Buffy Sainte-Marie

Buffy Sainte-Marie

Genres: folk, singer-songwriter, native american, female vocalists, 60s

About Buffy Sainte-Marie

Buffy Sainte-Marie, OC (born Beverly Jean Santamaria, February 20, 1941) is a American female vocalist songwriter, musician, composer, visual artist, educator, pacifist, and social activist. Throughout her career in all of these areas, her work has focused on issues of indigenous peoples of the Americas. Her singing and writing repertoire also includes subjects of love, war, religion, and mysticism. In 1997, she founded the Cradleboard Teaching Project, an educational curriculum devoted to better understanding Native Americans. She has won recognition and many awards and honours for both her music and her work in education and social activism. Sainte-Marie was born at the New England Sanitarium and Hospital in Stoneham, Massachusetts, to parents Albert Santamaria and Winifred Irene Santamaria, who later changed their name to Sainte-Marie. She attended the University of Massachusetts Amherst, earning degrees in teaching and Oriental philosophy and graduating in the top ten of her class. She went on to earn a Ph.D in Fine Art from the University of Massachusetts. In 1964, on a trip to the Piapot Cree reserve in Canada for a powwow she was welcomed and (in a Cree Nation context) adopted by the youngest son of Chief Piapot, Emile Piapot and his wife, who added to Sainte-Marie's cultural value of, and place in, native culture. In 1968, she married surfing teacher Dewain Bugbee of Hawaii; they divorced in 1971. She married Sheldon Wolfchild from Minnesota in 1975; they have a son, Dakota "Cody" Starblanket Wolfchild. That union also ended in divorce. She married her co-writer for "Up Where We Belong," Jack Nitzsche, on March 19, 1982. He died from a heart attack on August 25, 2000. As of 2007, she lives in Hawaii. Although not a Bahá'í herself, she became an active friend of the Bahá'í Faith by the mid-1970s when she is said to have appeared in the 1973 Third National Bahá'í Youth Conference at the Oklahoma State Fairgrounds, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and has continued to appear at concerts, conferences and conventions of that religion since then. In 1992, she appeared in the musical event prelude to the Bahá'í World Congress, a double concert "Live Unity: The Sound of the World" in 1992 with video broadcast and documentary. In the video documentary of the event Sainte-Marie is seen on the Dini Petty Show explaining the Bahá'í teaching of progressive revelation. She also appears in the 1985 video "Mona With The Children" by Douglas John Cameron. However, while she supports a universal sense of religion, she does not subscribe to any particular religion. Sainte-Marie claimed in a 2008 interview at the National Museum of the American Indian that she had been blacklisted by American radio stations and that she, along with Native Americans and other native people in the Red Power movements, were put out of business in the 1970s. In a 1999 interview at Diné College with a staff writer with the Indian Country Today, Sainte-Marie said "I found out 10 years later, in the 1980s, that President Lyndon B. Johnson had been writing letters on White House stationery praising radio stations for suppressing my music" and "In the 1970s, not only was the protest movement put out of business, but the Native American movement was attacked." As a result of this blacklisting led by (among others) Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, and Nashville disc jockey Ralph Emery (following the release of I'm Gonna Be a Country Girl Again), Sainte-Marie said "I was put out of business in the United States".

Taken from Last.fm

233,238 listeners  ·  2,466,532 plays via Last.fm

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Buffy Sainte-Marie — Top 26 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Buffy Sainte-Marie The Circle Game
Buffy Sainte-Marie Until It's Time for You To Go
Buffy Sainte-Marie Universal Soldier
Buffy Sainte-Marie Starwalker
Buffy Sainte-Marie Generation
Buffy Sainte-Marie Cripple Creek
Buffy Sainte-Marie Orion
Buffy Sainte-Marie Power in the Blood
Buffy Sainte-Marie Johnny Be Fair
Buffy Sainte-Marie Power In The Blood
Buffy Sainte-Marie The Uranium War
Buffy Sainte-Marie Soldier Blue [7]
Buffy Sainte-Marie Mister Can't You See
Buffy Sainte-Marie Getting Started
Buffy Sainte-Marie No No Keshagesh
Buffy Sainte-Marie Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
Buffy Sainte-Marie Farm In the Middle of Nowhere
Buffy Sainte-Marie Sing Our Own Song
Buffy Sainte-Marie Summer Boy
Buffy Sainte-Marie Helpless
Buffy Sainte-Marie Better To Find Out For Yourself
Buffy Sainte-Marie The Big Ones Get Away
Buffy Sainte-Marie The War Racket
Buffy Sainte-Marie Winter Boy
Buffy Sainte-Marie The Circle Game (From: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood)
Buffy Sainte-Marie God Is Alive Magic Is Afoot
The Circle Game
Until It's Time for You To Go
Universal Soldier
Cripple Creek
Power in the Blood
Johnny Be Fair
Power In The Blood
The Uranium War
Soldier Blue [7]
Mister Can't You See
Getting Started
No No Keshagesh
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
Farm In the Middle of Nowhere
Sing Our Own Song
Better To Find Out For Yourself
The Big Ones Get Away
The War Racket
The Circle Game (From: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood)
God Is Alive Magic Is Afoot