Smith, Bessie

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{{Infobox musical artist  <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject Musicians —>
 
| Name                = Bessie Smith
 
| Name                = Bessie Smith
 
| Img                = Bessiesmith.jpg
 
| Img                = Bessiesmith.jpg
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| Alias              =  
 
| Alias              =  
 
| Born                = April, 1894 or July, 1892
 
| Born                = April, 1894 or July, 1892
| Died                = [[September 26]], [[1937]]<br><small>[[Clarksdale, Mississippi|Clarksdale]], [[Mississippi]]</small>
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| Died                = September 26, 1937<br/><small>[[Clarksdale, Mississippi|Clarksdale]], [[Mississippi]]</small>
 
| Origin              = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Chattanooga, Tennessee|Chattanooga]], [[Tennessee]], [[United States]]
 
| Origin              = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Chattanooga, Tennessee|Chattanooga]], [[Tennessee]], [[United States]]
 
| Instrument          = [[Vocals]]
 
| Instrument          = [[Vocals]]
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}}
 
}}
  
'''Bessie Smith''' (July, 1892 or April, 1894 &ndash; [[September 26]], [[1937]]) was the most popular and successful female [[blues]] singer of the 1920s and 1930s,<ref>{{cite book
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'''Bessie Smith''' (July, 1892 or April, 1894 &ndash; September 26, 1937) was the most popular and successful female [[blues]] singer of the 1920s and 1930s, and an important influence on subsequent singers, including [[Billie Holiday]], [[Mahalia Jackson]], [[Nina Simone]] and [[Janis Joplin]]. Smith's wrenching blues expressed the harsh realities experienced by the black underclass in the [[Jim Crow era]]. A pioneering artist and leading figure of the [[Harlem Renaissance]], Smith defied racial barriers through the force of her indomitable personality and self-confident artistry.
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Joining the touring company of the legendary [[Ma Rainey]], Smith emerged as a formidable blues singer at a time that coincided with the birth of the commercial recording industry. Smith's "Down-Hearted Blues" (1923), recorded two years after Mamie Smith's ground-breaking "Crazy Blues," broke sales records and helped convince recording executives that jazz and blues, so-called race-music, was a viable commercial enterprise. Smith, and above all cornet player [[Louis Armstrong]], ushered in the [[Jazz Age]], an era that introduced [[African American]] music to mainstream America. The Smith-Armstrong sessions are considered classic collaborations of two pioneering musicians at the peak of their artistic powers.  
  | coauthors = Gene Jones
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  | title = [[Spreadin'Rhythm Around: Black Popular Songwriters, 1880-1930]]
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Smith's notorious private life contributed to the glamorizing of self-destructive behavior often associated with jazz, blues, and rock performers to the present day. Smith's [[alcoholism|drinking]], violent temper (and physical strength), and predatory sexual life involving both men and women were boundary breaking, even by the standards of free-living musicians of the [[Roaring Twenties]]. A number of Smith's recordings in her later career were frankly pornographic, reflecting both her loss of stature as an artist and her first-hand experience in reckless and often abusive relationships.
  | publisher = [[Schirmer Books]]
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{{toc}}
  | date = 1998
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Smith was also known for her generous and charitable acts, giving away much of her new-found wealth and paying hospital bills of friends,<ref>Carole Marks, and Diana Edkins. ''Style Makers and Rule Breakers of the Harlem Renaissance.'' (New York: Crown, 1999. ISBN 0609600966), 122</ref> and she remained devoted to her adopted child throughout her life. Her entire Columbia Records catalogue has been reissued and she was inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] in 1989.
  | pages = pp. 289
 
  | month = September
 
  | isbn = 978-0028647425 }} </ref>  and a strong influence on subsequent generations, including [[Billie Holiday]], [[Mahalia Jackson]], [[Nina Simone]] and [[Janis Joplin]].
 
  
 
== Life ==
 
== Life ==
=== Birthdate ===
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=== Birthdate and Early Life ===
For the 1900 [[United States Census|census]], Bessie Smith's mother, Laura Smith, reported that Bessie was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States in July, 1892. However, for the following census (1910), her sister, Viola Smith, reported the date as [[April 15]], [[1894]]; that date appears on all subsequent documents and was the one observed by Bessie and her family. There would be no reason for Bessie Smith to alter the date of her birth (year is a different matter). As early census figures are known on occasion to be unreliable and biographical interviews are also sometimes incomplete, there remains a serious debate regarding the size of Bessie Smith's family. The 1870 and 1880 censuses report three older half-siblings, and the 1900 census also reports data that is at odds with the recollections of her family and contemporaries.
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Bessie was the daughter of Laura (Owens) Smith and William Smith, a Baptist minister. For the 1900 [[United States Census|census]], Bessie Smith's mother reported that Bessie was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States in July, 1892. However, for the following census (1910), her sister, Viola Smith, reported the date as April 15, 1894. It was the later date that was observed by Bessie and her family and which appeared on all subsequent documents. While there is no reason for Bessie Smith to alter the date of her birth, the year is a different matter with some reports citing her year of birth as 1896 and 1898.<ref> Jana Evans Braziel, "Bye, Bye, Baby': Race, Bisexuality, and the Blues in the Music of Bessie Smith and Janis Joplin," ''Popular Music and Society'' 27 (2004):3-22 </ref>
 
 
=== Early life ===
 
  
That Bessie was the daughter of Laura (Owens) Smith and William Smith is not in dispute. In his book, ''Bessie'', biographer [[Chris Albertson]] states that William Smith was a laborer and part-time Baptist preacher (he was listed in the 1870 census as a minister of the gospel, in Moulton, Lawrence, Alabama) who 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 her sisters and brothers.
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Due to the unreliability of early census figures and sometimes incomplete biographical interviews, the size of Smith's family remains the subject of serious debate. However, most believe her to be one of seven children; her eldest brother, Bud, dying before she was even born. Smith lost her father soon after her birth and her mother passed when she was eight. Since both of her parents were deceased the care of Bessie and her other siblings fell to her older sister Viola.<ref>Elaine Feinstein. ''Bessie Smith: Empress of the Blues.'' (New York: Penguin Books, 1985. ISBN 0140080279)</ref>
  
=== Busker ===
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=== Early career ===
 
As a way of earning money for their impoverished household, Bessie and her brother Andrew began [[Busking|performing on the streets]] of Chattanooga as a duo, she singing and dancing, he accompanying on guitar; their preferred location was in front of the White Elephant Saloon at Thirteenth and Elm streets in the heart of the city's African-American community.
 
