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American violinist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Donna Shea, better known as Scarlet Rivera[2] is an American violinist. She is best known for her work with Bob Dylan, in particular on his 1976 album Desire and as part of the Rolling Thunder Revue.[2]
Born Donna Shea in Joliet, Illinois,[3] Rivera was privately trained in classical violin[3] and studied at the Mannes School of Music.[4]
Bob Dylan is said to have discovered Rivera before the rehearsal for his 1975 Rolling Thunder Revue tour. While being driven in his limousine around the Village, Dylan spotted Rivera walking with her violin case. Dylan stopped to converse with Rivera and invited her to his rehearsal studio where she spent the afternoon playing along with several of his new songs.[5] "If I had crossed the street seconds earlier," said Rivera in 2012, "it never would have happened." After a session with her, Dylan invited Rivera to play on the Rolling Thunder Revue tour. She played an important role in Dylan's studio album Desire.
In 1977, Rivera released her self-titled debut LP for Warner Bros. Records. According to Village Voice critic Robert Christgau, the album was regarded by some as "the worst record of the year".[6] Lindsay Planer from AllMusic praised the album, saying that Rivera "has consistently found specific and viable places for the violin in rock".[7]
Rivera has recorded multiple albums as a composer in numerous styles, instrumental, new-age, Celtic[4] and world music. She has performed in the US, Europe and Japan with her Celtic group. Rivera was a soloist with the Duke Ellington Orchestra at Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, and the Carnival of Venice.[citation needed]
She has also appeared on albums by Tracy Chapman,[2] (Crossroads), Keb Mo',[2] (The Door), Dee Dee Bridgewater (Just Family), David Johansen,[2] (David Johansen), and Indigo Girls.[2]
In recent years Rivera has recorded new age, instrumental, world, and Celtic music. She has also toured in Japan with the US-based South American group Ritual with Uruguayans Federico Ramos and Eduardo Marquez del Signore. She recorded the album Celtic Mist which was released in Japan.[citation needed] She also played violin on the 2014 album After the Fall, by UK-based Dodson and Fogg.[citation needed]
She was a special guest artist in the band in Joni 75: A Birthday Celebration, a birthday concert held in honor of Joni Mitchell on November 7, 2018, in Los Angeles and also in the concert with Brandi Carlile for Mitchell's Blue album in October 2019.
Rivera was featured in Martin Scorsese's 2019 pseudo-documentary film Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story[4] and attended the premiere in New York in June 2019.[8]
Rivera released the EP All of Me in April 2020 on Bright Sun Records, singing her own songs.
In May 2021, to celebrate Bob Dylan's 80th birthday, Rivera, along with Nine Mile Station, released a new version of "Hurricane". Paul Zollo, a writer for American Songwriter said that "Her presence of sound and spirit lifts this 'Hurricane' into a higher realm. The reverence she has for the song and its songwriter shines in the purity and passion of her playing."[9]
She continues to be an active recording artist, performer and composer, and is currently working on an album Celtic Magic to be released later in 2022.[citation needed]
Rivera is of Irish-Sicilian ancestry.[1] She was married in 1991 to the British session keyboardist Tommy Eyre. The marriage lasted until his death in 2001.[10]
This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (November 2019) |
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