
Before there was MTV, before there was arena rock, before distortion became standard fare for guitar players, there was Sister Rosetta Tharpe, an audacious performer from Cotton Plant, Arkansas who became a gospel superstar. Sister Rosetta’s immense talent and confidence arrived during an era when women, and especially women of color, had no voice. An era where no woman dared play guitar at the front of the stage, let alone front a solo act. No woman except Sister Rosetta Tharpe.
Sister Rosetta Tharpe is an artist that rarely comes up in debates about who the true founding father of rock ‘n’ roll was, but it turns out the found father of rock ‘n’ roll wasn’t a father at all, that distinction belongs to the incomparable SRT. One of the first women to front her own band, Sister Rosetta Tharpe is renowned for marrying traditional styles with modern rock ‘n’ roll and predating the work of likeminded guitar legends including Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters, and Elvis. A gospel-trained force of nature that broke barriers, stereotypes, and norms with astonishing regularity, Sister Rosetta Tharpe has and continues to influence scores of music icons and remains unequivocally the textbook definition of an iconoclast.