As a way of earning money for their impoverished household, Bessie and her brother Andrew began [[Busking|performing on the streets]] of Chattanooga as a duo, she singing and dancing, he accompanying on guitar; their preferred location was in front of the White Elephant Saloon at Thirteenth and Elm streets in the heart of the city's African-American community.
  
In 1904, her oldest brother, Clarence, covertly left home by joining a small traveling troupe owned by Moses Stokes. "If Bessie had been old enough, she would have gone with him," said Clarence's widow, Maud, "that's why he left without telling her, but Clarence told me she was ready, even then. Of course, she was only a child."<ref>Albertson's "Bessie" (Revised Edition, page 11)</ref>
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In 1904, her oldest brother, Clarence, covertly left home by joining a small traveling troupe owned by Moses Stokes. "If Bessie had been old enough, she would have gone with him," said Clarence's widow, Maud, "that's why he left without telling her, but Clarence told me she was ready, even then. Of course, she was only a child."<ref>Chris Albertson. ''Bessie,'' Revised Ed. (New Haven: Yale, 2003. ISBN 0300099029), 11</ref>
  
Bessie's turn came in 1912, when Clarence returned to Chattanooga with the Stokes troupe and arranged for its managers, Lonnie and Cora Fisher, to give her an audition. She was hired as a dancer rather than a singer, because the company also included [[Ma Rainey]].
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Bessie's turn came in 1912, when Clarence returned to Chattanooga with the Stokes troupe and arranged for its managers, Lonnie and Cora Fisher, to give her an audition. She was hired as a dancer rather than a singer, because the company also included [[Ma Rainey]]. Bessie traveled with the troupe across the South for several months, but left the troupe to join Irving C. Miller's tent show. The following year however she was forced to leave Miller's show because she was considered to be too dark. She then moved on to the 81 Theater in Atlanta and then Park's Big Revue at the Dixie Theater. In 1915 she rejoined Ma Rainey this time in Fat Chappelle's Rabbit Foot Mistrels, continuing to travel with various minstrel shows through 1916.<ref>Jackie Kay. ''Bessie Smith.'' (Bath, UK: Absolute Press, 1997. ISBN 1899791701)</ref>
  
=== Singer ===
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It was not until 1918 when she had the opportunity to star in her own show, ''Liberty Belles Revue'' in Atlanta, Georgia, in which she appeared as a male impersonator. She then moved up the East Coast playing shows in Atlantic City before settling in Philadelphia where she work in Horan's Madhouse Club from 1920-1923. It was in 1923 when she appeared in the [[musical comedy]] ''How Come'' being staged at the Dunbar Theater in Philadelphia.<ref>Kay</ref>
All contemporary accounts indicate that Rainey did not teach Smith to sing, but she probably helped her develop a stage presence.<ref>Based on recollections by contemporaries, including family, related in Albertson's "Bessie" (Revised Edition, pages 14-15)</ref> Smith began forming her own act around 1913, at [[Atlanta]]'s "81" Theatre. By 1920 she had gained a good reputation in the [[American South|South]] and along the [[Eastern Seaboard]].
 
  
 
=== Recordings ===
 
=== Recordings ===
In 1923, when sales figures for an [[Okeh Records|Okeh]] recording by singer [[Mamie Smith]] (no relation) opened up a new market and had talent scouts looking for blues artists, Bessie Smith was signed by [[Columbia Records]] to initiate the company's new "race records" series.
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In 1923, Smith was denied record contracts with both [[Okeh Records|Okeh]] and [[Black Swan Records Black Swan]] for sounding 'too rough.'<ref>Braziel</ref> Ironically both companies were founded to represent black artists, with [[W. E. B. Du Bois]] and [[John Nail]] serving on Black Swan's board of directors whose motto was 'The Only Genuine Colored Record-Others Are Only Passing.'<ref>Angela Y. Davis. ''Blues Legacies and Black Feminism.'' (New York: Pantheon Books, 1998. ISBN 067945005X)</ref>
  
Scoring a big hit with her first release, a coupling of "Gulf Coast Blues" and "Down Hearted Blues," which its composer, [[Alberta Hunter]] already had turned into a hit on the Paramount label, Bessie's career blossomed. She became a headliner on the black [[Theater Owners Booking Association]] (T.O.B.A.) theater circuit and was its top entertainer in the 1920s.<ref>Oliver, Paul. ''Bessie Smith.'' in Kernfeld, Barry. ed. ''The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd Edition, Vol. 3.'' London: MacMillan, 2002. p. 604.</ref>  Working a heavy theater schedule during the winter months and doing tent tours the rest of the year (eventually traveling in her own railroad car), Smith became the highest-paid black entertainer of her day. Columbia nicknamed her "Queen of the Blues", but a PR-minded press soon elevated to "Empress".  
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Later that year, however, Smith signed a recording contract with [[Columbia Records|Columbia]] where her first single, "Down Hearted Blues" sold a record-breaking 780,000 copies. She followed that success in 1925 with [[W.C. Handy's]] song "St. Louis Blues," which she recorded with [[Louis Armstrong]].
  
She would make some 160 recordings for Columbia, often accompanied by the finest musicians of the day, most notably [[Louis Armstrong]], [[James P. Johnson]], [[Joe Smith (musician)|Joe Smith]], [[Charlie Green]], and [[Fletcher Henderson]].
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In addition to her recordings Smith became a headliner on the black [[Theater Owners Booking Association]] (T.O.B.A.) [[vaudeville]] theater circuit and was its top entertainer in the 1920s.<ref>Paul Oliver, "Bessie Smith" in ''The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd Edition, Vol. 3,'' edited by Barry Kernfeld. (London: MacMillan, 2002), 604.</ref>
  
=== Broadway ===
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Her popularity with black and white audiences alike led her to be deemed the "World's Greatest Blues Singer" and eventually the "Empress of the Blues," and led her to earn hundreds of thousands of dollars.<ref>Davis</ref>
Smith's career was cut short by a combination of the [[Great Depression]] (which all but put the recording industry out of business) and the advent of "talkies", which spelled the end for [[vaudeville]]. She, however, never stopped performing. While the days of elaborate vaudeville shows were over, Bessie continued touring and occasionally singing in clubs. In 1929, she appeared in a [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] flop called ''Pansy'', a [[Musical theater|musical]] in which, the top white critics agreed, she was the only asset.
 
