Connie Converse was a pioneer of what’s become known as the singer-songwriter era, making music in the predawn of a movement that had its roots in the Greenwich Village folk scene of the early 1960s.
But her songs, created a decade earlier, arrived just a moment too soon.
And by the time the sun had come up in the form of a young Bob Dylan, she was already gone.
She had vanished from New York City, as she eventually would from the world, along with her music and legacy.
student heard a 1954 bootleg recording of Ms. Converse on WNYC, that her music started to get any of the attention and respect that had evaded her some 50 years before.