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Sunday, April 26, 2015

Born Today- Blues/Jazz Singer Ma Rainey- wikipedia

Ma Rainey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ma Rainey
MaRainey.jpg
Background information
Birth nameGertrude Malissa Nix Pridgett
Bornc. April 26, 1886
Columbus, Georgia, U.S.
DiedDecember 22, 1939 (aged 53)
Rome, Georgia, U.S.
GenresBlues
Occupation(s)Vocalist
Years active1899–1933
LabelsParamount
Associated actsRainey and Rainey, Assassinators of the Blues, Rabbit Foot MinstrelsBessie SmithLouis Armstrong
"Ma" Rainey (born Gertrude Malissa Nix Pridgett; c. April 26, 1886 – December 22, 1939)[1] was one of the earliest known American professional blues singers and one of the first generation of such singers to record.[2] She was billed as The Mother of the Blues.
She began performing as a young teenager (between the ages of 12 and 14), and performed under the name Ma Rainey after she and Will Rainey were married in 1904. They toured with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels and later formed their own group called Rainey and Rainey, Assassinators of the Blues. From the time of her first recording in 1923 to five years later, Ma Rainey made over 100 recordings, including "Bo-weevil Blues" (1923), "Moonshine Blues" (1923), "See See Rider" (1924), "Black Bottom" (1927), and "Soon This Morning" (1927).[3]
Ma Rainey was known for her very powerful vocal abilities, energetic disposition, majestic phrasing, and a ‘moaning’ style of singing. Her powerful voice was never adequately captured on her records, due to her recording exclusively for Paramount, which was at the time known for its below-average recording techniques and poor shellac quality. However, Rainey's other qualities are present and most evident in her early recordings, Bo-weevil Blues and Moonshine Blues.
Rainey recorded with Louis Armstrong in addition to touring and recording with the Georgia Jazz Band. She continued to tour until 1935 when she retired to her hometown.[1]

Biography[edit]

Gertrude Pridgett claimed to have been born on April 26, 1886 in Columbus, Georgia.[4] (This can be questioned, however, as the 1900 census listing indicates she may have been born in September 1882 in Alabama.[5]) She was the second of five children of Thomas and Ella (née Allen) Pridgett, from Alabama. She had at least two brothers and a sister named Malissa, with whom Gertrude was later confused in some sources.[4]
She came onto the performance scene at a talent show in Columbus, Georgia when she was 12–14 years old.[1][6] A member of the First African Baptist Church, she began performing in in Black minstrel show tents. She later claimed that she was first exposed to blues music around 1902. She formed the Alabama Fun Makers Company with her husband Will Rainey, but in 1906 they both joined Pat Chappelle's much larger and more popular Rabbit's Foot Company, where they were billed together as "Black Face Song and Dance Comedians, Jubilee Singers [and] Cake Walkers".[7] In 1910, she was described as "Mrs. Gertrude Rainey, our coon shouter",[7] and she continued with the Rabbit's Foot Company after it was taken over by new owner F. S. Wolcott in 1912.[1]
From 1914, the Raineys were billed as Rainey and Rainey, Assassinators of the Blues. Wintering in New Orleans, she met musicians including Joe "King" OliverLouis ArmstrongSidney Bechet and Pops Foster. Blues music increased in popularity and Ma Rainey became well known.[8] Around this time, Rainey met Bessie Smith, a young blues singer who was also making a name for herself.[A] A story later developed that Rainey kidnapped Smith, making her join the Rabbit Foot Minstrels, and teaching her to sing the blues. This was disputed by Smith's sister-in-law Maud Smith.[9]
From the late 1910s, there was an increasing demand for recordings by black musicians.[10] In 1920, Mamie Smith was the first black woman to record a record.[11] In 1923, Rainey was discovered by Paramount Records producer J. Mayo Williams. She signed a recording contract with Paramount, and in December she made her first eight recordings in Chicago.[12] These included the songs "Bad Luck Blues", "Bo-Weevil Blues" and "Moonshine Blues". She made more than 100 more over the next five years, which brought her fame beyond the South.[1][13] Paramount marketed her extensively, calling her "the Mother of the Blues", "the Songbird of the South", "the Gold-Neck Woman of the Blues" and "the Paramount Wildcat".[14]
In 1924 she made some recordings with Louis Armstrong, including "Jelly Bean Blues", "Countin' the Blues" and "See, See Rider".[15] In the same year she embarked on a tour of the Theater Owners Booking Association (TOBA) throughout the South and Midwestern United States, singing both for black and white audiences.[16] She was accompanied by bandleader and pianist Thomas Dorsey, and the band he assembled called the Wildcats Jazz Band.[17] They began their tour with an appearance in Chicago in April 1924 and continued, on and off, until 1928.[18] Dorsey left the group in 1926 due to ill health and was replaced as pianist by Lillian Hardaway Henderson, the wife of Rainey's cornetist Fletcher Henderson, who became the band's leader.[19]
Some of Rainey's lyrics contain open references to lesbianism or bisexuality. For example, a 1928 song, "Prove It on Me", states:
They said I do it, ain't nobody caught me. Sure got to prove it on me. Went out last night with a crowd of my friends. They must've been women, cause I don't like no men.[20]
According to the website queerculturalcenter.org, the lyrics refer to an incident in 1925 in which Rainey was "arrested for taking part in an orgy at [her] home involving women in her chorus."[21] "Prove It on Me" further alludes to presumed lesbian behavior, "It's true I wear a collar and a tie... Talk to the gals just like any old man."[22]
Political activist and scholar Angela Y. Davis notes: "'Prove It on Me' is a cultural precursor to the lesbian cultural movement of the 1970s, which began to crystallize around the performance and recording of lesbian-affirming songs."[23]Towards the end of the 1920s, live vaudeville went into decline, being replaced by radio and recordings.[19] Her career was not immediately affected and continued recording with Paramount and earned enough money touring to buy a bus with her name on it.[24] In 1928, she worked with Dorsey again and recording 20 songs, before Paramount finished her contract.[25] Her style of blues was no longer considered fashionable by the label.[26]