  
=== Film ===
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Smith recorded 160 songs while with Columbia Records, until in 1931, the effects of the Great Depression made it difficult for the record company to survive. However, Smith continued to tour with her own show ''The Bessie Smith Revue'' until her tragic death in 1937.<ref>Braziel</ref>
In 1929, Bessie Smith made her only film appearance, starring in a one-reeler based on [[W. C. Handy]]'s "[[Saint Louis Blues (music)|St. Louis Blues]]". In the film, directed by [[Dudley Murphy]] and shot in  Astoria, NY, she sings the title song accompanied by members of [[Fletcher Henderson]]'s orchestra, the Hall Johnson Choir, pianist James P. Johnson, and a string section[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0020447] &mdash; a musical environment radically different from any found on her recordings.
 
  
=== Swing Era ===
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=== Film and Broadway ===
In 1933, [[John H. Hammond|John Hammond]] saw Bessie perform in a small [[Philadelphia]] club and asked her to record four sides for the Okeh label (which had been acquired by Columbia).
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In 1929, Bessie Smith made her only film appearance in an adaptation of the song "St. Louis Blues." Smith, who recorded the song four years earlier, was chosen for the role by the song's composer W.C. Handy, who was also a collaborator on the film. In the film she played the scorned and beaten lover of a handsome gambler who leaves her for a lighter-skinned woman. The film has drawn much contemporary criticism for its use of racist and sexist stereotypes. But beyond that many have commented on the films inability to capture the same spirit of Smith's recording of the song. While the film outlines the same events that are related in the song's lyrics, without Smith's vocal interpretation the emotion and power of the female is not fully communicated in the film.<ref>Davis</ref>
  
These performances, for which Hammond paid her a non-royalty fee of $37.50 each, were recorded on [[November 24]], [[1933]]. They constitute Smith's final recordings. They are of particular interest because Smith was in the process of translating her blues artistry into something more ''apropos'' to the [[Swing Era]], and this session gives us a hint of what was to come.
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1929 also saw Smith's Broadway debut in Marceo Pickard's ''Pansy.'' However, due to limited rehearsal time, an inexperienced producer, and the show's subject matter (it dealt with college activities), the show was a flop. After receiving terrible reviews it closed after only three days and did more harms to Smith's career than good.<ref>Feinstein</ref>
  
The accompanying band included such Swing Era musicians as trombonist [[Jack Teagarden]], trumpeter [[William Frank Newton|Frankie Newton]], tenor saxophonist [[Leon "Chu" Berry|Chu Berry]], pianist [[Ford "Buck" Lee Washington|Buck Washington]], guitarist [[Bobby Johnson]], and bassist [[Billy Taylor]].
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=== Race relations ===
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Being a black artist in the 1920s and 1930s led Smith to face situations that equally successful white artists did not encounter. This included Columbia having to buy her a personal train car because she was not permitted in the 'whites only' first-class car. Smith's brother Clarence suggested the railroad car in 1925. It was custom made for Bessie by the South Iron and Equipment Company and with two stories, seven staterooms that slept four, a kitchen, and a bathroom it was large enough to comfortably hold everyone in her show. It was also recognizable; painted bright yellow with green lettering everyone knew when Smith's show came to town.<ref>Kay</ref> Also, in July 1927 robed members of the [[Ku Klux Klan]] appeared at one of her tent performances and began to pull up the tent stakes. When Smith heard of what was happening she left the tent and confronted the men shaking her fist at them and ordering them to "… pick up them sheets and run!" After continuing to curse at them the KKK members left and Smith returned to her performance.<ref>Davis</ref>
  
Even [[Benny Goodman]], who happened to be recording with [[Ethel Waters]] in the adjoining studio, dropped by for an almost inaudible guest visit. Hammond was not pleased with the result, preferring to have Smith back in her old blues groove, but "Take Me For A Buggy Ride" and "Gimme a Pigfoot" (in which Goodman is part of the ensemble) remain among her most popular recordings.
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=== Personal life and reputation ===
 
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Bessie Smith was married twice. Her first marriage was to Earl Love in 1920, which ended a year later when he died. Smith married three years later, this time to Jack Gee. Smith's love and admiration for Gee was stirred during their first date when he was attacked by an "unknown assailant." Smith visited him every day in the hospital for five weeks and moved in with him after his release. The two married shortly after and remained together for six years which were marked by affairs, arguments, and violent fights.<ref>Feinstein</ref>
== Death ==
 
On [[September 26]], [[1937]], Smith was severely injured in a car accident while traveling along [[U.S. Route 61]] between [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]] and [[Clarksdale, Mississippi]] with her lover (and [[Lionel Hampton]]'s uncle), Richard Morgan, at the wheel. She was taken to Clarksdale's black Afro-American Hospital where her right arm was [[amputate]]d. She did not regain consciousness, dying that morning.<ref>Smith's death, and a popular, but now discredited, version of the circumstances surrounding it — namely, that she died as a result of being refused admission to a "[[White people|Whites Only]]" hospital in Clarksdale (a myth started by jazz writer/producer [[John H. Hammond|John Hammond]] in an inaccurate article that appeared  in the November 1937 issue of [[Down Beat|Down Beat magazine]]) — formed the basis for [[Edward Albee]]'s 1959 one-act play ''[[The Death of Bessie Smith]]''.</ref>
 
  
The Afro-American Hospital, now the [[Riverside Hotel (Clarksdale)|Riverside Hotel]] in Clarksdale, was the site of the dedication of the fourth historic marker on the [[Mississippi Blues Trail]].<ref>{{cite web
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While Gee took credit for managing Smith's tours and for writing some of the songs Smith recorded and performed, it is now believed that his role was minimal, and that Smith wrote the songs herself. However, because of Smith's love for Gee and his violent temper, those that were part of the show were terrified of him and allowed him to take credit.
|url=http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07025/756420-37.stm
 
|title=Historical marker placed on Mississippi Blues Trail
 
|publisher=Associated Press
 
|accessdate=2007-02-09
 
}}</ref>
 
  
== Digital Remastering ==
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In an attempt to save their marriage Smith adopted a six-year-old boy; the son of one of Smith's chorus girl's niece. They renamed the boy John Gee, Jr. and Smith took great pride in spoiling him. However, because of her constant touring Smith was unable to take care of John, Jr. daily. Therefore she bought two houses for her sisters in Philadelphia with the understanding that they care for her son while she was away.<ref>Kay</ref>
Given the technical faults in the majority of her original [[gramophone record]]ings especially variations in recording speed, which raised or lowered the apparent [[Pitch (music)|pitch]] of her voice, misrepresented the "light and shade" of her superb phrasing, interpretation and delivery, and altered the apparent [[Key signature|key]] of her performances (sometimes raised or lowered by as much as a [[semitone]]) and, also, the fact that the "centre hole" in some of the master recordings had not been in the true middle of the master disc, meaning that there were wide variations in tone, pitch, key and phrasing as the commercially released record revolved around its spindle — there is a very significant and very positive difference in the performance that Smith delivers in the current [[Remaster|digitally remastered]] versions of her work.
 
