John Bassette

John Bassette

John Bassette, African American folksinger from Cleveland, tipping his hat

John Bassette (photo by Todd Wieder)
Background information
Born (1941-12-28)December 28, 1941
Hampton, Virginia
Died November 1, 2006(2006-11-01) (aged 64)
Cleveland, Ohio
Genres Folk music
Occupation(s) Singer/songwriter, poet and cable television personality
Instruments Guitar

John Bassette (December 28, 1941 – November 2006) was a folk singer/songwriter, poet and cable television personality in the Greater Cleveland, Ohio, United States, area. He was born in Hampton, Virginia, USA.

Musical career

Bassette first attracted national notice at the 1967 Newport Folk Festival, where critic Bradford F. Swan singled out his performance of his composition "Brown Boy" as "an immensely moving song, beautifully sung" and "the high point of the evening".[1] Later that same year, he performed at Carnegie Hall at a "Sing Out" hootenanny sponsored by the magazine of the same name. He also performed that August at the legendary Bitter End on Bleecker Street, of which the New York Times music critic Dan Sullivan wrote, "Mr. Bassette, who knows what he is doing at all times, obviously enjoys it and ought to be able to make a good living at it in years to come."[2]

Returning to Cleveland, Bassette produced three full-length albums, two mini-albums, and a self-illustrated book of stories, songs, essays and poetry entitled Losing Face in America. Bassette was a pioneer in the area of producing his own recordings and releasing them on his own label, something few musicians in the Cleveland area had done before. His first mini-album, Weed and Wine, produced by TinkerToo Music & Records, featured a cover by underground comic artist Dave Sheridan, and both the cover song and the song Hello, Cleveland were local hits. He appeared at many street fairs and events in the Northeast Ohio area, and favored benefits for charitable causes including the Cleveland Free Clinic. He also appeared as a regular guest on the seminal folk-music segment, Coffeebreak Concerts, on the major Cleveland Rock radio station WMMS.[3] Bassette also appeared alongside Sammy Davis Jr. in the London company of Golden Boy. He hosted a cable TV show through Viacom in the mid-eighties under the name Jon Bon, and produced two music videos and a documentary on how to create videos on a tight budget.

Writings

An article by John Bassette entitled “How to Copyright Your Songs” was published in Mother Earth News in 1970, and he published a collection of poetry and stories entitled Losing Face in America in 1978, including the poem "Golden Doves & Dolphins", reprinted in the Changeling Times in 1983 (along with a feature on him and his album Another Alternative called It's So Nice on Hessler Street).

Death and Tributes

Bassette suffered a series of strokes during the 90s, and stayed first at St. Herman’s House of Hospitality, then at St. Augustine Manor. A benefit concert for Bassette was organized by singer/songwriter Alex Bevan on May 19, 2002 at the Beachland Ballroom & Tavern in Cleveland, OH, featuring Jim Ballard, Charlie Wiener, Michael Stanley, Jim Schafer, and many others. Bevan compiled and released an album for the benefit entitled Rainbow Colored Clouds. This contained some Bassette favorites, as well as the previously-unreleased title track. Bassette died in November 2006. In 2007 a tribute CD entitled Been Through So Much Together was released by Skyline Productions. It featured many well-known Cleveland-area and other folk musicians and friends of Bassette, including Tom Paxton, Michael Stanley, Jim Ballard, and Alex Bevan.[4]

References

  1. Swan, Bradford. "Festival Singers Folksy", Providence Journal July 14, 1967, p. 14.
  2. Sullivan, Dan "Bitter End Has Good Beginnings", New York Times, August 31, 1967, p. 27.
  3. Olszewski, Mike. Radio Daze: Stories from the Front in Cleveland's FM Air Wars, p. 71. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 2003.
  4. John Bassette Tribute Site

Discography

Written Works

Performance Venues

Articles about Bassette

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