Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Bessie Brown

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation(s)
  
Singer

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Bessie Brown


Years active
  
1920s and 30s

Instruments
  
Vocals

Died
  
1955

Bessie Brown cpsstaticrovicorpcom3JPG400MI0002298MI000

Birth name
  
Bessie smith = "The Original" Bessie Brown; Sadie Green, Caroline Lee, and possibly Helen Richards

Origin
  
Cleveland, Ohio, United States

Albums
  
Complete Recorded Works (1925-29), Bessie Brown (1925-1929) & Liza Brown (1929), Song from a Cotton Field

Genres
  
Jazz, Classic female blues

Record labels
  
Document Records, Pathe Records

Similar People
  
Rosa Henderson, Martha Copeland, Cotton Jones, Bertha Hill, Clara Smith

What s the matter now bessie brown her jazz band 1925 banner record


Bessie Brown (1890–1955) also known as "The Original" Bessie Brown, was an American classic female blues, jazz, and cabaret singer. She sometimes recorded under the pseudonyms Sadie Green, Caroline Lee, and possibly Helen Richards. Brown was active as a recording artist from 1925 to 1929.

Contents

Bessie Brown Bessie Brown Wikipedia

She should not be confused (although often is in biographies and discographies) with the Bessie Brown who recorded vaudeville and blues-styled duets with George W. Williams, over a similar timespan.

Bessie Brown Song From A Cotton Field Bessie Brown Shazam

Song from a cotton field bessie brown


Life and career

Brown was born in Marysville, Ohio. She recorded between November 10, 1925, and April 1, 1929. In her concurrent vaudeville career, she sometimes performed as a male impersonator. She also appeared in revues, including Moonshine Revue, The Whirl of Joy and Dark-Town Frolics, and on the stage as a cabaret performer, primarily on the East Coast. On her recordings she sang in a deepened tone, without any notable African-American dialect. Thus, to more than one commentator, her style was similar to that of Sophie Tucker.

On her recordings Brown was backed by some of the best Harlem-based musicians of the time, including Thomas Morris and Rex Stewart (cornet); Charlie Irvis and Charlie Green (trombone); Coleman Hawkins and Buster Bailey (saxophone); Buddy Christian and Clarence Holiday (banjo); and Porter Grainger, Clarence Williams and Fletcher Henderson (piano).

She left the music industry in 1932 and married Clarence Shaw in the early 1930s. She had one child, Helen Smith Mcreynolds, from her first marriage. She died of a heart attack in 1955.

The bulk of her known recorded work was issued as a compilation album, Complete Recorded Works (1925–29), by Document Records in 1996. The album also includes four October 1929 recordings by the unrelated comedian Eliza "Liza" Brown.

References

Bessie Brown Wikipedia