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The Forgotten JAZZ World

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Title: The Forgotten JAZZ World


1
The Forgotten JAZZ World
  • By Tinisha Shaw Jennifer Nuñez

2
Women of Jazz
  • Women, especially African American women, are
    often not recognized for their contributions to
    the jazz.
  • As singers, band leaders, instrumentalists,
    writers, and producers these women were a vital
    aspect of popularity and legacy of jazz.

The following are examples of the female key note
jazz during the early to mid 20th century.
(International Sweethearts of Rhythm)
3
Ella FitzgeraldThe First Lady of Song
  • The most popular female jazz singer in the United
    States for more than half a century.
  • Born in Newport News, Virginia on April 25, 1917
    and grew up in Yonkers, New York.
  • Her childhood is described as happy. Ella grew up
    in a mixed neighborhood and was a self-described
    tomboy.
  • Her mother worked at a laundry mat and as a
    caterer. Her step-father dug ditches and as a
    part-time chauffeur.

4
Ella FitzgeraldThe First Lady of Song
  • As a teenager Ella would take the train into
    Harlem to the Apollo Theater and enter into
    Amateur Night at the Apollo.
  • By 1934 Ella was able to compete as a dance act
    but when faced with boos she decided to sing.
  • From then on she began entering every talent show
    she could find.

5
Ella FitzgeraldThe First Lady of Song
  • In January 1935 she won the chance to perform for
    a week with Tiny Bradshaw band at the Harlem
    Opera House.
  • In mid 1936 Ella made her first recording Love
    and Kisses.
  • By 1938 at the age of 21 Ella had hit number one
    on the pop charts for 17 weeks and sold one
    million copies with the album A-Tisket, A-Tasket.
  • After this Ellas stardom grew.

6
Ella FitzgeraldThe First Lady of Song
  • Ella joined the Philharmonic tour and worked with
    Louis Armstrong
  • From 1956-1964 she recorded covers for Cole
    Porter, Duke Ellington, the Gershwins, Irving
    Berlin, and Rodgers and Hart.
  • She was a favorite and frequent guest on The Bing
    Crosby Show, The Dinah Shore Show, The Ed
    Sullivan Show, and The Tonight Show.
  • By her death at the age of 79 on June 15, 1996
    Ella had recorded over 200 albums, won 13 Grammy
    awards, and sold over 40 million albums.

Just One of Those Things
7
Bessie SmithThe Empress of the Blues
  • Described as the greatest of the classic Blues
    singers of the 1920s.
  • Also described as a rough, crude, and violent
    woman who loved her Gin.
  • Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee on April 15
    sometime between the years of 1894 and 1900.
  • She made her start as a street musician in
    Chattanooga until she was discovered by Blues
    singer Ma Rainey.

8
Bessie SmithThe Empress of the Blues
  • In 1912 she joined the Rabbit Foot Minstrels were
    she was mentored by Ma Rainey.
  • In 1915 she left the show and joined the T.O.B.A
    vaudeville circuit (Theatre Owners Booking
    Association) where she built up a following
    throughout the south.
  • Her first recording was Down Hearted Blues, in
    1923. The record sold more than 750,000 copies in
    a year.

9
Bessie SmithThe Empress of the Blues
  • Throughout the 1920s Bessie recorded with many of
    the great Jazz musicians of that era such as
    Fletcher Henderson, James P. Johnson, Don Redman,
    and Louis Armstrong.
  • Her record St. Louis Blues with Louis Armstrong
    was considered one of the finest recordings of
    the 1920s
  • Bessie Smith became one of the biggest
    African-American stars of the 1920s with all
    races.

10
Bessie SmithThe Empress of the Blues
  • Smith became the highest paid Black entertainer
    in the country during the 1920s making 1500 a
    week.
  • However, by 1930 her career had faltered due to
    changing music tastes, mismanagement, and her
    heavy drinking.
  • Her last New York appearance was in 1936. On
    September 27, 1937 she was killed in an
    automobile accident in Clarksdale, Mississippi
    traveling to Memphis, Tennessee.

11
Bessie SmithThe Empress of the Blues
  • Bessie Smith was known for her slow blues
    ballads.
  • Her voice was described as huge, sweeping, and
    capable of strength and tenderness.
  • She left behind over 160 recordings and huge
    legacy.