  
==References in Other Works==
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When Gee and Smith finally separated in 1929 because of his infidelity with Gertrude Saunders, a performer like Smith, Gee decided to hurt Smith by using their son. One day when Smith was not at him he told John, Jr. to get in his car and then drove him to the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children (SPCC) and reported that ten-year-old John, Jr. was allowed to stay out all night and that he refused to go to school. John, Jr. eventually escaped the SPCC only to be placed in Gee's care where Gee and Saunders forced him to live in the basement.<ref>Kay</ref>
  
* The rock and roll group [[The Band]], popular during the 1960s and the 1970s, wrote a song about Bessie Smith named after her. Singer [[Norah Jones]] included the song in a 2002 concert performance at the [[House of Blues]]. Excerpt of the lyrics to [[The Band]]'s "Bessie Smith":
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After losing both Gee and her son, Smith was left heartbroken, but did become involved with Richard Morgan, a Chicago [[bootlegger]], before her death.
  
<blockquote>
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In addition to these heterosexual relationships Smith almost certainly engaged in relationships with Lillian and Marie, two female dancers from her show, and others. However, it was her relationship with Ruby Walker, Gee's niece, which was the most intensely emotional. While many of Smith's biographers believe her affair with Walker to be purely emotional, Walker's interviews with biographer Chris Albertson, prove the relationship to have been sexual as well.<ref>Brazier</ref> However, while Walker was loyal to Smith and protected her from Gee, she too often tried to take advantage of Smith's fame. During one of Smith's recording sessions Walker spoke to the producer, as Smith sang, about the possibility of recording some songs herself. Smith, suspicious of Walker, immediately interceded and order that Walker not be allowed to record.<ref>Feinstein</ref> But despite their arguments they remained loyal to one another until Smith's divorce from Gee, when Walker left Smith, claiming that she was terrified of what Gee would do if she remained on tour with Bessie.
"Bessie was more than just a friend of mine </br>
 
We shared the good times with the bad </br>  
 
Now many a year has passed me by </br>  
 
I still recall the best thing I ever had </br>
 
  
I'm just goin' down the road t' see Bessie </br>
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In addition to Smith's open [[bisexuality]] she also had a reputation for heavy drinking and lewd behavior. One particular incident occurred when Smith was leaving a party at the home of Carl Van Vechten, a wealthy journalist from Manhattan. Van Vechten's wife attempted to embrace Smith as she exited at which point Smith cursed at her and knocked her over. Smith's violent behavior and hard drinking also led to her being stabbed as she left a party by a young man she pushed aside at a party.<ref>Feinstein</ref>
Oh, See her soon </br>
 
Goin' down the road t' see Bessie Smith </br>
 
When I get there I wonder what she'll do.."
 
</blockquote>
 
  
* The 1996 album of Seattle punk band [[The Gits]], [[Kings and Queens]], included a live piano-accompanied improvisation cover of Smith's "Graveyard Dream Blues" named "Graveyard Blues" sung by blues-influenced vocalist [[Mia Zapata]]. The song starts with Zapata telling the audience that "This is a song by (...) Bessie Smith. This is from her to you..."  The track is held in high regard by Gits fans and music critics. 
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== Death ==
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On September 26, 1937, Smith was severely injured when, while traveling along [[U.S. Route 61]] between [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]] and [[Clarksdale, Mississippi]] with Richard Morgan at the wheel, their car struck a National Biscuit Company truck that was parked without lights. She was taken to Clarksdale's black Afro-American Hospital where her right arm was amputated. She did not regain consciousness, dying that morning. For some time it was believed that Smith's died as a result of being refused admission to a "[[White people|Whites Only]]" hospital in Clarksdale. The myth, which is now discredited, began when jazz writer/producer [[John H. Hammond|John Hammond]] wrote an inaccurate article that appeared in the November 1937 issue of [[Down Beat|Down Beat magazine]]. The article went on to be the basis for [[Edward Albee]]'s 1959 one-act play ''[[The Death of Bessie Smith]].''<ref>Kay</ref>
  
* In early 2006, UK alternative Rock/Hip Hop act [[Bad Music Inc.]] paid tribute to Smith with their song [[Bessie]]. Excerpt of the lyrics to Bad Music Inc's "Bessie":
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Smith's insurance policy ensured that she would have a large [[funeral]]. Her five-hundred dollar casket was trimmed with gold and lined with pink velvet. There were more than 40 floral arrangements and thousands lined the streets of her hometown as she was laid to rest eight days after her death.
  
<blockquote>
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Yet despite all of this her grave was left unmarked. Gee, who inherited all of her money, and the rest of her family did not buy her a headstone. In 1948 a Bessie Smith Memorial Concert was held to raise funds for a stone but according to Smith's sister Maud, Gee pocketed the money. The same happened again in the early 1950s when a benefit was held at the Blue Note Club in Philadelphia. Maude Smith reported that she gave a check to Gee with the understanding that the two would choose a stone together, but she never heard from him again and no stone was ever purchased.<ref>Kay</ref>
"It's easy to forget, or not to be aware </br>
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However, in August 1970 Juanita Greene, President of the North Philadelphia chapter of the [[National Association for the Advancement of Colored People|NAACP]] and [[Janis Joplin]] purchased a gravestone for Smith that read "The Greatest Blues Singer In The World Will Never Stop Singing." It had been Greene's mother who had served as a housekeeper for Smith.<ref>Brazier</ref>
So let me take a moment, I've a legacy to share </br>
 
Bessie, Bessie sing through your pain..."
 
