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Marie Knight’s vocal talents were recognized early on. When she was five years old, Marie—who was born in Sanford, Florida, but raised in Newark, New Jersey—sang the gospel number “Doing All the Good We Can” at her parents’ church, where the congregants marveled at her poise. A member of the youth choir, she was soon elevated to soloist and taught herself to play piano. “I used to go to the church in the daytime and just hit one note at a time, to hear that sound,” she recalled. “It was a joy to me, to put those notes together on the piano, just one key at a time.”
    That joy soon became a professional calling for Marie, who by her early twenties had gained experience touring the national gospel circuit with evangelist Frances Robinson; she even recorded a few early sides with the quartet The Sunset Four. In 1946, she met Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the nationally famous gospel singer-guitarist, who recognized something special in Marie’s compelling contralto and her elegant stage presence. The two became gospel’s preeminent duo of the 1940s, recording hits for Decca Records, including “Didn’t It Rain,” “Up Above My Head,” and the gorgeous “Beams of Heaven.” By the late 1940s, Marie and Rosetta had split to pursue separate musical projects—Marie to do solo gospel work on Decca.
    The two women reunited frequently on stage during the 1950s, however. In addition to singing before thousands of gospel fans in Washington, DC in 1950, and touring with up-and-coming gospel vocalist Wynona Carr in 1954, Marie and Rosetta impressed the critics with their sophisticated performances at top New York City jazz clubs in 1955.
In the 1960s, Marie cultivated a rhythm-and-blues career, touring with the likes of Brooke Benton, the Drifters, and Clyde McPhatter. After a hiatus, she re-emerged in the mid-1970s to record gospel music; today, Marie Knight is a minister at Gates of Prayer Church in New York, founded by the late Dolly Lewis.
    In January 2002, on a cold, bright Saturday morning, Marie entered a recording studio to pay tribute to her old singing partner, Rosetta Tharpe, doing a solo version of their old hit “Didn’t It Rain.” [Listen the fruits of that session on Shout, Sister, Shout! (MC-0050).] That session—and Marie’s continuing vitality as a singer and performer—led to her present collaboration with producer Mark Carpentieri.
    Marie’s new recording is the Gospel songs of Rev. Gary Davis titled Let Us Get Together (MC-0058). Larry Campbell (Dixie Hummingbirds, Bob Dylan, Levon Helm, Elvis Costello) is playing all the stringed instruments. That release came out June 26, 2007. It marked Marie’s first full-length recording in over 20 years. The recording was named a top 10 blues release by NPR and Marie was featured in "Living Blues," "No- Depression," & "Dirty Linen." Since 2007 Marie has performed on Mountain Stage, Woodsongs Radio Hour and has opened shows for Madeleine Peyroux. Marie has also performed at The Chicago Blues Festival, The Lowell Folk Festival and The Cognac Blues Festival and the Ottawa Folk Festival to name a few.
    Her voice has changed since the earliest days of youth recitals in Newark, but Marie Knight’s gift—the one recognized early on by her church—remains undiminished by time.

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Marie Knight (June 1, 1925, Sanford, Florida - August 30, 2009, Harlem) was an American gospel and R&B singer.
Knight was born in Sanford, Florida but grew up in Newark, New Jersey. She first toured as a singer with Frances Robinson, an evangelist. She toured with Sister Rosetta Tharpe in the 1940s, recording and performing with her through the 1950s. Tharpe recognized "something special" in Marie's contralto voice. Among their successes were the songs "Beams of Heaven", "Didn't it Rain", and "Up Above My Head". In the 1960s she recorded some secular soul music and R&B, and in 1961 she recorded the single "Come Tomorrow", which was later a hit for Manfred Mann. Knight's version of "Cry Me a River" reached #35 on the U.S. Billboard R&B charts in 1965. She toured with Brook Benton, the Drifters, and Clyde McPhatter.
In 2002, Knight made a comeback in the gospel world, recording for a tribute album to Rosetta Tharpe. She also released a full-length album on her manager's label in 2007. She died of complications from pneumonia on August 30, 2009.