Monday, December 28, 2009

DATES AND TIMES: Blues Chapel and Last Words

Blues Chapel and Last Words
at
Gallery 80808/Vista Studios
808 Lady Street, Columbia, SC
February 4 – 16, 2010

Opening Reception: Friday, February 5 from 6 – 8. The reception will include the free tribute “Ladies Sing the Blues…” at the Blue Martini, which shares the common hallway with the gallery, starting at 7 PM (a second, expanded tribute will be presented at 9 PM with a $5 cover).

Gallery hours: Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 11 AM – midnight; Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday from 11 – 6; Sunday Noon – 6. (803) 252-6134 for Gallery 80808/Vista Studios.

Blue Martini hours: Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 7 PM until past midnight. Doors opening on the night of the reception at 6 PM. (803) 256-2442.

More of Susan Lenz's work can be seen on her blogs:
http://artbysusanlenz.blogspot.com
and
http://graverubbingquilts.blogspot.com

Press Release


Susan Lenz presents BLUES CHAPEL and LAST WORDS, fiber installations at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios

Columbia fiber and installation artist Susan Lenz presents two related installations from Thursday, February 4 through Tuesday, February 16, 2010 at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, 808 Lady Street in Columbia’s downtown arts and cultural district. The exhibit includes two distinct areas: Blues Chapel and Last Words.

Blues Chapel is an installation honoring the great women of the early Blues world. Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Nina Simone, Billie Holiday and Alberta Hunter are among the twenty-four singers depicted saint-like above an altar and before mahogany church pews. Music fills the gallery and the opening reception will include a free performance at 7 PM in the Blue Martini, just down the shared hallway. The installation has just returned to Columbia after two months in the Great Denton Arts Council’s Gough Gallery where it received extensive media coverage in the arts-oriented community.

(Above: Billie Holiday by Susan Lenz, one of 24 early female Blues singers honored in Blues Chapel.)

The installation is the artist’s tribute to the hard-singing, hard-living women. “Early female blues singers lived in a male dominated society, in a segregated country, and worked in an industry that took advantage of their lack of education and opportunity,” Lenz said. “Physical abuse, drug and alcohol dependence, and poverty plagued most. They struggled, made sacrifices, and sang of their woes. They helped change the world for today’s young, black, female vocalists.”

(Above: Father and Mother, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt by Susan Lenz. Click on image to enlarge. To see other art quilts in this series to be on view at Blues Chapel and Last Words, please visit the link above. Click on image to enlarge.)

If Blues Chapel is considered the “church”, then Last Words is its churchyard where the departed rest. Last Words, based on gravestone rubbings on fabric and collected epitaphs, explores the concepts of remembrance and mortality. This brand-new body of work is made up of over 30 grave rubbing art quilts, 25 photo transfers stitched with found objects (Angels in Mourning Series), and a focal point of sheer chiffon banners embroidered with hundreds of collected epitaphs.

(Above: Be Ye Also Ready, Angels in Mourning Series by Susan Lenz. One of 25 xylene photo transfers of cemetery angels stitched with found objects. Click on image to enlarge.)

“The work is meant to suggest the serenity of a cemetery, the connection with the past, and the frailty of life,” Lenz said. “Personal and universal issues of mortality are evident in the selection of words from the past that address the future.”

(Above: Eboniramm who will present a free tribute at Blue Martini during the opening reception and also a later performance that night with only a $5 cover charge.)

Ladies Sing the Blues…and it never felt so good! During the art reception on Friday, February 5th, the Blue Martini will present the tribute “Ladies Sing the Blues…” hosted by the “Queen of Blues” Bessie Smith, portrayed by singer Eboniramm. Eboniramm will spotlight Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Nina Simone, Anita O’Day and other female blues pioneers (all included in Blue Chapel). The Blue Martini will present a second, expanded “Ladies Sing the Blues…” starting at 9 PM Friday, February 5th. The $5 cover charge will include Eboniramm and more ladies singing the blues.

Exhibition: February 4 – 16, 2010
Opening Reception: Friday, February 5 from 6 – 8. The reception will include the free tribute “Ladies Sing the Blues…” at the Blue Martini, which shares the common hallway with the gallery, starting at 7 PM (a second, expanded tribute will be presented at 9 PM with a $5 cover).

Gallery hours: Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 11 AM – midnight; Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday from 11 – 6; Sunday Noon – 6.

Blue Martini hours: Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 7 PM until past midnight. Doors opening on the night of the reception at 6 PM.