Death[edit]

In 1935 Rainey returned to her hometown, Columbus, Georgia, where she ran two theaters, "The Lyric" and "The Airdrome",[27] until her death from a heart attack in 1939 at age 53[28] in Rome, Georgia.[29]

Legacy[edit]

In 1983, Rainey was inducted into the Blues Foundation's Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990.[30]
Bob Dylan refers to Rainey in the song "Tombstone Blues" on his 1965 album, Highway 61 Revisited in which she is intimate with Beethoven ("Ma Rainey and Beethoven once unwrapped their bedroll").[citation needed]
In 1981 Sandra Lieb wrote the first full-length book about Rainey, Mother of the Blues: a Study of Ma Rainey.
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, a 1982 play by August Wilson, is a fictionalized account of the recording of her song of the same name in December 1927.
Poet Sterling A. Brown wrote a poem entitled "Ma Rainey" in 1932 about how "When Ma Rainey/Comes to town" people everywhere would hear her sing.
In 1994, the U.S. Post Office issued a Rainey 29-cent commemorative postage stamp.
In 2004, "See See Rider Blues" (written in 1925) was inducted in the Grammy Hall of Fame, and was included by the National Recording Preservation Board in the Library of CongressNational Recording Registry in 2004.[31]
Academy Award winner Mo'Nique played Ma Rainey in the 2015 film Bessie.

Recordings[edit]