</blockquote>
 
  
* Singer/pianist/songwriter [[Nina Simone]] dedicates her blues-song "[[I Want A Little Sugar In My Bowl]]" to Bessie Smith on her live-album [[It Is Finished]] (1974), stating "Bessie Smith, you know?..." before commencing with the song. Ironically, the song title was changed to "I [[Need]] a Little Sugar In My Bowl" on the album, and credited to Ms. Simone.
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== Digital Remastering ==
 +
Given the technical faults in the majority of her original [[gramophone record]]ings—especially variations in recording speed, which raised or lowered the apparent [[Pitch (music)|pitch]] of her voice, misrepresented the "light and shade" of her superb phrasing, interpretation and delivery, and altered the apparent [[Key signature|key]] of her performances (sometimes raised or lowered by as much as a [[semitone]]) and, also, the fact that the "centre hole" in some of the master recordings had not been in the true middle of the master disc, meaning that there were wide variations in tone, pitch, key and phrasing as the commercially released record revolved around its spindle—there is a very significant and very positive difference in the performance that Smith delivers in the current [[Remaster|digitally remastered]] versions of her work.
  
* Often the subject of concept albums, Bessie has been paid such a recorded tribute by numerous singers, including Juanita Hall, [[Dinah Washington]], and [[Teresa Brewer]].
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==Legacy==
  
* The character of Shug Avery in [[Alice Walker]]'s 'The Color Purple' is reportedly inspired / based on Smith.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
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At the height of her popularity Bessie Smith sold more records and earned more money than any other blues performer.<ref>Chris Albertson. ''Bessie'' </ref>Smith's rising popularity brought her to New York, where she performed with jazz greats including [[Fletcher Henderson]], [[James P. Johnson]], and [[Coleman Hawkins]]. The confluence of great jazz musicians and arrangers, preeminently [[Duke Ellington]], and such writers as [[Langston Hughes]], [[James Weldon Johnson]], and [[Zora Neale Hurston]], came to be known as the Harlem Renaissance.  
  
* Smith is mentioned in [[Dory Previn]]'s song ''A Stone for Bessie Smith'' on her album ''Mythical Kings & Iguanas''. It refers to the fact that Smith's grave remained unmarked until [[Janis Joplin]] and Juanita Green bought a headstone.
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Smith's subject matter was key in defining her songs and style. Always focusing on the female perspective of African American life Smith recorded songs about abuse, lost lovers, female rivalry and jealousy, [[hoodoo|voodoo]], and race relations. Her grassroots and traditional black sound cost her early record contracts but ultimately earned Smith her success and helped to create a bridge between former and contemporary black identity.<ref>Davis</ref> In a time when black women were consigned to, at best, domestic work, Smith brought a strength and understanding to their shared experience. Smith unapologetically redefined the blues and it was the strength just below the sadness of her songs that would influence later singers like [[Billie Holiday]], [[Aretha Franklin]], and [[Janis Joplin]]. In 1989 Bessie Smith was inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] under the category of Early Influence.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
<div class="references-small">
 
<references />
 
</div>
 
  
== References and further reading ==
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<references/>
 +
 
  
* [[Chris Albertson|Albertson, C.]], Liner notes, ''Bessie Smith: The Complete Recordings, Volumes 1 - 5'', Sony Music Entertainment, 1991.
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== References ==
* Albertson, C., ''Bessie'', Stein and Day, (New York), 1972.
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* [[Chris Albertson|Albertson, C.]] Liner notes, ''Bessie Smith: The Complete Recordings, Volumes 1 - 5.'' Sony Music Entertainment, 1991.
* Albertson, C., ''Bessie (Revised and Expanded Edition)'', Yale University Press (New Haven), 2003. ISBN 0-300-09902-9.
+
* Albertson, C. ''Bessie.'' New York: Stein and Day, 1972.
* Albertson, C., ''Bessie Smith, Empress of the Blues'', Schirmer Books (New Haven), 1975.
+
* Albertson, C. ''Bessie.'' (Revised and Expanded Edition), New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN 0300099029
* Brooks, E., ''The Bessie Smith Companion: A Critical and Detailed Appreciation of the Recordings'', Da Capo Press (New York), 1982.
+
* Albertson, C. ''Bessie Smith, Empress of the Blues.'' New Haven: Schirmer Books, 1975.
* [[Angela Davis|Davis, A. Y.]], ''Blues Legacies and Black Feminism: Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday'', Pantheon Books (New York), 1998. ISBN 0-679-45005-X. Contains 100 pages of lyrics recorded by Smith.
+
* Brooks, E. ''The Bessie Smith Companion: A Critical and Detailed Appreciation of the Recordings.''  New York: Da Capo Press, 1982.
* Eberhardt, C., ''Out of Chattanooga'', Ebco (Chattanooga), 1993.
+
* Davis, Angela Y. ''Blues Legacies and Black Feminism: Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday.'' NY: Pantheon Books, 1998. ISBN 067945005X. Contains 100 pages of lyrics recorded by Smith.
* [[Elaine Feinstein|Feinstein, E.]], ''Bessie Smith'', Viking (New York), 1985, ISBN 0670806420.
+
* Eberhardt, C. ''Out of Chattanooga.'' Chattanooga: Ebco, 1993.
* Grimes, S., ''Backwaterblues: In Search of Bessie Smith'', Rose Island Pub. (Amherst), 2000, ISBN 0970708904.
+
* Feinstein, Elaine. ''Bessie Smith.'' NY: Viking, 1985. ISBN 0670806420
* [[Jackie Kay|Kay, J.]], ''Bessie Smith'', Absolute (New York), 1997. ISBN 1-899791-55-8.
+
* Grimes, S. ''Backwaterblues: In Search of Bessie Smith.'' Amherst: Rose Island Pub., 2000. ISBN 0970708904
* Manera, A., ''Bessie Smith'', Raintree (Chicago), 2003. ISBN 0739868756.
+
* Kay, Jackie. ''Bessie Smith.'' NY: Absolute, 1997. ISBN 1899791558
* Martin, F., ''Bessie Smith'', Editions du Limon (Paris), 1994. ISBN 290722431X.
+
* Manera, A. ''Bessie Smith.'' Chicago: Raintree, 2003. ISBN 0739868756
* Moore, C., ''Somebody's Angel Child: The Story of Bessie Smith'', T. Y. Crowell Co. (New York), 1969. A children's book that is largely fiction.
+
* Marks, Carole, and Diana Edkins. ''Style Makers and Rule Breakers of the Harlem Renaissance.'' New York: Crown, 1999. ISBN 0609600966
* [[Paul Oliver|Oliver, P.]], ''Bessie Smith'', Cassell (London), 1959.
+
* Martin, F. ''Bessie Smith.'' Paris: Editions du Limon, 1994. ISBN 290722431X
* Welding, P., and Byron, T., eds., ''Bluesland: Portraits of Twelve Major American Blues Masters'', Dutton (New York), 1991. ISBN 0-525-93375-1. Includes "T'Aint Nobody's Business If I Do" by Chris Albertson.
+
* Moore, C. ''Somebody's Angel Child: The Story of Bessie Smith.'' NY: T. Y. Crowell Co., 1969. A children's book that is largely fiction.
 +
* Oliver, Paul. ''Bessie Smith.'' London: Cassell, 1959.
 +
* Welding, P., and T. Byron, eds.. ''Bluesland: Portraits of Twelve Major American Blues Masters.'' NY: Dutton, 1991. ISBN 0525933751. Includes "T'Aint Nobody's Business If I Do" by Chris Albertson.
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
* [http://www.jerryjazzmusician.com/mainHTML.cfm?page=albertson.html  Interview with Bessie Smith biographer Chris Albertson]
+
All links retrieved January 20, 2022.
* Listen to Bessie Smith at [http://jazz-on-line.com/Bessie_Smith.htm Jazz Old Time On Line] <!-- site claims that all recordings are in the Public Domain—>
+
* [http://www.jerryjazzmusician.com/mainHTML.cfm?page=albertson.html  Interview with Bessie Smith biographer Chris Albertson]  
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Revision as of 02:12, 21 January 2022