Members of the media can schedule interviews with the artist by contacting her at (803) 254-0923 or mouse_house@prodigy.netMore of her work can be seen at http://artbysusanlenz.blogspot.comhttp://graverubbingquilts.blogspot.com

For information on the concert “Ladies Sing the Blues….and it never felt so good!” Contact the Blue Martini at (803) 256-2442

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Victoria Spivey


Victoria Spivey

Victoria Spivey was born in 1908 andbegan her recording career at age 19 as a pianist at the Lincoln Theater in Dallas. In the early 1920s, she played in Texas gambling parlors, gay hangouts and whorehouses. Spivey wasn't afraid to sing sexually suggestive lyrics. She wrote many of her own songs. Her first recording, “Black Snake Blues”, was for the Okeh label in 1926. In the 1930s she moved to New York to record for several companies and perform in various African-American musical revues. She also toured but left show business in the 1950s, singing only in church. In 1962 she formed her own Spivey Records label. Her first release featured Bob Dylan as an accompanist. She was in demand on the folk-blues revival festival circuit and influenced a new generation of singers. In 1970, Spivey was awarded a "BMI Commendation of Excellence" from the music publishing organization for her long and outstanding contributions to many worlds of music. After entering Beekman Downtown Hospital with an internal hemorrhage, she died a short while later in 1976. Spivey is buried in Hempstead, N.Y.

Mamie Smith


Mamie Smith

Mamie Smith was born as Mamie Robinson on May 26, 1883 in Cincinnati, Ohio and lived until September 16, 1946. She was a vaudeville singer, dancer, pianist and actress, and appeared in several motion pictures late in her career. As a vaudeville singer she performed a number of styles including jazz and blues. She entered blues history by being the first African American to make vocal blues recordings in 1920.

She toured with African-American vaudeville and minstrel shows until settling in New York City in 1913, where she worked as a cabaret singer. She appeared in songwriter Perry Bradford's musical "Made in Harlem" in 1918. In early 1920, Okeh Records planned to record popular singer Sophie Tucker performing a pair of songs by Perry Bradford. Tucker was ill and could not make it to the session; Bradford persuaded Okeh to allow Mamie Smith to record in Tucker's place. Later that year Smith recorded the Bradford-penned "Crazy Blues”. These were the first recordings of vocal blues by an African American singer. “Crazy Blues” was a hit, selling a million copies in one year. The success of Smith's record prompted record companies to seek to record other female blues singers and started the era of what is now known as classic female blues.

Sippie Wallace


Sippie Wallace

Sippie Wallace was born on November 1, 1898 in Houston, Texas as Beulah Thomas. Her family was quite musical; her brothers were George W. Thomas, a notable pianist, bandleader, composer, and music publisher, and Hersal Thomas, and her niece was Hociel Thomas (daughter of George). In her youth she sang and played organ in Baptist church where her father was a deacon, but in the evenings the children took to sneaking out to tent shows. By her midteens, they were playing in those tent shows.

In 1915 she moved to New Orleans, Louisiana, married, and changed her name. In 1923 she moved to Chicago, Illinois and made her first recordings for Okeh Records as Sippie Wallace, "The Texas Nightingale". She was one of the popular blues singers of the 1920s, recording over 40 songs between 1923 and 1927, many written by herself or her brothers. In the 1930s she retired from most commercial performance, mostly playing and singing in church in Detroit, Michigan. She made some more recordings in the 1940s, and returned to touring in 1966 with the blues revival of that period, when her fellow singer Victoria Spivey convinced her to record a new album, Sippie Wallace Sings the Blues. That album made such a vivid impression on Bonnie Raitt, then a student at Radcliffe College with an interest in the blues, that she sought out and befriended Wallace, and fifteen years later in 1981, the duo recorded an album Sippie for Atlantic Records, which earned a 1983 Grammy nomination and the 1984 W. C. Handy Award for best blues album of the year. Sippie Wallace continued performing into her 80s. She died on her birthday in 1986. Sippie Wallace was inducted into the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame in 1993.

Shirley Horn


Shirley Horn

Shirley Horn was born on May 1, 1934 and began to play the piano at age four. After majoring in music at Howard University, Horn put together her first trio in 1954. Miles Davis invited her to open for him at the Village Vanguard in 1960, an engagement that led to a recording contract with Mercury Records and a life-long friendship with Davis. Quincy Jones became an admirer and mentor of Horn’s during this period, and produced two of her albums. After parting ways with the label over creative differences, she recorded a number of albums for the Danish Steeplechase label, which cemented her reputation as a singular talent. Horn was a devoted wife and mother, so much so that she eschewed touring for many years and instead chose to perform primarily in clubs around the D.C. and Baltimore area. In 1986, she signed with Verve and released fourteen albums to critical acclaim. She was received eight Grammy nominations, was elected to the Lionel Hampton Jazz Hall of Fame, and won the Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Performance in 1999. She received many other awards and died on October 20, 2005 in her hometown of Washington, DC after a lengthy illness.

