After dropping out of high school, Marshall started performing under the name Cat Power, while in Atlanta, backed by musicians Glen Thrasher, Mark Moore, and others. She soon moved to New York City, New York, United States in 1992, then later opening for Liz Phair in 1994, she met Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth and Tim Foljahn of Two Dollar Guitar, who encouraged her to record, and played on her first two albums, 1995's Dear Sir and 1996's Myra Lee. In 1996 she was signed to Matador Records, and released her third album, What Would the Community Think, which spawned a single and music video, "Nude as the News".
Shortly following the release of What Would the Community Think Marshall disappeared from the musical scene, initially working as a baby sitter in Portland, Oregon and then moving to a farmhouse in Prosperity, South Carolina with boyfriend Bill Callahan (who performs under the name Smog). The plan was to permanently retire from music but during a sleepless night resulting from a nightmare, Marshall wrote several new songs. These songs would make up the bulk of Moon Pix. The album was recorded at Sing Sing Studios in Melbourne in eleven days with backing musicians Mick Turner and Jim White of the Dirty Three. The album was well-received by critics, and gained her recognition in the indie rock scene. However, during the subsequent tours she grew tired of her own material. This resulted in a series of shows during 1999 involving Marshall providing musical accompaniment to a series of screenings of the silent movie The Passion of Joan of Arc. The shows combined original material and many covers, many of which would later see release on The Covers Record, a collection of cover songs recorded at various sessions in 1998 and 1999. A selection of covers that didn't make it on to the album were recorded at Peel Acres, home of the highly influential and legendary British DJ John Peel. The session was broadcast on his BBC Radio 1 show and featured Marshall's own interpretations of Bob Dylan's "Hard Times in New York Town" amongst others.
In 2003 she resumed releasing original material with You Are Free, a diverse and critically acclaimed album that featured guest musicians such as Eddie Vedder, Dave Grohl, and the Dirty Three's Warren Ellis.
2004 saw the release of Speaking for Trees, a critically polarizing DVD which featured a single two-hour static shot of Marshall performing in a woodland. It was accompanied by an audio CD containing the 18-minute song "Willie Deadwilder", which featured M. Ward on guitar. 2005 found Cat Power out on the road again, touring the world and playing sold-out solo shows, including an Australian tour supporting Nick Cave. The shows largely consisted of material for her next album.
Cat Power's seventh record, The Greatest, was released in January, 2006. This was not a "Greatest Hits" record but rather a collaboration with Al Green's guitarist Teenie Hodges and many other well-known R&B musicians. A tour followed in the fall of 2006.
Early in 2006, Marshall announced the cancellation of her upcoming United States tour, citing "health-related issues". A few days later, Matador announced the cancellation of her two shows in London and Paris. She resumed touring in April 2006, playing some of the most well received shows of her career both with the Memphis Rhythm Band and as a solo performer.
In 2007, she played live music for the spring/ summer Chanel Haute Couture collection in Paris and appeared in Wong Kar Wai's film My Blueberry Nights as Katya. Also in 2007, she became the first female ever to win the Shortlist Music Prize when The Greatest was voted album of the year in June. Earlier in the year she was nominated in the Best International Female category at the annual Brit Awards, alongside more mainstream artists like Christina Aguilera and Nelly Furtado.
On January 22, 2008, Cat Power released a second collection of covers called Jukebox--her eighth LP overall. It included versions of songs by artists such as Hank Williams, James Brown, Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Patsy Cline and Janis Joplin.
Since then, she has released an EP called "The Dark End of the Street" on vinyl, only.
Cat Power released her first original song since 2008 just before Christmas 2011 when an MP3 of "King Rides By" was made available on her official site, in exchange for a donation of at least $0.99 to the Festival of Children Foundation and the Ali Forney Center charities. (King Rides By Songfacts).
