MUS 376U Group 6 Bessie Smith Empress of the Blues
Nov 14, 2014
2. The Empress
Pivotal figure in not only music, but as one with great influence
in a changing society.
Musically: the bridge from down home or rural blues to a more
sophisticated urban form.
Within Society: an iconic figure of the great migration of rural
African-Americans of the south to northern cities.
Her blues were not just sorrowful, but also pointed out
injustices
This presentation examines Bessies life and music, plus the
technology that helped create her identity.With all these
attributes intact she became a transitional figure of music of the
1920s.
3. Believed to have been born in 1893 around Chattanooga
Tennessee
Lost both parents at a very young age
There existed no good system for orphaned children
Many children took to urban streets by begging, stealing,
or busking for money.
Bessie and her brother Clarence became street performers.
Still at a rough pre-teen age, Bessie joined her first minstrel
show -
The Moses Stokes Travelling Show
4. Ma Rainey immediately saw in Bessie the empress she would
become.She and her husband mentored Bessie.
Later it had been circulated that Bessie was kidnapped by Ma
Rainey.This seems farfetched especially since Bessies choices were
either the street or the stage.
Ma Rainey
However, the street and the minstrel show stage were one of the
root causes that lead Bessie to not only sing the blues but live
them out as well.She became a heavy drinker and barroom brawler,
living out in exaggerated actions the very lyrics she emoted.
5. The song Me and My Gin is an example of Bessies portrayal of the
blues and her lifestyle. This song about Gin can be an allegory for
many other things.Look over the lyrics and see if you can come up
with any other interpretations of what this song is about.
Clues; alcoholism, love, oppression,(double click or open hyperlink
to song)
prostitution, misogyny, etc.
Also, what musical form of the blues
is being used?
Stay away from me cause Im in my sin
Stay away from me cause Im in my sin.
If this place gets raided, its just me and my gin.
Dont try me nobody, oh, you will never win.
Dont try me nobody cause you will never win.
Ill fight the army, navy just me and my gin.
6. Any bootlegger sure is a pal of mine.
Any bootlegger sure is a pal of mine.
Cause a good ol bottle o gin will get it all the time.
When Im feeling high aint nothing I wont do.
When Im feeling high aint nothing I wont do.
Get me full of liquor and Ill sure be nice to you.
I dont want no pork and I dont need no beer.
I dont want no pork and I dont need no beer.
I dont want no porkchop just give me gin instead
7. I believe there are only two truly regal women in the world, my
mother (the queen) and Bessie Smith.
- Prince of Wales
Whatever pathos there is in the world, whatever sadness she had,
was brought out in her singing-and the audience knew it and
responded to it.
- Frank Schiffman, owner of the Apollo theater
Bessies royal image came not only from
her larger than life personality and powerful
voice.It also took some clever promotion
from her record company and the exposure
from the emerging commercial radio
stations of 1920s.
8. Prior to the 1920s, it was assumed there was no market for
African-American musicians. But the sales success of Mamie Smiths
Crazy Blues turned the heads of the labels.
After that, record labels scramble to find blues singers,
especially women.Columbia Records, Okeh, Paramount, and Vocalion
started to develop separate departments and release recordings
entitled race records.
Bessie Smiths recordings of Gulf Coast Blues and Down Hearted Blues
from 1923 on Columbia are thought to be her first recordings.Their
release proved to be an overwhelming success.800,000 sold in the
first six months.But it just wasnt the record industry at work for
Bessies popularity.
9. Commercial radio boomed in the 1920s:
10. It became easier to pick up cheap radio sets 11. Radios
doubled as pieces of furniture and soon replaced the parlor piano
Much like today, radio hosts played records live over the air and
included occasional live performances.
The radio reached an incredibly
broad audience. Bessie could be
heard crying the blues from the
homes of white middle class
neighborhoods.
Soon, Bessie would be giving
separate shows to white only
audiences and she did so gladly,
for the ticket sales and salaries
were increased for such occasions.
12. Through records and radio, Bessie became the foremost lady
blues singer and transitional icon between old time blues (Ma
Rainey) and a more sophisticated form of modern blues.