Sarah Vaughan


Sarah Vaughan

Sarah Vaughan was born in 1924. She sang in church as a child and had extensive piano lessons from 1931-39. After she won an amateur contest at the Apollo Theater, she was hired for the Earl Hines big band as a singer and second vocalist. Unfortunately, the musicians' recording strike kept her off record during this period (1943-44). When lifelong friend Billy Eckstine broke away to form his own orchestra, Vaughan joined him, making her recording debut. She loved being with Eckstine's orchestra, where she became influenced by a couple of his sidemen, Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. Other than a few months with John Kirby from 1945-46, Sarah Vaughan spent the remainder of her career as a solo star.
Sarah Vaughan recorded with several labels throughout her life and appeared in numerous films. Only during her last few years did her recording career falter a bit, with only two forgettable efforts after 1982. However, up until near the end, Vaughan remained a world traveler, singing and partying into all hours of the night with her miraculous voice staying in prime form. She died in 1990 of lung cancer.

Ruth Brown


Ruth Brown

They called Atlantic Records "the house that Ruth built" during the 1950s. Ruth Brown's regal hit-making reign from 1949 to the close of the '50s helped tremendously to establish the New York label's predominance in the R&B field. Later, the business all but forgot her. She was forced to toil as domestic help for a time but she returned to the top. Her status as a postwar R&B pioneer and tireless advocate for the rights and royalties of her peers is recognized worldwide. She was born in 1928 and ran away from home in 1945 to pursue music. She was introduced to the fledgling record company Atlantic. En route to NYC, Brown’s leg was seriously injured in a serious auto accident. This delayed her debut record for nine months. When it was finally cut, it became a hit. Her music then was regularly on the R&B charts. She appeared in the 1955 groundbreaking TV program “Showtime at the Apollo”. Then her popularity waned. After raising her two sons and working a nine-to-five job, Brown began to rebuild her musical career in the mid-'70s. Her comedic sense served her well during a TV sitcom “Hello, Larry” and in John Waters' 1985 sock-hop satire film Hairspray. She won a Tony Award in the 1989 for her Broadway appearance. She recorded for Fantasy Records in the ‘80s and ‘90s and hosted NPR’s "Harlem Hit Parade" and "Blues Stage." Brown's nine-year ordeal to recoup her share of royalties from all those Atlantic platters led to the formation of the nonprofit Rhythm & Blues Foundation, an organization dedicated to helping others in the same frustrating situation. Ruth Brown was still alive and publicly performing when Blues Chapel debuted. Sadly, she passed away on November 17, 2006 after a heart attack and stroke.

Rosetta Tharpe


Rosetta Tharpe

Rosetta Tharpe was born March 20, 1921 in Cotton Plant, Arkansas; the daughter of Katie Bell Nubin, a traveling missionary and shouter in the classic gospel tradition known throughout the circuit as "Mother Bell," she was a prodigy, mastering the guitar by the age of six. In time the family relocated to Chicago, where Tharpe began honing her unique style; blessed with a resonant vibrato, both her vocal phrasing and guitar style drew heavy inspiration from the blues, and she further aligned herself with the secular world with a sense of showmanship and glamour unique among the gospel performers of her era. Signing to Decca in 1938, Tharpe became a virtual overnight sensation; her first records were smash hits, and quickly she was performing in the company of mainstream superstars. She led an almost schizophrenic existence, remaining in the good graces of her core audience while also appealing to her growing white audience.
During World War II, Tharpe recorded V-Discs for American soldiers overseas. In 1944, she began recording with boogie-woogie pianist Sammy Price; their first collaboration, "Strange Things Happening Every Day," even cracked Billboard's race records Top Ten, a rare feat for a gospel act and one which she repeated several more times during the course of her career. In 1946 she teamed with the Newark-based Sanctified shouter Madame Marie Knight. In the early ’50 they cut a handful of straight blues sides; their fans were outraged. Knight made a permanent leap into secular music, with little success. Tharpe remained a gospel artist, although her credibility and popularity were seriously damaged. Her record sales dropped off and her live engagements became fewer. Many purists took Tharpe's foray into the mainstream as a personal affront. She spent over a year touring clubs in Europe. Tharpe's comeback was slow but steady, and by 1960 she had returned far enough into the audience's good graces to appear at the Apollo Theatre. She continued touring even after suffering a major stroke in 1970, dying in Philadelphia on October 9, 1973.

