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Edna Hicks

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Name
  
Edna Hicks

Role
  
Singer


Albums
  
Gulf Coast Blues

Siblings
  
Lizzie Miles

Edna Hicks wwwredhotjazzcomednahicksjpg

Died
  
August 16, 1925, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Record labels
  
Gennett Records, Columbia Records

Similar People
  
Lizzie Miles, Porter Grainger, Viola McCoy, Lena Wilson, Monette Moore

I m goin away blues singer edna hicks her first recording 1923 victor record


Edna Hicks (October 14, 1891 or 1895 – August 16, 1925) was an American blues singer and musician. Her recorded songs include "Hard Luck Blues" and "Poor Me Blues". She also recorded "Down Hearted Blues", and "Gulf Coast Blues" on the Brunswick label in 1923.

Contents

Edna hicks poor me blues


Biography

She was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. Although most sources state that her birth name was Edna Landreaux, the daughter of Victor Landreaux and Rena (last name unknown), researchers Bob Eagle and Eric LeBlanc suggest that her birth name was Lucille Landry, the daughter of Victor Landry and Rosa Moore. She was the half-sister of Lizzie Miles.

She is believed to have moved north in her mid-teens. Around 1911, as Edna Landry, she married vaudeville performer and touring company manager Will Benbow, and performed in his shows, but they separated after a few years.

She was popular in black vaudeville in the American Midwest in the late 1910s and 1920s, appeared often in Chicago and Cincinnati, and made recordings for seven different record labels in 1923 and 1924: Victor, Vocalion, Columbia, Gennett, Brunswick, Ajax, and Paramount. Her most frequent accompanist was Fletcher Henderson; some of her recordings featured accompaniment by Porter Grainger and Lemuel Fowler. In 1916, she appeared was in a show called Follow Me at Casino Theater in New York City. She also appeared in Billy King's musical comedy Over the Top, and the musical comedies The New American, A Trip Around the World, and A Derby Day in Dixie, all in The Lafayette Theater in New York City.

In August 1925, while assisting her husband in filling their automobile's gasoline tank, she was burned after splashed gasoline was ignited by a candle she was holding. She died in a Chicago hospital two days later, on August 16. She is buried at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Worth, Illinois.

References

Edna Hicks Wikipedia