Both started recording in 1923, but Bessies more urban style
contained a depth which African-American music had not known
before.
13. Bessies new urban style:
1. Her voice displayed a sophisticated phrasing not previously
known
2. She anticipated chords
3. Her tone was of a richer variety.
4. The lyrical content of her songs contained an abundance of
metaphors
5. Her rhythmic treatment of tunes, especially with the use of
triplets in duple meter, exhibited a more jazzy than bluesy
feeling.
In the following song Graveyard Dream Blues, see if you can pick
out these techniques.
14. Graveyard Dream Blues
Blues on my mind, blues all around my head
Blues on my mind, and blues all around my head
I dreamed last night that the man that I love was dead
I went to the graveyard, fell down on my knees
I went to the graveyard, fell down on my knees
And I asked the gravedigger to give me back my real good man
please
The gravedigger look me in the eye
The gravedigger look me in the eye
Said Im sorry lady but your man has said his last goodbye
I wrung my hands and I wanted to scream
I wrung my hands and I wanted to scream
But when I woke up I found it was only a dream
Double Click or Open Hyperlink
Bessie and her husband Jack Gee
15. Bessie continued to make good money and toured throughout the
1920s, but had transitioned to a more modern and urban sound.
Musicians that followed her took up where she left off and
progressed the form even further.
Duke Ellington and Count Basie used Bessies techniques and placed
them in a much more richand complex setting.
The big band and swing era would sweep the nation.
16. The depression changed what the nation desired to listen
to.
The big beat of the swing bands covered up the reality of the
depression.
Bessie would try and adjust to the changes by recording for Okeh
(included many big band musicians).
Radio and records had started Bessie on her ride and they
contributed to her diminished stature as the Empress.
17. Seen here in the movie St. Louis Blues from 1929, Bessie sings
a song by the same name composed by W.C. Handy.This is a moment in
history where the crash of the stock market and Bessies popularity
come together.Open the following link to view the scene.
St. Louis Blues by Bessie Smith
18. In 1937 Bessie died in an automobile accident.
She was to become one of many tortured souls whose light burned
bright and fast.That flame still can be seen when we listen to her
music and share her experience.
Music transcends race and moves beyond assumptionBessies history
was sung straight into the heart, from the heart.Bessie Smiths
ability, god given or street learned,(maybe both) takes its
rightful place in American music history.Without her special gifts,
music would not have certain elements that the listener now takes
for granted.Bessie is the empress.
19. The emerging race record and
commercial radio of the 1920s that
Bessie Smith was a part of really made
a mark on American culture.They
ushered in the Jazz Age.Many artists
from differing backgrounds would
progress forward with elements of what
Bessie had created.
In a group discussion, write about what influences we see today in
American music. Whatconnections to Bessie Smiths experience can be
made?Think about the media, the music itself, and lyrical content
from Bessie to now, Could a Bessie Smith happen today?
20. This has been a powerpoint presentation provided
by group 6 of American Musical Traditions MUS 376U.
Portland State University.
The following students have provided research and have
participated in the construction of the powerpoint:
Lori Haddan & RyannSteininger provided the biographical
information
TahmeenaRaheel and Christopher Maddox provided information on race
records and the commercialization of radio
Samuel Varhan and KorenSasse researched photos and pictures used in
the presentation..
Sara Gates and Elizabeth Lamson chose the songs and provided the
lyrics for the presentation.
Anna Holly (who recorded the narrative) and Todd Ahseln handled the
physical construction of the powerpoint
21. Sources of Information
1. Albertson, Chris.Bessie.Yale University Press, 2003.
2.Youtube-http://youtu.be/8Who6fTHJ34
3.Smith, Bessie.The Complete Recordings Vol. 1, 2, 3, & 4
Columbia Records.1991
4.Schoenberg, Loren.Jazz: An American Music History.
5.notablebiographies.com/Sc-St/Smith-Bessie.html
6.pbs.org/jazz/exchange/exchange race records.html
7.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi g1epc/is tov/ai 2419101005
8.flickr.com/photos/