Peggy Lee


Peggy Lee

Lee was born Norma Deloris Egstrom in Jamestown, North Dakota. After her mother died her father remarried and her stepmother was very cruel to her. So she left home, and in 1941, she joined Benny Goodman's band—then at the height of its popularity—and for over two years toured the United States with it. She recorded several hits and became a star. In 1944, Lee began to record for Capitol Records, for whom she produced a long string of hits over the next three decades. She also recorded for Decca Records (1952-56). She was also known as a songwriter with such hits as the songs from the Disney movie Lady and the Tramp, which she also sang. She also acted in several films and was nominated for an Oscar in 1955. Lee was nominated for twelve Grammy Awards, winning Best Contemporary Vocal Performance for her 1969 hit "Is That All There Is". In 1995 she was given the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. In the early 1990s, she retained famed entertainment attorney Neil Papiano, who, on her behalf successfully sued Disney for royalties on Lady and the Tramp. Lee's lawsuit claimed that she was due royalties for video tapes, a technology that did not exist when she agreed to write and perform for Disney. She continued to perform into the 1990s and still mesmerized audiences and critics alike. After years of poor health, Lee died from complications from diabetes and cardiac disease at the age of 81 in 2002.

Nina Simone


Nina Simone

Eunice Kathleen Waymon, better known as Dr. Nina Simone (Hon.) was born on February 21, 1933 in Tryon, NC. She began singing at her local church and showed prodigious talent as a pianist. Her public debut, a piano recital, was made at the age of ten. Her parents, who had taken seats in the front row, were forced to move to the back of the hall to make way for whites. This incident contributed to her later involvement in the civil rights movement. At seventeen, Simone moved Philadelphia where she taught piano and accompanied singers. She studied at Julliard, thanks to the sponsorship of benefactors, but lack of funds meant that she was unable to fulfill her dream of becoming America's first African-American concert pianist. She was rejected by the Curtis Institute and believed it was because she was black.Simone turned instead to blues and jazz in Atlantic City nightclubs, taking the name Nina Simone in 1954;. She first came to public notice in 1959 with her wrenching rendition of George Gershwin's "I Loves You Porgy". Throughout the 1960s, Simone was involved in the civil rights movement and recorded a number of political songs. In 1971, Simone left the United States following disagreements with agents, record labels, and the tax authorities, citing racism as the reason. She returned in 1978 and was arrested for tax evasion (she had withheld several years of income tax as a protest against the Vietnam War). In 1995, Simone reportedly shot and wounded her neighbour's son with a pneumatic pistol after his laughing disturbed her concentration. She also fired at a record company executive whom she accused of stealing royalties. In 1993, she settled near Aix-en-Provence in the south of France where she died of cancer in 2003.

Memphis Minnie McCoy


Memphis Minnie McCoy

Memphis Minnie was born in Algiers, Louisiana on June 3, 1897 as Lizzie Douglas. She ran away to Memphis, Tennesse at age thirteen. She joined Ringling Brothers circus the next year. A Columbia Records talent scout heard signed her to a contract in 1929. Minnie recorded for forty years, a unique feat among female blues artists. She was a flamboyant character who wore bracelets made of silver dollars and was the biggest female blues singer from the early Depression years through World War II. She took up the electric guitar in 1942. She combined her Louisiana-country roots with Memphis-blues to produce her unique country-blues sound. Along with Big Bill Broonzy and Tampa Red, she took country blues into electric urban blues, paving the highway for giants like Muddy Waters, Little Walter, and Jimmy Rogers. She was married three times, and each husband was an accomplished blues guitarist: Joe McCoy (a.k.a. "Kansas Joe") later of the Harlem Hamfats, Casey Bill Weldon of the Memphis Jug Band, and Ernest Lawlers (a.k.a. "Little Son Joe"). Minnie recorded nearly 200 records with “Little Son Joe”. In the 1940s she formed a touring Vaudeville company. From the 1950s on, however, public interest in her music declined and in 1957 she and Little Son Joe returned to Memphis. In 1961, Joe died and Minnie suffered a stroke which forced her to spend the rest of her life in nursing homes until she died in 1973.

Luckily, she was able to see her reputation revived in the 1960s as part of the general revival of interest in the blues. She died on August 6, 1973. In 1980, Memphis Minnie was inducted into the Blues Foundation's Hall of Fame.

