


Buffy
Sainte-Marie - Biography
Buffy Sainte-Marie has enjoyed a long career that has seen her rise to
stardom on the folk circuit and try her hand at
country, rock, soundtrack themes, acting, activism, and children's television. For
most listeners, she remains identified with the material she wrote and sang for
Vanguard in the mid-'60s.
Her songs that addressed the plight of the Native American, particularly
"Now That the
Sainte-Marie was born to Cree Indian parents and adopted by a white
family. Signed to Vanguard, she was one of the folk scene's more prominent
rising stars in the '60s, and certainly the only widely heard performer
articulating Native American viewpoints in song. Much of her best material from
this era, however, gained its greatest commercial inroads via cover versions. "Universal
Soldier" was one of Donovan's first hits. "Until It's Time for You to
Go," perhaps her best composition, was covered by numerous pop singers,
and became a big British hit for Elvis Presley in the early '70s. "Cod'ine," one of the few '60s songs to explicitly
address the dangers of drugs, was covered by Californian rock bands Quicksilver
Messenger Service and the Charlatans.
Sainte-Marie didn't pigeonhole herself as a folky,
though, recording in
She hadn't made an album for 15 years before issuing Coincidence and Likely Stories in 1992.