This sortable table presents all 94 titles recorded by Ma Rainey.[32]
  • The recording dates are approximate.
  • The Classification by Sandra Lieb is almost entirely by form. Blues songs which are only partly of twelve-bar structure as classified as "Mixture of Blues and Popular Song Forms". Blues songs without any twelve-bar or eight-bar structure are classified as "Non-blues".[33]
  • The JSP and DOCD columns refer to the two complete CD reissues.[34][35]
  • Click any label to sort. To return to chronological order, click #.
#MatrixRecording
date
TitleAccompanimentParamount
Issue No.
Sandra Lieb
Classification
JSP
77933
Document
DOCD
Notes
0115961923/12Bad Luck BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12081Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
0215971923/12Bo-Weavil BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12080Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
A5581another take on both JSP & DOCD
0315981923/12Barrel House BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12082Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
0415991923/12Those All Night Long BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12081Non-bluesA5581another take on both JSP & DOCD
0516081923/12Moonshine BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12083Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
A5581
0616091923/12Last Minute BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12080Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
0716121923/12Southern BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12083Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
0816131923/12Walking BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12082Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
0916981924/03Lost Wandering BluesPruit Twins12098Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
1016991924/03Dream BluesPruit Twins12098Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
1117011924/03Honey Where You Been So Long?Lovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12200Non-bluesA5581
1217021924/03Ya-Da-DoHer Georgia Jazz Band12257Non-bluesA5581another take on both JSP & DOCD
1317031924/03Those Dogs of Mine
(Famous Cornfield Blues)
Lovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12215Non-bluesA5581
1417041924/03Lucky Rock BluesLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12215Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
A5581
1517411924/04South Bound BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12227Non-bluesA5581
1617581924/05Lawd Send Me A Man BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12227Non-bluesA5581
1717591924/05Ma Rainey's Mystery RecordLovie Austin
Blues Serenaders
12200Twelve-Bar BluesA5581
1818241924/08Shave 'Em Dry Bluestwo unknown guitars12222Eight-Bar BluesB5581
1918251924/08Farewell Daddy Bluesunknown guitar12222Twelve-Bar BluesB5581
2019221924/10Booze And BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12242Twelve-Bar BluesB5582
2119231924/10Toad Frog BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12242Twelve-Bar BluesB5582
2219241924/10Jealous Hearted BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12252Twelve-Bar BluesB5582
2319251924/10See See Rider BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12252Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
B5582with Louis Armstrong, another take on both JSP & DOCD
2419261924/10Jelly Bean BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12238Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
B5582with Louis Armstrong
2519271924/10Countin' The BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12238Twelve-Bar BluesB5582with Louis Armstrong, another take on both JSP & DOCD
26100011924/11Cell Bound BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12257Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
B5582
2721361925/05Army Camp Harmony BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12284Twelve-Bar BluesB5582another take on both JSP & DOCD
2821371925/05Explaining The BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12284Twelve-Bar BluesB5582another take on both JSP & DOCD
2921381925/05Louisiana Hoo Doo BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12290Twelve-Bar BluesB5582
3021381925/05Goodbye Daddy BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12290Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
B5582
3122091925/05Stormy Seas BluesHer Georgia Band12295Twelve-Bar BluesB5582another take on DOCD5625
3222101925/08Rough And Tumble BluesHer Georgia Band12311Twelve-Bar BluesB5582
3322111925/08Night Time BluesHer Georgia Band12303Twelve-Bar BluesB5582another take on both JSP & DOCD
3422121925/08Levee Camp MoanHer Georgia Band12295Non-bluesB5582
3522131925/08Four Day Honorary ScatHer Georgia Band12303Non-bluesB5582misprint for 'Fore Day, another take on both JSP & DOCD
3622141925/08Memphis Bound BluesHer Georgia Band12311Twelve-Bar BluesB5582
3723691925/12Slave To The BluesHer Georgia Band12332Twelve-Bar BluesC5583
3823701925/12Yonder Come The BluesHer Georgia Band12357Non-bluesC5583
3923711925/12Titanic Man BluesHer Georgia Band12374Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
C5583another take on both JSP & DOCD
4023721925/12Chain Gang BluesHer Georgia Band12338Twelve-Bar BluesC5583
4123731925/12Bessemer Bound BluesHer Georgia Jazz Band12332Twelve-Bar BluesC5583another take on both JSP & DOCD
4223741925/12Oh My Babe BluesHer Georgia Band12374Non-bluesC5583
4323751925/12Wringing And Twisting BluesHer Georgia Band12338Non-bluesC5583
4423691925/12Stack O'Lee BluesHer Georgia Band12357BalladC5583
4524481926/03Broken Hearted BluesHer Georgia Band12364Twelve-Bar BluesC5583another take on DOCD5625