Mary Lou Williams


Mary Lou Williams

Mary Lou Williams was born Mary Elfrieda Scruggs in 1910. She taught herself the piano by ear and was playing in public at the age of six. When she was 13, she started working in vaudeville, and three years later married saxophonist John Williams. They moved to Memphis, and she made her debut on records with Synco Jazzers. Soon, Mary Lou was the band’s top soloist and arranged much of the music. She wrote songs and arrangements for other top singers and bands as well, including Benny Goodman, Earl Hines, and Tommy Dorsey. She divorced John Williams in 1942 and married trumpeter Harold “Shorty” Baker. She co-led a combo with Baker before joining Duke Ellington. She played briefly with Benny Goodman in 1948 and actively encouraged young modernists who would lead the bebop revolution.
Williams lived in Europe from 1952-1954 and then became very involved in the Catholic religion. She retired from music for a few years before appearing as a guest with Dizzy Gillespie's orchestra in 1957. Williams wrote three masses and a cantana, was a star at Benny Goodman's 40th-anniversary Carnegie Hall concert in 1978, taught at Duke University, and often planned her later concerts as a history of jazz recital. By the time she passed away at the age of 71, she had a list of accomplishments that could have filled three lifetimes.

Sara Martin


Sara Martin

Sara Martin was born in 1884 and began her vaudeville career around 1915 in Illinois. In 1922 she was signed to a recording contract with Okeh Records by Clarence Williams. Williams wrote and played piano on a number of Martin’s early records. Sara Martin was said to have excelled as a live performer and was a star on the TOBA circuit in the early 1920s. She had a deep, full-bodied voice that compared favorably with Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey but lacked the emotional punch of those two singers. She often sounded a bit wooden, like she was reading the lyrics on her records, although her diction was impeccable. She recorded four sides with Clarence Williams that included King Oliver on cornet in 1928. “Death Sting Me Blues” from these sessions is one of her better records and shows Oliver to be a master of the Blues. While primarily a popular singer, Martin could get low down on the blues and was billed as the “famous moanin’ mama” as well as “the colored Sophie Tucker” reflecting her dual roles as a Blues and Vaudeville performer. She toured the country until the early 1930s and recorded with Okeh until 1928. When blues faded out in the early 1930s Sara retired from show business but continued to sing gospel. She returned to her hometown of Louisville, Kentucky during the Depression and worked in a nursing home. She died of a stroke in 1955.

Gertrude Pridgett "Ma" Rainey


Gertrude Pridgett "Ma" Rainey

Gertrude Pridgett Rainey, better known as Ma Rainey (April 26, 1886December 22, 1939), was one of the earliest known professional blues singers and one of the first generation of such singers to record. She was billed as The Mother of the Blues. She did much to develop and popularize the form and was an important influence on younger blues women, such as Bessie Smith, and their careers.Born in Columbus, Georgia, she first appeared on stage in Columbus in "A Bunch of Blackberries" at the age of 14. She then joined a traveling vaudeville troupe and married fellow vaudeville singer William 'Pa' Rainey in 1904. They toured with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels as Rainey & Rainey, Assassinators of the Blues, singing a mix of blues and popular songs. In 1912, she took the young Bessie Smith into the Rabbit Foot Minstrels, trained her, and worked with her until Smith left in 1915. Also known, though less discussed, is that she was bisexual. Rainey never shied away from her feelings in her music. Rainey was outspoken on women's issues and a role model for future women entertainers who took control of their own careers. Ma Rainey was already a veteran performer with decades of touring with African-American shows in the U.S. Southern States when she made her first recordings in 1923. Rainey signed with Paramount Records and, between 1923 and 1928, she recorded 100 songs. Rainey was extremely popular among southern blacks in the 1920s. She retired in 1933 and died of a heart attack in 1939.

