As Staples celebrates her 87th birthday on July 10, Dylan's description of hearing her sing for the first time remains one of the most memorable tributes ever paid to another artist. Recalling the Staple Singers' early recording of "Uncloudy Day," Dylan said in a 2015 interview with AARP that Staples' singing "just knocked me out."
Born in Chicago in 1939, Staples began performing as a child alongside her father, Roebuck "Pops" Staples, and her siblings in the Staple Singers. What started as a family gospel group evolved into one of the defining voices of both American music and the Civil Rights Movement. Inspired by Pops' friendship with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the group blended gospel with messages of hope, justice and equality, helping provide the soundtrack for an era of historic change.
While her work with the family group cemented her place in music history, Staples also built a remarkable solo career spanning more than five decades. She collaborated with artists including Prince, Ry Cooder, Jeff Tweedy, Hozier, Arcade Fire, David Byrne and Aretha Franklin, while continuing to release acclaimed albums well into her 80s. Her 2010 album You Are Not Alone earned her first competitive Grammy Award, and she has since added multiple Grammy wins, including Album of the Year as a featured artist on Jon Batiste'sWe Are.
"By the time the Staple Singers' string of R&B hits kicked off in the early Seventies, Mavis Staples' liquid contralto had already been tearing the roof off with her family's gospel group for two decades and had become the signature voice of the civil rights movement. ... She's got the most undiluted gospel technique of any pop star ever," wrote Rolling Stone.
More than seven decades after she first stepped onto the stage with her family, Staples remains one of American music's most powerful voices, a singer whose blend of gospel, soul and conviction continues to inspire generations of artists and listeners alike.
Related: Nobel Prize-Winning Songwriter Just Named America's Most Essential Musical Artist
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