Home

Black News and News Makers in History: Roberta Martin

African American news - Black News and News Makers in History recognizes Roberta Martin this week in Black history.Roberta Evelyn Winston (Martin Austin) was born February 12, 1907 in Helena, Arkansas, one of six children, to William and Anna Winston who were proprietors of a general store. She began studying piano at age six years.

Around 1916, before her tenth birthday, her family relocated to Cairo, Illinois. By age ten, she was playing piano at various church functions in Chicago, working with Thomas A. Dorsey, the "Father of Gospel Music," at Chicago's Pilgrim Baptist Church and eventually becoming choir director at Pisgah Baptist Church...

Mildred Bryant Jones, choral director at Wendell Phillips High School where Winston attended, taught her in piano and choral directing, inspiring Winston later to attend Northwestern University, where she studied piano in anticipation of a career as a classical concert pianist.

While the date of her marriage to William "Bill" Martin and details of their subsequent divorce are uncertain, she was known as Roberta Martin at the onset of her career in the early 1930s.

In 1932, Martin joined Thomas Dorsey and Theodore Frye's Chicago-based Young People's Choir, and was eventually employed as the choir's pianist.

A 1933 concert featuring the Bertha Wise Quartet led Martin to develop a new style of her own. That same year, Martin and Frye founded the Martin-Frye Quartet. Later renamed the Roberta Martin Singers, the group's early members included Robert Anderson, James Lawrence, Norsalus McKissick, Eugene Smith, Romance Watson, and Willie Webb. Martin accompanied the group as pianist but also sang the occasional solo.

In 1939, Martin established her Roberta Martin Studio of Music, a Chicago-based gospel music publishing house—one of the largest. It distributed her compositions as well as those of James Cleveland, Dorothy Norwood, and Alex Bradford. Among the notable songs Martin published were "He Knows How Much We Can Bear" (1941), "Try Jesus, He Satisfies" (1943), "Only a Look" (1948), "I'm Just Waiting on the Lord" (1953), and "God Is Still on the Throne" (1959).

In 1947, she married James Austin; they had one son. In spite of a change in surnames, her stage name remained the same throughout her career.

The Roberta Martin Singers were a hit in the 1940s and 1950s, recording for the Apollo and Savoy record labels and earning several gold records. In the early 1940s, female voices—namely those of Bessie Folk and Delois Barrett—were added.

Though stricken with cancer, Martin reportedly refused painkilling drugs during the time leading up to her death on January 18, 1969, in Chicago, believing that God could perform a miracle. At her funeral, 50,000 black Chicagoans passed through Mount Pisgah Baptist Church to pay their last respects. Martin is buried at Chicago's Burr Oak Cemetery, where fellow Arkansan and gospel star Sister Rosetta Tharpe is buried.

Working with gospel greats like Thomas Dorsey and Theodore Frye, Roberta Martin was one of the most significant figures during gospel music's golden age (1945–1960). A performer and publisher, she reached iconic status in Chicago, where she influenced numerous artists (such as Alex Bradford, James Cleveland, and Albertina Walker) and had an impact on an entire industry with her innovation and business acumen.

Martin was honored posthumously by the Smithsonian Institution in 1981 with a colloquium and by the U.S. Postal Service on July 15, 1998, with a commemorative postage stamp.

Compiled from http://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=2779.

 
Banner
Banner

Get our news by email!

Please be sure to add pasadenajournal.com to your approved senders list before subscribing! Learn More
Unsubscribe any time

Search the Journal

Login

Some sections of our site are for registered and/or paid subscribers only. Please login or create an account.



To post Comments, submit events or access Article Archives you must be a registered member:

Banner

Missing Something?

Did you know you can get the Pasadena Journal weekly print publication for more news and information?

Read more...

Black News and News Makers in History

6/13/1967: Thurgood Marshall appointed to U.S Supreme Court.  Read More.

6/14/1939: The Ethel Waters Show, a variety special, appears on NBC making it first time an African American appears on television.

6/15/1877: Henry O. Flipper, cadet, becomes first black West Point graduate.

6/15/1892: Matilda Sissieretta Jones, soprano, becomes first African American to perform at Carnegie Hall. One of highest paid performers for era, she also performed at White House that year for President Harrison & at Madison Square Garden.

6/15/1921: Bessie Coleman, pilot, attended French "ten-month flight training course finishing three months early to obtain license -- first U.S. woman of any race to do so directly..." Read More.

6/16/1792: Francis Johnson, composer, band leader, born. Read More.

6/17/1775: Peter Salem & Salem Poor, battle heroes among Black soldiers, fought at Battle of Bunker Hill & Breed's Hill.

6/18/1942: Bernard W. Robinson, Harvard medical student, made ensign in U.S. Naval Reserve becoming first Black to win U.S. Navy commission.

6/19/1865: Word of 1863 Emancipation Proclamation reached Galveston, Texas and about one-third of state's population was freed. In 1980, the event became a legal Texas holiday. Many states unofficially celebrate occasion. There have been unsuccessful attempts to make it national holiday.

6/19/1918: John H. Johnson, JET and Ebony magazines editor & publisher, founder of Johnson Publishing Company (most successful African American U.S. publishing company), Fashion Fair cosmetics owner, & owner of first African American owned radio station in Chicago, born.