Koko Taylor


Koko Taylor

Koko Taylor was born on September 28, 1935 as Cora Walton, on a farm just outside Memphis, Tennessee. Taylor left for Chicago in 1954 with her husband, truck driver Robert "Pops" Taylor and in the late 1950s began singing in blues clubs. She was spotted by Willie Dixon in 1962, and this led to wider performances and her first recording contract. In 1965, Taylor was signed by Chess Records, recorded a major hit that reached number four on the R&B charts in 1966. It sold a million copies. National touring in the late 1960s and early 1970s improved her fan base, and she became accessible to a wider record-buying public when she signed with Alligator Records in 1975. She then recorded over a dozen albums for that label, many nominated for Grammy awards. She came to dominate the female blues singer ranks, winning 24 W. C. Handy Awards (more than any other artist). After her recovery from a near-fatal car crash in 1989, Taylor appeared in movies such as Blues Brothers (2000). She opened a blues club on Division St. in Chicago in 1994 but closed it in 1999. Koko Taylor was awarded the W. C. Handy Lifetime Music Achievement Award in 2007; won the 2008 Grammy for “Old School”, Best Traditional Blues Album; won the 2008 Grammy for Gonna Buy Me a Mule, Best Song of the Year; and a Grammy as the Best Female Blues Performer of 2008. Koko Taylor performed until her death on June 3, 2009.

Ethel Waters


Ethel Waters

Ethel Waters was born on Halloween in 1896 in Chester, Pennsylvania. Her first Harlem club job was at Edmond’s Cellar in about 1919. Later, she toured with Fletcher Henderson and was sponsored under the Black Swan Record label. By 1925 she was recording with Columbia Records. She was a versatile vocalist and gained popularity for her jazz, big band, gospel, Broadway, and popular music as well as for the Blues. She was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award in 1949 for the film “Pinky”. In 1950, she won the New York Drama Critics Award. Before her death, she toured with Billy Graham. She was inducted in the Gospel Music Hall of fame posthumously.

Ella Fitzgerald


Ella Fitzgerald

Ella Fitzgerald was born on April 25, 1918 but orphaned in early childhood. She was sent to an orphanage in Yonkers. She won an amateur contest sponsored by the Apollo Theatre in 1934, which led to an engagement with Chick Webb's band, which she took over following his death in 1939. She went solo in 1942. During the '40s she recorded successfully and appeared in films. Later, Fitzgerald severed her ties with Decca and joined Granz's new company, Verve. One of their first projects was a series of two-record "songbooks," dedicated to the nation's premier songwriters like Cole Porter, Rodgers And Hart, and George and Ira Gershwin. Nelson Riddle among others provided jazz-tinged arrangements, and these sets enabled Fitzgerald to “cross over” to a general audience. She also had smash albums singing with Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Ellington, Marty Paich, and Riddle. Granz, Fitzgerald's manager since the late '40s, kept her very busy, issuing her records regularly and booking constant festival dates. She kept going into the '70s, expanding her repertoire. Fitzgerald had eye surgery in the early '70s, and since battled recurring vision problems and illnesses in the '80s. A recognized treasure, several retrospective sets were issued in 1993, in recognition of Fitzgerald's 75th birthday. She died on June 15, 1996 from complications with diabetes. She is best known as a jazz vocalist and for her “scat” singing.

Edith Wilson


Edith Wilson

She was born Edith Goodall to a middle class black family in Louisville, KY, on September 2, 1896. Her ancestors included an American Vice President, John C. Breckenridge, and a woman who was the model for the Liza character in Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin.

Edith Wilson entered show business in 1919 at the Park Theater in Louisville. Shortly afterwards she joined blues singer Lena Wilson and her pianist brother Danny. Edith and Danny Wilson were married and the three formed an act. Soon, Edith Wilson was introduced to Columbia Records where she was paired with Johnny Dunn's Jazz Hounds for a series of 17 recordings made in 1921 and 1922.

Edith Wilson became a major star in the New York black entertainment world. She was a member, with the famous Florence Mills, of "Lew Leslie's Plantation Review" at the Lafayette Theater in Harlem. In the mid- to late '20s, Edith Wilson went to England and established herself as an international star. She appeared in non-singing roles on radio shows like Amos and Andy and in the Humphrey Bogart/Lauren Bacall classic film “To Have and Have Not”. Around 1950, Edith Wilson assumed the character of Aunt Jemima, promoting the pancake mix for the Quaker Oats Company.

Edith Wilson retired from show business in 1963 to work as an executive secretary with Negro Actors Guild and to involve herself with other charitable, religious, and literary activities. Her last appearance was at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1980. She died on March 30, 1981 in Chicago.