Bessie Smith
1936 photograph by Carl Van Vechten
1936 photograph by Carl Van Vechten
Background information
Born April, 1894 or July, 1892
Origin Flag of United States Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States
Died September 26, 1937
Clarksdale, Mississippi
Genre(s) Blues
Occupation(s) Singer
Instrument(s) Vocals
Years active 1912-1937
Label(s) Columbia

Bessie Smith (July, 1892 or April, 1894 – September 26, 1937) was the most popular and successful female blues singer of the 1920s and 1930s, and an important influence on subsequent singers, including Billie Holiday, Mahalia Jackson, Nina Simone and Janis Joplin. Smith's wrenching blues expressed the harsh realities experienced by the black underclass in the Jim Crow era. A pioneering artist and leading figure of the Harlem Renaissance, Smith defied racial barriers through the force of her indomitable personality and self-confident artistry.

Joining the touring company of the legendary Ma Rainey, Smith emerged as a formidable blues singer at a time that coincided with the birth of the commercial recording industry. Smith's "Down-Hearted Blues" (1923), recorded two years after Mamie Smith's ground-breaking "Crazy Blues," broke sales records and helped convince recording executives that jazz and blues, so-called race-music, was a viable commercial enterprise. Smith, and above all cornet player Louis Armstrong, ushered in the Jazz Age, an era that introduced African American music to mainstream America. The Smith-Armstrong sessions are considered classic collaborations of two pioneering musicians at the peak of their artistic powers.

Smith's notorious private life contributed to the glamorizing of self-destructive behavior often associated with jazz, blues, and rock performers to the present day. Smith's drinking, violent temper (and physical strength), and predatory sexual life involving both men and women were boundary breaking, even by the standards of free-living musicians of the Roaring Twenties. A number of Smith's recordings in her later career were frankly pornographic, reflecting both her loss of stature as an artist and her first-hand experience in reckless and often abusive relationships.

Smith was also known for her generous and charitable acts, giving away much of her new-found wealth and paying hospital bills of friends,[1] and she remained devoted to her adopted child throughout her life. Her entire Columbia Records catalogue has been reissued and she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989.

Life

Birthdate and Early Life

Bessie was the daughter of Laura (Owens) Smith and William Smith, a Baptist minister. For the 1900 census, Bessie Smith's mother reported that Bessie was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States in July, 1892. However, for the following census (1910), her sister, Viola Smith, reported the date as April 15, 1894. It was the later date that was observed by Bessie and her family and which appeared on all subsequent documents. While there is no reason for Bessie Smith to alter the date of her birth, the year is a different matter with some reports citing her year of birth as 1896 and 1898.[2]

Due to the unreliability of early census figures and sometimes incomplete biographical interviews, the size of Smith's family remains the subject of serious debate. However, most believe her to be one of seven children; her eldest brother, Bud, dying before she was even born. Smith lost her father soon after her birth and her mother passed when she was eight. Since both of her parents were deceased the care of Bessie and her other siblings fell to her older sister Viola.[3]

Early career

As a way of earning money for their impoverished household, Bessie and her brother Andrew began performing on the streets of Chattanooga as a duo, she singing and dancing, he accompanying on guitar; their preferred location was in front of the White Elephant Saloon at Thirteenth and Elm streets in the heart of the city's African-American community.

In 1904, her oldest brother, Clarence, covertly left home by joining a small traveling troupe owned by Moses Stokes. "If Bessie had been old enough, she would have gone with him," said Clarence's widow, Maud, "that's why he left without telling her, but Clarence told me she was ready, even then. Of course, she was only a child."[4]

Bessie's turn came in 1912, when Clarence returned to Chattanooga with the Stokes troupe and arranged for its managers, Lonnie and Cora Fisher, to give her an audition. She was hired as a dancer rather than a singer, because the company also included Ma Rainey. Bessie traveled with the troupe across the South for several months, but left the troupe to join Irving C. Miller's tent show. The following year however she was forced to leave Miller's show because she was considered to be too dark. She then moved on to the 81 Theater in Atlanta and then Park's Big Revue at the Dixie Theater. In 1915 she rejoined Ma Rainey this time in Fat Chappelle's Rabbit Foot Mistrels, continuing to travel with various minstrel shows through 1916.[5]

It was not until 1918 when she had the opportunity to star in her own show, Liberty Belles Revue in Atlanta, Georgia, in which she appeared as a male impersonator. She then moved up the East Coast playing shows in Atlantic City before settling in Philadelphia where she work in Horan's Madhouse Club from 1920-1923. It was in 1923 when she appeared in the musical comedy How Come being staged at the Dunbar Theater in Philadelphia.[6]

Recordings

In 1923, Smith was denied record contracts with both Okeh and Black Swan Records Black Swan for sounding 'too rough.'[7] Ironically both companies were founded to represent black artists, with W. E. B. Du Bois and John Nail serving on Black Swan's board of directors whose motto was 'The Only Genuine Colored Record-Others Are Only Passing.'[8]

Later that year, however, Smith signed a recording contract with Columbia where her first single, "Down Hearted Blues" sold a record-breaking 780,000 copies. She followed that success in 1925 with W.C. Handy's song "St. Louis Blues," which she recorded with Louis Armstrong.

