Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
All Music Guide to the Blues: The Definitive Guide to the Blues. San Francisco, California: Backbeat Books. ISBN 0-87930-736-6. Harrison, Daphne Duval (1990). Black Pearls: Blues Queens of the 1920s. New Brunswick and London: Rutgers. ISBN 0-8135-1280-8. Russell, Tony (1997). The Blues: From Robert Johnson to Robert Cray.
Classic female blues was an early form of blues music, popular in the 1920s. An amalgam of traditional folk blues and urban theater music, the style is also known as vaudeville blues. Classic blues were performed by female singers accompanied by pianists or small jazz ensembles and were the first blues to be recorded.
1960* Tennessee Memphis blues [34] Bernice Edwards: 1907 1969 Texas Classic female blues [35] Sleepy John Estes: 1899* 1977 Tennessee Country blues [36] Ethel Finnie: 1898 1981 Louisiana Classic female blues [37] Blind Boy Fuller: 1907* 1941 North Carolina Piedmont blues [38] Jesse Fuller: 1896 1976 Georgia Piedmont blues [38] Jazz Gillum: 1904 ...
20th-century women singers (3 C, 14 P) Pages in category "20th-century women musicians" The following 90 pages are in this category, out of 90 total.
Classic female blues was an early form of blues music popular in the 1920s. An amalgam of traditional folk blues and urban theater music, the style is also known as ...
Pages in category "20th-century English women singers" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 245 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
(Top) 1 1920–1969. 2 1970–present. 3 See also. ... The following is a list of crooners and includes artists who have been described as a crooner at some point in ...
The Roberta Martin Singers adds two female performers, making it the "first combination of male and female voices in one ensemble". The Singers were performing and recording in New York, working with independent labels that focused on jazz and rhythm and blues. [454] The end of the creative peak of jazz in Manhattan. [21]