Dinah Washington


Dinah Washington

Dinah Washington was born Ruth Jones in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in 1924. Her family moved to Chicago while she was still a child. She played piano and directed her church choir. Later, she studied in Walter Dyett's renowned music program at DuSable High School. For a while, she split her time between performing in clubs as “Dinah Washington” while using the name “Ruth Jones” with the Salle Martin's gospel choir. She made extraordinary recordings in jazz, blues, R&B and light pop but refused to record gospel music, believing it wrong to mix the secular and spiritual professionally. She was a member of Liionel Hampton’s band in 1942 and cut her first hit with Keystone Records in 1943. She charted numerous R&B hits in the ‘40s and ‘50s. With "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes" 1959, Washington won a Grammy for Best R&B Performance. What set Dinah Washington apart from her contemporaries, was her extraordinary diction and phrasing. She was married seven times, and divorced six times while having several lovers, including Quincy Jones, her young arranger. She was known to be imperious and demanding in real life, but audiences loved her. In London she once declared, "...there is only one heaven, one earth and one queen...Queen Elizabeth is an impostor", but the crowd loved it. During her marriage to football player Dick "Night Train" Lane, she died from an accidental overdose of diet pills and alcohol at the age of 39 in 1963.

Billie Holiday


Billie Holiday

Billie Holiday was born on April 7, 1915 in Philadelphia as Eleanora Fagan Goughy. She became known to the world as 'Lady Day'. Much of Holiday's difficult childhood is clouded by conjecture and legend, some of it propagated by herself in her autobiography published in 1956. Her mother, Sadie Fagan, was allegedly only thirteen at the time of her birth; her father Clarence Holiday, was fifteen. Her parents married when she was three, but they soon divorced, leaving her to be raised largely by her mother and other relatives. A hardened and angry child, she dropped out of school at an early age and began working as a prostitute with her mother. This preceded her move to New York with her mother sometime in the early 1930s. Settling in Harlem, Holiday began singing informally in numerous clubs. Around 1932 she was "discovered" by record producer John Hammond. He arranged several sessions for her with Benny Goodman; her first-ever recording was "Your Mother's Son-In-Law" (1933). On November 23, 1934, she performed at the Apollo Theater. Holiday began performing regularly at numerous clubs on 52nd Street in Manhattan. She became one of the first blues singers to break the “color” barrier, appearing with white musicians. Yet, she was still forced to use the back entrance and wait in a dark room before appearing on stage. Once on stage, she was transformed into Lady Day with the white gardenia in her hair. Holiday was a dabbler in recreational drug use for most of her life. Yet, it was heroin that would be her undoing, taking it intravenously from about 1940. Drugs, alcohol, and absuvie relationships marred her success and affected her voice. She was arrested for heroin possession in May 1947 and served eight months in a women’s prison. Her New York City Cabaret Card was subsequently revoked, which kept her from working in clubs there for the remaining 12 years of her life. She toured Europe in 1954 and 1958. On May 31, 1959, she was taken to Metropolitan Hospital in New York, suffering from liver and heart problems where she died from cirrhosis of the liver on July 17, 1959 at the age of 44. In the final years of her life, she had been progressively swindled out of her earnings, and she died with only $0.70 in the bank and $750 on her person.

Bessie Smith

Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States on April 15, 1894, Bessie Smith was one of six surviving children of William and Laura Smith. William Smith was a laborer who also worked as a part-time Baptist preacher, but he died before Bessie could remember him. By the time Bessie was nine, she had lost her mother as well, and her older sister Viola was left in charge of caring for the younger sisters and brothers. As a way of earning money for her impoverished household, Bessie and her younger brother Andrew began performing on the streets of Chattanooga as a singer/guitarist duo. In 1904, her oldest brother Clarence left home to tour with a small traveling theatre company.

When Clarence returned to Chattanooga in 1912 with the Moses Stokes Theatre Company, he arranged for the troupe's managers Lonnie and Cora Fisher to give his sister an audition. Bessie was initially hired as a dancer. The show included Ma Rainey, who did not teach Smith to sing but probably helped her develop a stage presence. Smith began developing her own act around 1913, at Atlanta's "81" Theatre. By 1920 she had gained a reputation in the South and along the Eastern Seaboard.

In 1923, when blues had become popular enough to begin selling records, Smith was signed by Columbia records, and quickly rose to stardom as a headliner on the T. O. B. A. (Theater Owners' Booking Association) theater circuit. Her biggest recorded hit was "Down Hearted Blues", a song written and previously recorded by Alberta Hunter. Smith became the highest-paid black entertainer of her day.

In 1929, she appeared in a Broadway flop called Pansy, a musical in which, the top white critics agreed, she was the only asset. John Hammond asked her to record four sides for the Okeh label in 1933 after seeing her perform in a Philadelphia nightclub. These performances, for which Hammond paid her $37.50 each, were her final recordings.

On September 26, 1937, Smith was severely injured in a car accident while traveling from a concert in Memphis to Clarksdale, Mississippi. She was taken to the segregated Afro-Hospital and her arm was amputated, but she never regained consciousness and died that morning.