12
Billie HolidayLady Day
  • Described as the Greatest Female Jazz Vocalist of
    all time.
  • Born Eleanora Fagan in 1915 in Baltimore, MD
  • Her childhood was difficult and led to her
    dropping out of high school and moving in with
    her mother to Harlem.
  • Desperate for money she auditions to be a singer
    at a speakeasy.
  • This job leads to many other performances in
    Harlem clubs.
  • Soon discovered by John Hammond she was given
    great exposure and worked with many great jazz
    names such as Duke Ellington and Lester Young.

13
Billie HolidayLady Day
  • Established a lifelong relationship with Lester
    Young "Prez who coined the nickname Lady Day.
  • She began making her first recordings in 1935
    with Teddy Wilson.
  • In 1938 she joined Artie Shaws band becoming one
    of the first black singers to be featured in a
    white orchestra.
  • Due to the Jim Crow Laws in the South Lady Day
    found it difficult to tour the area when she was
    not given the respect to even enter the venues
    front door.
  • She decided to leave and pursue a solo career.

Fun Fact She used the name "Billie Holiday"
because of her admiration for film star Billie
Dove.
14
Billie HolidayLady Day
  • In 1939 Strange Fruit was released and
    jumpstarted her solo career given her not only
    the respect she deserved, but also created a
    large fan base.
  • Her career began to take off with the success of
    slow, melancholy songs of unreciprocated love
    such as Gloomy Sunday (1941) God Bless the Child
    and Lover Man (1944).
  • These songs showed off her vocal skills and also
    revealed the pain that she suffered as her
    personal life deteriorated.
  • Drugs, Alcohol, Abusive Men, and Cocaine/Heroine
    all took their tolls on her health and career.

15
Billie HolidayLady Day
  • Despite her personal problems Lady Day become
    one of the worlds most famous voices. She
    successfully broke race lines by being one of the
    few black artists to perform in all-white and
    interracial venues.
  • Her influences live on still today through the
    works of modern jazz vocalists
  • The lyrics from many of her songs revealed and
    made the general public aware of the turmoil
    and pain that many blacks suffered during the
    early to mid 20th century.

16
International Sweethearts of Rhythm
  • All-Girl Band that was active from 1937-1949.
  • This band was unique in that it was both all
    female as well as a racially integrated group.
  • Black, Asian, Latina, Indian, White, and Puerto
    Rican women came together and created music that
    more than held its own
  • Hence the name International
  • Admired by their peers, including Count Basie and
    Louis Armstrong.

17
International Sweethearts of Rhythm
  • Very popular among black/interracial audiences
    but faced a great amount of problems when touring
    the South.
  • The South caused problems not only for the
    minority members, but also for the white members.
  • Despite their struggles in dealing with a racist
    society, people could not overlook the great
    amount of talent that composed the Sweethearts.

18
International Sweethearts of Rhythm
  • The height of their careers came during WWII. As
    men were off fighting the war people began to
    focus their attention on women jazz performers
    who now had the responsibility continuing the
    development of jazz as well as entertaining the
    troops abroad.

19
International Sweethearts of Rhythm
  • USO TOUR
  • The Sweethearts were so popular that they were
    invited to take a 6month European tour during
    WWII.
  • Many of its members became the first women of
    their race to travel internationally with the
    USO.

20
Remember
  • Women, especially African American women
    contributed a great deal to the creation,
    development, and continuation of Jazz.
  • They did so under the roles of vocalists,
    instrumentalists, band leaders, conductors, and
    much more.

21
References
  • All songs taken from The Smithsonian Collections
    of Classic Jazz. Sony Music Entertainment Inc.,
    1997.
  • Dahl, Linda. Stormy Weather The Music and Lives
    of a Century of Jazzwomen. New York Pantheon
    Books, 1984. ML82 .D3 1984
  • OMeally, Robert. Lady Day The Many Faces of
    Billie Holiday. De Capo Press, 2000. ML420.H58
    O4 1991  
  • Tucker, Sherrie. Swing Shift All-Girl Bands of
    the 1940s. Durham, N.C. Duke University Press,
    2000. ML82 .T83 2000  
  • Tucker, Sherrie. Nobody's Sweethearts Gender,
    Race, Jazz, and the Darlings of Rhythm.
    American Music, Vol. 16, No. 3. (Autumn, 1998),
    pp. 255-288. Online via JSTOR. http//links.jstor.
    org/sici?sici0734-43922819982329163A33C2553A
    NSGRJA3E2.0.CO3B2-Y (25 August 2005).
  • Tucker, Sherrie. PBS Jazz a Film by Ken Burns
    Jazz in Time Women in Jazz. lt
    http//www.pbs.org/jazz/time/time_women.htmgt (25
    August 2005).
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