Gaye Adegbalola

Gaye Adegbalola

Person from United States

Genres: blues, female vocalists, Female Voices, All, spotify

Gaye Adegbalola
Gaye Adegbalola
Gaye Adegbalola
Gaye Adegbalola
Gaye Adegbalola
Gaye Adegbalola

About Gaye Adegbalola

Gaye Adegbalola (born Gaye Todd, March 21, 1944, Fredericksburg, VA) is an American blues singer and guitarist, teacher, lecturer, activist, and photographer. She was a founding member of Saffire, The Uppity Blues Women, initially formed as a duo in 1984 by Adegbalola and her guitar teacher, Ann Rabson. Adegbalola was born and raised in Fredericksburg, Virginia. She graduated as valedictorian of the then-segregated Walker-Grant High School. She finished Boston University with a major in biology and a minor in chemistry. Prior to becoming a teacher, she worked as a technical writer for TRW Systems, a biochemical researcher at Rockefeller University, and a bacteriologist at Harlem Hospital. She has a Master’s degree in Educational Media (with a concentration in photography) from Virginia State University. In the early '70s, she began her teaching career. She was an educator in the Fredericksburg City Public School system for 18 years, and honored as Virginia State Teacher of the Year in 1982. Throughout her teaching career, she directed Harambee 360º Experimental Theater. She was able to creatively use performance as a tool to assist black youth in gaining confidence as they struggled with identity issues during the spread of "integration." During her teaching career, Adegbalola moonlighted as a musician. By maintaining the blues legacy, she now sees herself as a contemporary griot – keeping the history alive, delivering messages of empowerment, ministering to the heartbroken, and finding joy in the mundane. As a founding member of Saffire, The Uppity Blues Women, she became a full-time performer. (Saffire ended in November, 2009, after making music together for 25 years.) She has toured nationally and internationally, and has won numerous awards including the prestigious Blues Music Award (formerly the W.C. Handy Award – the Grammy of the blues industry). As of 2012, Adegbalola has 14 CDs in national distribution, including 4 on her own label, Hot Toddy Music. Gaye composes, sings and plays acoustic guitar, slide guitar, and harmonica. She is the mother of son, Juno Lumumba Kahlil. Motherhood is essential to her bio. Official Website: Gaye Adegbalola

Taken from Last.fm

3,958 listeners  ·  15,620 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

13
stations playing
7
countries
16
tracks tracked
most active station (The Russian Federation)
Heard alongside: Buddy Guy B.B. King Freddie King

Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation

ITU Jaz/Blues
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 128
372 Likes

RadioBlues Flac
1 track on rotation
OGG : 1500
359 Likes

rocknblues
1 track on rotation
MP3 : 128
108 Likes

Gaye Adegbalola — Top 16 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Gaye Adegbalola Let Go, Let God
Gaye Adegbalola Bittersweet Blues
Gaye Adegbalola FGM (Female Genital Mutilation)
Gaye Adegbalola Only One Truth
Gaye Adegbalola Dirty Sheets
Gaye Adegbalola Speech
Gaye Adegbalola The Dirty Dozens
Gaye Adegbalola The Thank You Song-Delta Slide
Gaye Adegbalola Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah-Rock N Roll
Gaye Adegbalola Meet Me With Your Black Drawers On
Gaye Adegbalola Hetero Twinges | Mixxx
Gaye Adegbalola Winona
Gaye Adegbalola Nothing's Changed | Mixxx
Gaye Adegbalola Ain't Technology Grand?
Gaye Adegbalola You Really Got A Hold On Me
Gaye Adegbalola Hetero Twinges
Let Go, Let God
Bittersweet Blues
FGM (Female Genital Mutilation)
Only One Truth
Dirty Sheets
The Dirty Dozens
The Thank You Song-Delta Slide
Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah-Rock N Roll
Meet Me With Your Black Drawers On
Hetero Twinges | Mixxx
Nothing's Changed | Mixxx
Ain't Technology Grand?
You Really Got A Hold On Me
Hetero Twinges