Bertha "Chippie" Hill



Bertha "Chippie" Hill

Bertha “Chippie” Hill was one of the few singers of her generation to make a full-fledged comeback in the 1940's. One of 16 children, she started working in 1916 as a dancer before she became better known as a singer. She toured with Ma Rainey's Rabbit Foot Minstrels and then was a solo performer on vaudeville for a long period. Hill settled in Chicago in 1925 and recorded regularly for a few years. After working steadily in the Chicago area until 1930, she eventually left music to raise seven children. Hill occasionally sang during the next 15 years but mostly worked outside of music. She was rediscovered by writer Rudi Blesh in 1946, working in a bakery. Appearances on Blesh's "This Is Jazz" radio series resulted in her coming back to the music scene, performing at the Village Vanguard, Jimmy Ryan's and even appearing at Carnegie Hall in 1948 with Kid Ory. She sang at the Paris Jazz Festival, worked with Art Hodes in Chicago and was back in prime form in 1950 when she was run over by a car and killed. Chippie Hill, who introduced Richard M. Jones' "Trouble In Mind" in 1926, recorded 23 titles during 1925-29 with such sidemen as Jones, Louis Armstrong, Shirley Clay, Georgia Tom Dorsey, Tampa Red and Punch Miller. She also recorded nine selections on two dates in 1946 with Lee Collins, Lovie Austin, Baby Dodds and Montana Taylor.

Anita O'Day



Anita O'Day

Born Anita Belle Colton in 1919 in Chicago, she was raised largely by her mother, and entered her first marathon-dance contest while barely a teenager. She soon started singing earned a place in Gene Krupa's band in 1941 but the band broke up in 1943. She then performed and recorded with Stan Kenton. And had her solo debut in 1946. Her first album (and the first LP ever released by Verve) was “Anita” in 1955. She performed in jazz festivals throughout the 1950s and was a worldwide hit. O'Day's series of almost twenty Verve LPs during the '50s and '60s proved her to be one of the most distinctive, trend-setting, and successful vocal artists of the time. She worked with a variety of arrangers and in many different settings but by the early '60s, her ebullient voice had begun sounding tired. This was the cumulative effects of heroin addiction, its resulting lifestyle, and a non-stop concert schedule forced her into a physical collapse by 1967. After taking several years to kick alcohol and drug addictions, she made a comeback at the 1970 Berlin Jazz Festival and returned in the early '70s with a flood of live and studio albums, many recorded in Japan and some released on her own label, Emily Records. Her autobiography, 1981's High Times, Hard Times was typically honest and direct regarding her colorful past. Though her voice gradually deteriorated, O'Day recorded throughout the 1970s and '80s, into the '90s remaining an exciting, forceful vocalist on record as well as in concert. She died on November 23, 2006. Her death was after the creation of Tapestry in Blue, part of “Blues Chapel”.

ALBERTA HUNTER


ALBERTA HUNTER

Alberta Hunter was born in 1895 in Memphis, Tennessee. She ran away to Chicago at the age of twelve in order to become a Blues singer. She got her first professional start in 1911 at a Southside club called Dago Frank’s. She stayed there until 1913 when the place was closed after a murder on the premise. She saved enough money working elsewhere to bring her mother to Chicago. She supported her for the rest of her life. Alberta was married briefly but never consummated the union. She used her mother as an excuse but was, in fact, a lesbian. She found years of companionship and love with Lottie Taylor, the niece of the famous African-American entertainer Bert Williams. She sang in many Chicago clubs and became quite a star, billed as “The Sweetheart of Dreamland”. One night, her piano player was shot while on stage. In 1921, Alberta moved to New York and launched her recording career with the Black Swan label. She switched to Paramount in 1922. She wrote much of her own material and penned Bessie Smith’s hit “Down Hearted Blues”. In 1923 she became the first African-American singer to be backed up by a white band. Alberta recorded songs under several pseudonyms during the 1920s in an attempt to keep record companies she had signed exclusive contracts with from finding out about this extra income. She went to Europe and toured parts of “Showboat” with Paul Robeson. She was a hit in Paris and went to Russian and the Middle East. During World War II, Alberta was part of the USO entertaining troops throughout Asia and the South Pacific Islands. She quit singing after her mother’s death in 1956. At the age of 59 she enrolled in a practical nursing course and worked for twenty years in a New York City hospital. In the early 1960s she recorded a few albums and then surprisingly took to the stage again in 1977 at the age of 82. She performed until the time of her death in 1984.