Laura Nyro was one of pop music's true originals: A brilliant and innovative composer, her songs found greater commercial success in the hands of other performers, but her own records -- intricate, haunting works highlighting her singularly powerful vocal phrasing, evocative lyrics, and alchemical fusion of gospel, soul, folk, and jazz structures -- remain her definitive artistic legacy.
The daughter of a jazz trumpeter, she was born
Laura Nigro on October 18, 1947, and composed her first songs at the age of eight. After attending Manhattan's famed High School of Music and Art, she began performing in area clubs, drawing on influences as diverse as
Bob Dylan and
John Coltrane. In 1967,
Nyro issued her first LP,
More Than A New Discovery; though commercially unsuccessful, the album was a treasure trove of material for other artists --
The Fifth Dimension scored with "Wedding Bell Blues" and "Blowin' Away,"
Barbra Streisand covered "Stoney End," and
Blood, Sweat & Tears tackled "And When I Die."
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