In 2012, Cat Power released her 9th studio album, Sun which received generally positive reviews from critics. The album was included in several year-end lists by music critics and publications. Rolling Stone magazine, in their list of the "50 Best Albums of 2012", ranked it at sixteenth place, writing "the idea of the brilliantly morose Chan Marshall making a dance-rock record is almost absurd. Yet the groove-powered Sun is a perfect fit." The A.V. Club placed the album at number twenty-two on their list of the "Best Albums of 2012." Billboard also placed the album at number nine in their list of the "10 Best Albums of 2012."The L.A. Times and Filter magazine both placed the album at number six in their lists of the best albums of 2012. Sun was also included on two separate "Best Music of 2012" lists compiled by NPR, appearing at number five on the list compiled by Bob Boilen,while topping the list compiled by Robin Hilton. The album was also listed twenty-eighth on Stereogum's list of top 50 albums of 2012. Thus, becoming Cat Power's most successful original album.
In April 2015, Marshall announced that she recently had a baby.
In February 2016, Marshall had to cancel her New Zealand shows due to health reasons. According to an official press release, this is the first time in Marshall's 18-year touring history she has been forced to postpone, but is "determined to make it back ASAP, and in good health".
Angelitos Negros
Cat Power Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Con el pincel extranjero
Pintor que sigues el rumbo
De tantos pintores viejos
Aunque la Virgen sea blanca
Píntame angelitos negros
Que también se van al cielo
Pintor, si pintas con amor
Por que desprecias su color
Si sabes que en el cielo
También los quiere Dios
Pintor de santos de alcoba
Si tienes alma en el cuerpo
Porque al pintar en tus cuadros
Te olvidaste de los negros
Siempre que pintas iglesias
Pintas angelitos bellos
Pero nunca te acordaste
De pintar un ángel negro
Pintor de santos de alcoba
Si tienes alma en el cuerpo
Por que al pintar en tus cuadros
Te olvidaste de los negros
Siempre que pintas iglesias
Pintas angelitos bellos
Pero nunca te acordaste
De pintar un ángel negro
The song is about the racial discrimination towards black people in painting and art. The first verse describes a painter who was born in the singer's homeland but uses foreign brushes and follows the style of old painters. The second verse explains how the painter depicts beautiful angels in his paintings but avoids painting black angels, even though they are also good and go to heaven.
The chorus is an appeal to the painter to paint black angels, despite the societal norms of depicting only white angels. The third verse questions the painter's reason for not painting black angels, especially when he knows that God loves everyone regardless of their skin color. The fourth verse is a reflection on how the painter only paints beautiful white angels in churches and completely ignores the existence of black angels.
The song's message is not just about painting but also represents how society discriminates against black people and devalues their existence. Through this song, the singer raises her voice against the long-standing racial prejudice and demands equality for all races, colors, and cultures.
Line by Line Meaning
Pintor nacido en mi tierra
Painter born in my land
Con el pincel extranjero
With the foreign brush
Pintor que sigues el rumbo
Painter who follows the path
De tantos pintores viejos
Of so many old painters
Aunque la Virgen sea blanca
Although the virgin is white
Píntame angelitos negros
Paint me little black angels
Que también se van al cielo
That also go to heaven
Todos los negritos buenos
All the good little black boys
Pintor, si pintas con amor
Painter, if you paint with love
Por que desprecias su color
Why do you despise their color
Si sabes que en el cielo
If you know that in heaven
También los quiere Dios
God also loves them
Pintor de santos de alcoba
Painter of bedroom saints
Si tienes alma en el cuerpo
If you have a soul in your body
Porque al pintar en tus cuadros
Why, when you paint in your pictures
Te olvidaste de los negros
Did you forget about the black ones
Siempre que pintas iglesias
Whenever you paint churches
Pintas angelitos bellos
You paint beautiful little angels
Pero nunca te acordaste
But you never remembered
De pintar un ángel negro
To paint a black angel
Pintor de santos de alcoba
Painter of bedroom saints
Si tienes alma en el cuerpo
If you have a soul in your body
Por que al pintar en tus cuadros
Why, when you paint in your pictures
Te olvidaste de los negros
Did you forget about the black ones
Siempre que pintas iglesias
Whenever you paint churches
Pintas angelitos bellos
You paint beautiful little angels
Pero nunca te acordaste
But you never remembered
De pintar un ángel negro
To paint a black angel
Lyrics © ACE Music, Peermusic Publishing
Written by: Andres Eloy Blanco, Manuel Alvarez Maciste
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
Peter Pumkinghead
on He-War
i love the cats