In addition to her recordings Smith became a headliner on the black Theater Owners Booking Association (T.O.B.A.) vaudeville theater circuit and was its top entertainer in the 1920s.[9]

Her popularity with black and white audiences alike led her to be deemed the "World's Greatest Blues Singer" and eventually the "Empress of the Blues," and led her to earn hundreds of thousands of dollars.[10]

Smith recorded 160 songs while with Columbia Records, until in 1931, the effects of the Great Depression made it difficult for the record company to survive. However, Smith continued to tour with her own show The Bessie Smith Revue until her tragic death in 1937.[11]

Film and Broadway

In 1929, Bessie Smith made her only film appearance in an adaptation of the song "St. Louis Blues." Smith, who recorded the song four years earlier, was chosen for the role by the song's composer W.C. Handy, who was also a collaborator on the film. In the film she played the scorned and beaten lover of a handsome gambler who leaves her for a lighter-skinned woman. The film has drawn much contemporary criticism for its use of racist and sexist stereotypes. But beyond that many have commented on the films inability to capture the same spirit of Smith's recording of the song. While the film outlines the same events that are related in the song's lyrics, without Smith's vocal interpretation the emotion and power of the female is not fully communicated in the film.[12]

1929 also saw Smith's Broadway debut in Marceo Pickard's Pansy. However, due to limited rehearsal time, an inexperienced producer, and the show's subject matter (it dealt with college activities), the show was a flop. After receiving terrible reviews it closed after only three days and did more harms to Smith's career than good.[13]

Race relations

Being a black artist in the 1920s and 1930s led Smith to face situations that equally successful white artists did not encounter. This included Columbia having to buy her a personal train car because she was not permitted in the 'whites only' first-class car. Smith's brother Clarence suggested the railroad car in 1925. It was custom made for Bessie by the South Iron and Equipment Company and with two stories, seven staterooms that slept four, a kitchen, and a bathroom it was large enough to comfortably hold everyone in her show. It was also recognizable; painted bright yellow with green lettering everyone knew when Smith's show came to town.[14] Also, in July 1927 robed members of the Ku Klux Klan appeared at one of her tent performances and began to pull up the tent stakes. When Smith heard of what was happening she left the tent and confronted the men shaking her fist at them and ordering them to "… pick up them sheets and run!" After continuing to curse at them the KKK members left and Smith returned to her performance.[15]

Personal life and reputation

Bessie Smith was married twice. Her first marriage was to Earl Love in 1920, which ended a year later when he died. Smith married three years later, this time to Jack Gee. Smith's love and admiration for Gee was stirred during their first date when he was attacked by an "unknown assailant." Smith visited him every day in the hospital for five weeks and moved in with him after his release. The two married shortly after and remained together for six years which were marked by affairs, arguments, and violent fights.[16]

While Gee took credit for managing Smith's tours and for writing some of the songs Smith recorded and performed, it is now believed that his role was minimal, and that Smith wrote the songs herself. However, because of Smith's love for Gee and his violent temper, those that were part of the show were terrified of him and allowed him to take credit.

In an attempt to save their marriage Smith adopted a six-year-old boy; the son of one of Smith's chorus girl's niece. They renamed the boy John Gee, Jr. and Smith took great pride in spoiling him. However, because of her constant touring Smith was unable to take care of John, Jr. daily. Therefore she bought two houses for her sisters in Philadelphia with the understanding that they care for her son while she was away.[17]

When Gee and Smith finally separated in 1929 because of his infidelity with Gertrude Saunders, a performer like Smith, Gee decided to hurt Smith by using their son. One day when Smith was not at him he told John, Jr. to get in his car and then drove him to the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children (SPCC) and reported that ten-year-old John, Jr. was allowed to stay out all night and that he refused to go to school. John, Jr. eventually escaped the SPCC only to be placed in Gee's care where Gee and Saunders forced him to live in the basement.[18]

After losing both Gee and her son, Smith was left heartbroken, but did become involved with Richard Morgan, a Chicago bootlegger, before her death.

In addition to these heterosexual relationships Smith almost certainly engaged in relationships with Lillian and Marie, two female dancers from her show, and others. However, it was her relationship with Ruby Walker, Gee's niece, which was the most intensely emotional. While many of Smith's biographers believe her affair with Walker to be purely emotional, Walker's interviews with biographer Chris Albertson, prove the relationship to have been sexual as well.[19] However, while Walker was loyal to Smith and protected her from Gee, she too often tried to take advantage of Smith's fame. During one of Smith's recording sessions Walker spoke to the producer, as Smith sang, about the possibility of recording some songs herself. Smith, suspicious of Walker, immediately interceded and order that Walker not be allowed to record.[20] But despite their arguments they remained loyal to one another until Smith's divorce from Gee, when Walker left Smith, claiming that she was terrified of what Gee would do if she remained on tour with Bessie.

In addition to Smith's open bisexuality she also had a reputation for heavy drinking and lewd behavior. One particular incident occurred when Smith was leaving a party at the home of Carl Van Vechten, a wealthy journalist from Manhattan. Van Vechten's wife attempted to embrace Smith as she exited at which point Smith cursed at her and knocked her over. Smith's violent behavior and hard drinking also led to her being stabbed as she left a party by a young man she pushed aside at a party.[21]

Death

On September 26, 1937, Smith was severely injured when, while traveling along U.S. Route 61 between Memphis and Clarksdale, Mississippi with Richard Morgan at the wheel, their car struck a National Biscuit Company truck that was parked without lights. She was taken to Clarksdale's black Afro-American Hospital where her right arm was amputated. She did not regain consciousness, dying that morning. For some time it was believed that Smith's died as a result of being refused admission to a "Whites Only" hospital in Clarksdale. The myth, which is now discredited, began when jazz writer/producer John Hammond wrote an inaccurate article that appeared in the November 1937 issue of Down Beat magazine. The article went on to be the basis for Edward Albee's 1959 one-act play The Death of Bessie Smith.[22]

Smith's insurance policy ensured that she would have a large funeral. Her five-hundred dollar casket was trimmed with gold and lined with pink velvet. There were more than 40 floral arrangements and thousands lined the streets of her hometown as she was laid to rest eight days after her death.

