Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Arizona Dranes

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Arizona Dranes

Role
  
Musical Artist

Albums
  
It's All Right Now


Arizona Dranes Raising Arizona The first great gospel singer learned her

Died
  
1963, Los Angeles, California, United States

People also search for
  
Christopher C. King, Josh Rosenthal, Bryan Hoffa

Arizona dranes crucifixion


"Arizona" Juanita Dranes (May 4, 1889 or 1891–1963) was one of the first gospel artists to bring the musical styles of Holiness churches' religious music to the public in her records for Okeh and performances in the 1920s. She was also one of the first professional woman gospel singers. Her distinctive, nasal vocal style and piano playing that incorporated boogie and ragtime influenced later gospel artists.

Contents

Arizona Dranes ghostcapital Arizona Dranes Complete Recorded Works

Arizona dranes i m going home on the morning train


Biography

Arizona Dranes wwwthemortonreportcomuploadspicsarizonadrane

Juanita Drane (or possibly Drain) was born blind in 1889 or 1891 in Sherman, Texas. Drane attended the Texas Institute for Deaf, Dumb and Blind Colored Youth in Austin from 1896 to 1910. She learned to play piano in her early teens.

Arizona Dranes Arizona Dranes quotLambs Blood Has Washed Me Cleanquot YouTube

Drane had been believed to be of both African-American and Mexican descent, but research by Michael Corcoran for He Is My Story: the Sanctified Soul of Arizona Dranes disproved Mexican heritage.

Arizona Dranes i0wpcomwwwmichaelcorcorannetwpcontentuploa

Her correct last name is "Drane", as listed in the official enrollment record for the 1896–1897 school year at the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired. Her name was spelled "Drane" at school, though she was billed as "Dranes" later in life. Because both parents were illiterate, the surname was written down as it was pronounced. Corcoran's research found a probable cousin named "Doran," which would be pronounced "Drane" in the black southern dialect of the time.

Career

Arizona Dranes Arizona Juanita Dranes I Shall Wear a Crown YouTube

After graduating from the Texas Institute, she returned to Sherman for ten years. Around 1922, Dranes joined the Church of God in Christ Church in Wichita Falls. She soon became a favored singer-pianist of the founder, Bishop Charles Mason and was well utilized in the COGIC circles. She incorporated a syncopated, ragtime style in her gospel accompaniment and soon established the songs "I Shall Wear A Crown," "My Soul's a Witness for the Lord," and "Lamb's Blood Has Washed Me Clean" as COGIC standards.

Arizona Dranes Arizona Dranes Forgotten Mother Of The Gospel Beat NPR

Dranes introduced piano accompaniment to Holiness music, which had previously been largely a cappella, and accompanied herself in the barrelhouse and ragtime styles popular at the time. She began recording in 1926 with Okeh Records, first as a solo artist and later with choirs and various other artists and groups. She was one of the first professional women gospel singers and sang at COGIC meetings in the Bible Belt, touring Texas, Tennessee, and Oklahoma.

Arizona Dranes The Musicians Heavenly Sight

Although she last recorded in 1928, she continued touring through the 1940s. She moved to Los Angeles in 1948 and died there on July 27, 1963. Later gospel artists, such as Roberta Martin and Clara Ward, were heavily influenced by her piano playing; Dranes' nasal singing style also influenced artists such as Sister Rosetta Tharpe.

References

Arizona Dranes Wikipedia