singer née Holmes |
|
|
| Folk-blues singer |
|
|
| "Livin' With the Blues" singer |
|
|
| "___ Sings Dylan" (1965 folk album) |
|
|
| Single-named folk singer |
|
|
| Folk-singing civil rights activist |
|
|
| Alabama-born singer |
|
|
| One-named singer |
|
|
| One-named singer |
|
|
| Husky-voiced folk-blues singer |
|
|
| Folk music favorite |
|
|
| One-named singer of folk and blues |
|
|
| One-named singer from Alabama |
|
|
| "Mine Eyes Have Seen" singer |
|
|
| One-named singer |
|
|
| Single-named folk singer |
|
|
| "My Eyes Have Seen" singer |
|
|
| One-named singer from Birmingham, Alabama |
|
|
| Folk/blues singer |
|
|
| One-named singer |
|
|
| Alabama-born one-named singer |
|
|
| "Cool Water" singer |
|
|
| Single-named folksinger |
|
|
| Single-name songbird |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| One-named folk singer |
|
|
| 60s folk singer |
|
|
| Husky-voiced folk singer |
|
|
| Influential urban folk singer |
|
|
| Folk singer from Birmingham, Ala. |
|
|
| Single-named folk singer |
|
|
| Ala.-born folk singer |
|
|
| U.S. folk singer |
|
|
| Famed folk singer |
|
|
| Singer from Birmingham |
|
|
| American folk singer |
|
|