4624511926/03Jealousy BluesHer Georgia Band12364Non-bluesC5583another take on DOCD5660
4724521926/03Seeking BluesHer Georgia Band12352Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
C5583another take on both JSP & DOCD
4824661926/03Mountain Jack BluesJimmy Blythe (piano)12352Twelve-Bar BluesC5583another take on both JSP & DOCD
4926271926/06Down In The BasementHer Georgia Band12395Non-bluesC5583
5026281926/06Sissy BluesHer Georgia Band12384Twelve-Bar BluesC5583
5126291926/06Broken Soul BluesHer Georgia Band12384Non-bluesC5583
5226311926/06Trust No ManLillian Henderson (piano)12395Non-bluesC5583
534051926/11Morning Hour BluesJimmy Blythe (piano)
Blind Blake (guitar)
12455Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
544071926/11Weepin' Woman BluesHer Georgia Boys12455Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
554081926/11Soon This MorningHer Georgia Band12438Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
5640191926/12Little Low Mamma BluesBlind Blake (guitar)
poss Leroy Picket (violin)
12419Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
5740201926/12Grievin Hearted BluesBlind Blake (guitar)
poss Leroy Picket (violin)
12419Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
D5584
5840211926/12Don't Fish In My SeaJimmy Blythe (piano)12438Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
5940821927/08Big Boy BluesHer Georgia Band12548Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
6040831927/08Blues Oh BluesHer Georgia Band12566Non-BluesD5584
6140901927/08Damper Down BluesHer Georgia Band12548Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
6240911927/08Gone Daddy BluesHer Georgia Band12526Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
D5584
6340921927/08Oh Papa BluesHer Georgia Band12566Non-bluesD5584
6447071927/08Misery BluesHer Georgia Band12508Non-bluesD5584
6547081927/08Dead Drunk BluesHer Georgia Band12508Twelve-Bar BluesD5584
6647091927/08Slow Driving MoanHer Georgia Band12526Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
D5584
67202281927/12Blues The World Forgot — Part 1Her Georgia Band12647ComedyD5584
68202291927/12Ma Rainey's Black BottomHer Georgia Band12590Non-bluesD5584
69202301927/12Blues The World Forgot — Part 2Her Georgia Band12647ComedyD5584
70202311927/12Hellish RagHer Georgia Band12612Non-bluesD5584
71202321927/12Georgia Cake WalkHer Georgia Band12590ComedyD5584
72202331927/12New Bo-Weavil BluesHer Georgia Band12603Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
D5584
73202321927/12Moonshine BluesHer Georgia Band12603Mixture of Blues and
Popular Song Forms
D5584
74202331927/12Ice Bag PapaHer Georgia Band12612Non-bluesD5584
75206611928/06Black Cat Hoot Owl BluesHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12687Twelve-Bar BluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
76206621928/06Log Camp BluesHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12804Twelve-Bar BluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
77206631928/06Hear Me Talking To YouHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12668Twelve-Bar BluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
78206641928/06Hustlin' BluesHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12804Twelve-Bar BluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
79206651928/06Prove It On Me BluesHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12668Non-bluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
80206661928/06Victim Of The BluesHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12687Twelve-Bar BluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
81206671928/06Traveling BluesHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12707Twelve-Bar BluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
another take on JSP and on DOCD5216
82206681928/06Deep Moaning Blues BluesHer Tub Jug Washboard Band12707Twelve-Bar BluesE5156band led by Georgia Tom
another take on both JSP & DOCD
83208781928/09Daddy Goodbye BluesGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12963Eight-Bar BluesE5156
84208791928/09Sleep Talking BluesGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12760Twelve-Bar BluesE5156another take on both JSP & DOCD
85208801928/09Tough Luck BluesGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12735Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
86208811928/09Blame It On The BluesGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12760Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
87208821928/09Sweet Rough ManGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12926Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
88208831928/09Runaway BluesGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12902Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
89208851928/09Screech Owl BluesEddie Miller (piano)12735Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
90208861928/09Black Dust BluesEddie Miller (piano)12926Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
91208971928/09Leaving This MorningGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12902Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
92208981928/09Black Eye BluesGeorgia Tom Dorsey (piano)
Tampa Red (guitar)
12963Twelve-Bar BluesE5156another take on both JSP & DOCD
93209211928/10Ma And Pa Poorhouse BluesPapa Charlie Jackson (duet & Banjo)12718Twelve-Bar BluesE5156
94201441928/10Big Feeling BluesPapa Charlie Jackson (duet & Banjo)12718Twelve-Bar BluesE5156

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Sources are unclear on the exact date and circumstances under which Rainey and Smith met, although it was probably some time between 1912 and 1916.[9]

References

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