Yet despite all of this her grave was left unmarked. Gee, who inherited all of her money, and the rest of her family did not buy her a headstone. In 1948 a Bessie Smith Memorial Concert was held to raise funds for a stone but according to Smith's sister Maud, Gee pocketed the money. The same happened again in the early 1950s when a benefit was held at the Blue Note Club in Philadelphia. Maude Smith reported that she gave a check to Gee with the understanding that the two would choose a stone together, but she never heard from him again and no stone was ever purchased.[23] However, in August 1970 Juanita Greene, President of the North Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP and Janis Joplin purchased a gravestone for Smith that read "The Greatest Blues Singer In The World Will Never Stop Singing." It had been Greene's mother who had served as a housekeeper for Smith.[24]

Digital Remastering

Given the technical faults in the majority of her original gramophone recordings—especially variations in recording speed, which raised or lowered the apparent pitch of her voice, misrepresented the "light and shade" of her superb phrasing, interpretation and delivery, and altered the apparent key of her performances (sometimes raised or lowered by as much as a semitone) and, also, the fact that the "centre hole" in some of the master recordings had not been in the true middle of the master disc, meaning that there were wide variations in tone, pitch, key and phrasing as the commercially released record revolved around its spindle—there is a very significant and very positive difference in the performance that Smith delivers in the current digitally remastered versions of her work.

Legacy

At the height of her popularity Bessie Smith sold more records and earned more money than any other blues performer.[25]Smith's rising popularity brought her to New York, where she performed with jazz greats including Fletcher Henderson, James P. Johnson, and Coleman Hawkins. The confluence of great jazz musicians and arrangers, preeminently Duke Ellington, and such writers as Langston Hughes, James Weldon Johnson, and Zora Neale Hurston, came to be known as the Harlem Renaissance.

Smith's subject matter was key in defining her songs and style. Always focusing on the female perspective of African American life Smith recorded songs about abuse, lost lovers, female rivalry and jealousy, voodoo, and race relations. Her grassroots and traditional black sound cost her early record contracts but ultimately earned Smith her success and helped to create a bridge between former and contemporary black identity.[26] In a time when black women were consigned to, at best, domestic work, Smith brought a strength and understanding to their shared experience. Smith unapologetically redefined the blues and it was the strength just below the sadness of her songs that would influence later singers like Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, and Janis Joplin. In 1989 Bessie Smith was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame under the category of Early Influence.

Notes

  1. Carole Marks, and Diana Edkins. Style Makers and Rule Breakers of the Harlem Renaissance. (New York: Crown, 1999. ISBN 0609600966), 122
  2. Jana Evans Braziel, "Bye, Bye, Baby': Race, Bisexuality, and the Blues in the Music of Bessie Smith and Janis Joplin," Popular Music and Society 27 (2004):3-22
  3. Elaine Feinstein. Bessie Smith: Empress of the Blues. (New York: Penguin Books, 1985. ISBN 0140080279)
  4. Chris Albertson. Bessie, Revised Ed. (New Haven: Yale, 2003. ISBN 0300099029), 11
  5. Jackie Kay. Bessie Smith. (Bath, UK: Absolute Press, 1997. ISBN 1899791701)
  6. Kay
  7. Braziel
  8. Angela Y. Davis. Blues Legacies and Black Feminism. (New York: Pantheon Books, 1998. ISBN 067945005X)
  9. Paul Oliver, "Bessie Smith" in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd Edition, Vol. 3, edited by Barry Kernfeld. (London: MacMillan, 2002), 604.
  10. Davis
  11. Braziel
  12. Davis
  13. Feinstein
  14. Kay
  15. Davis
  16. Feinstein
  17. Kay
  18. Kay
  19. Brazier
  20. Feinstein
  21. Feinstein
  22. Kay
  23. Kay
  24. Brazier
  25. Chris Albertson. Bessie
  26. Davis


References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Albertson, C. Liner notes, Bessie Smith: The Complete Recordings, Volumes 1 - 5. Sony Music Entertainment, 1991.
  • Albertson, C. Bessie. New York: Stein and Day, 1972.
  • Albertson, C. Bessie. (Revised and Expanded Edition), New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN 0300099029
  • Albertson, C. Bessie Smith, Empress of the Blues. New Haven: Schirmer Books, 1975.
  • Brooks, E. The Bessie Smith Companion: A Critical and Detailed Appreciation of the Recordings. New York: Da Capo Press, 1982.
  • Davis, Angela Y. Blues Legacies and Black Feminism: Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday. NY: Pantheon Books, 1998. ISBN 067945005X. Contains 100 pages of lyrics recorded by Smith.
  • Eberhardt, C. Out of Chattanooga. Chattanooga: Ebco, 1993.
  • Feinstein, Elaine. Bessie Smith. NY: Viking, 1985. ISBN 0670806420
  • Grimes, S. Backwaterblues: In Search of Bessie Smith. Amherst: Rose Island Pub., 2000. ISBN 0970708904
  • Kay, Jackie. Bessie Smith. NY: Absolute, 1997. ISBN 1899791558
  • Manera, A. Bessie Smith. Chicago: Raintree, 2003. ISBN 0739868756
  • Marks, Carole, and Diana Edkins. Style Makers and Rule Breakers of the Harlem Renaissance. New York: Crown, 1999. ISBN 0609600966
  • Martin, F. Bessie Smith. Paris: Editions du Limon, 1994. ISBN 290722431X
  • Moore, C. Somebody's Angel Child: The Story of Bessie Smith. NY: T. Y. Crowell Co., 1969. A children's book that is largely fiction.
  • Oliver, Paul. Bessie Smith. London: Cassell, 1959.
  • Welding, P., and T. Byron, eds.. Bluesland: Portraits of Twelve Major American Blues Masters. NY: Dutton, 1991. ISBN 0525933751. Includes "T'Aint Nobody's Business If I Do" by Chris Albertson.

External links

All links retrieved January 20, 2022.


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