Sister Gertrude Morgan
Biography
Sister Gertrude Morgan's music wasn't remarkable for its beauty, its message, or its sophistication. Nevertheless, through a single album -- 1970s Let's Make a Record, recorded in New Orleans -- the eccentric figure best known for roaming the streets of the French Quarter in the 1950s and '60s and shouting invented spirituals through a megaphone made musical history, and not only within the narrow confines of gospel. Better than anybody who has ever set lips to a microphone, Sister Gertrude Morgan established an aural equivalent for outsider art.
For Sister Gertrude, born in 1900 as the seventh child of a poor Louisiana farmer, music was a natural extension of artistic inclinations that billowed around her from an early age. Though she was forced to quit school in third grade to help in the family fields, Sister Gertrude's passion for art remained tethered to her as tightly as her love of the Baptist Church. When the family couldn't afford art supplies, Sister Gertrude sketched figures and scenes in the dirt outside her childhood home with a stick. Married in 1928 to Will Morgan, she left her Louisiana home to live in Georgia. There, in 1937, she claimed to have had an epiphany one day while sitting alone in her kitchen.
Selected Discography

Let's Make A Record
2004
