0
Joan Baez
Joan Baez
American singer, songwriter, musician and activist
1
Jenny Whiteley
Jenny Whiteley
Canadian singer
2
Jenny Hval
Jenny Hval
Norwegian singer-songwriter, record producer, musician, and novelist
3
Eliza Gilkyson
Eliza Gilkyson
American singer-songwriter
4
Frankie Armstrong
Frankie Armstrong
British singer
5
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
American singer and songwriter
6
Holly Near
Holly Near
American actress, singer and activist
7
Bonnie Raitt
Bonnie Raitt
blues singer-songwriter and slide guitar player from the United States
8
Selena Quintanilla
Selena Quintanilla
American singer, songwriter, actress, and fashion designer (1971-1995)
9
Linda Ronstadt
Linda Ronstadt
American singer
10
Pauline Oliveros
Pauline Oliveros
American composer and musician
11
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Canadian musician
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Kate Wolf
Kate Wolf
American singer
13
Al Hurricane
Al Hurricane
American singer-songwriter
14
Sara Hickman
Sara Hickman
American musician
15
Songs of Separation
Songs of Separation
Anglo-Scottish music project
16
Linda Tillery
Linda Tillery
American singer and percussionist
17
Jenny Owen Youngs
Jenny Owen Youngs
American singer, songwriter
18
Cam
Cam
American country music singer and songwriter
19
Joanna Newsom
Joanna Newsom
American musician
Jenny Vincent
musical artist

Jenny Vincent

Intro
musical artist
Music

Jenny Wells Vincent (April 22, 1913 – May 8, 2016) was an American singer, songwriter, and activist. A scholar of Hispano music, she is credited with helping to preserve New Mexican folk music.

Vincent was born in Minnesota and raised in Chicago. In 1936, following her graduation from Vassar College, she and her husband, Dan Wells, visited the San Cristóbal, New Mexico, ranch of Freida Lawrence, the widow of D. H. Lawrence. In 1937 they bought a ranch in San Cristóbal and moved to New Mexico. Soon after, they founded a school on the property for grades 5–12 for boarders and daytime students. A classically trained musician,Vincent visited Taos-area schools where she played Mexican folk songs, although school administrators, pushing for assimilation, forbade speaking Spanish in classrooms. She also traveled from town to town, recording local musicians singing and playing old folk songs, frequently in Spanish. In 1943, Vincent became the Taos County representative for the Rocky Mountain Farmers Union, which, according to a biography, was "a milestone for her personal and political maturation. In this work she found meaningful expression and practical application for her growing political convictions.” That same year, Vincent joined the Communist Party.

Vincent and Wells were divorced in the early 1940s. In 1949, she married Craig Vincent. They remained at the San Cristóbal property, converting the school to a guest ranch. Its mission was "not to raise livestock" but to "foster a community among progressives looking for a refuge from the battles of the Cold War". Among other political and social causes, the Vincents supported the Chicano Movement and the 1951 Salt of the Earth Strike. Believing that music was a vehicle for social advocacy, Vincent played with like-minded musicians including Pete Seeger, Paul Robeson, Woody Guthrie, Malvina Reynolds and Earl Robinson.

Vincent was one of six New Mexicans to receive the 2013 Governor’s Arts Award. Recognized as "one of the finest folk musicians in the state", she was nominated by three past award recipients. In 2006 she was honored by The University of New Mexico and the New Mexico State Historic Preservation Division for a lifetime of activism through popular culture. She died in 2016 at the age of 103. Her archives of original recordings were donated to the University of New Mexico’s Zimmerman Library.