Artist

Mother Maybelle Carter

Genre: Country ,Traditional Country ,Old-Timey ,North American
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1927 - 1978
Listen on Coda
Affectionately revered as "Mother" Maybelle, Maybelle Carter formed one-third of the Carters, country music's foundational family act. She entered the world as Maybelle Addington in May 1909 and became connected to A.P. and Sara Carter through marriage when she wed Ezra, A.P.'s brother. Serving as the ensemble's guitarist while also handling autoharp and banjo, she developed the group's distinctive approach through her pioneering bass tunings and contributed to every landmark track they cut between 1928 and 1943, totaling roughly 270 sides.

Once the original trio disbanded, she toured and recorded alongside daughters Helen, Anita, and June, each of whom carved out careers in country music, with June ultimately attaining legendary status. Throughout her extended professional life she reached numerous high points and became a valued advisor to musicians from the next two generations. A standout moment arrived with her joint performance alongside Sara at the Newport Folk Festival; the event appeared as the album An Historic Reunion, first issued on CD by Germany's Bear Family label in 1991 and later by Koch International in 1997.

Among her individual releases, the self-titled 1957 debut on the Ambassador imprint earned widespread praise, matched by the reception given to 1964's Queen of the Autoharp on Kapp. She occupied a central place on the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's landmark 1971 set Will the Circle Be Unbroken, exposing her artistry to a fresh audience of rock listeners. Maybelle Carter passed away in October 1978.