Artist's albums
Mamie Smith Vol. 1 (1920-1921)
1995 · album
Mamie Smith Vol. 2 (1921-1922)
1995 · album
Mamie Smith Vol. 3 (1922-1923)
1995 · album
Mamie Smith Vol. 4 (1923-1942)
1995 · album
Blue Woman
2023 · album
Live Music
2022 · album
My Jazzy Kiss
2021 · album
Mem'ries of You, Mamie
2021 · album
Milestones of Legends - Female Blues, Vol. 1
2018 · album
Queen of the Blues
2015 · album
Crazy Blues: The Best Of Mamie Smith
1920 · compilation
Presenting Mamie Smith
1920 · album
Similar artists
Tampa Red
Artist
Sippie Wallace
Artist
Ma Rainey
Artist
Lucille Bogan
Artist
Clara Smith
Artist
Papa Charlie Jackson
Artist
Memphis Minnie
Artist
Victoria Spivey
Artist
Ethel Waters
Artist
Ruth Etting
Artist
Alberta Hunter
Artist
Lil Green
Artist
Sophie Tucker
Artist
Bessie Smith
Artist
Ida Cox
Artist
Lee Morse
Artist
Marion Harris
Artist
Charley Patton
Artist
W.C. Handy
Artist
Biography
Though technically not a blues performer, Mamie Smith notched her place in American music as the first black female singer to record a vocal blues. That record was "Crazy Blues" (recorded August 10, 1920), which sold a million copies in its first six months and made record labels aware of the huge potential market for "race records"; thus paving the way for Bessie Smith (no relation) and other blues and jazz performers. An entertainer who sported a powerful, penetrating, feminine voice with belting vaudeville qualities, as opposed to blues inflections, Smith toured as a dancer with Tutt-Whitney's Smart Set Company in her early teens, and sang in Harlem clubs before World War I. Apparently, Smith's pioneering recording session was an accident, since she was filling in for Sophie Tucker, but the success of the record made her wealthy. Soon thereafter, Smith began touring and recording with a band called the Jazz Hounds, which featured such jazz notables as Coleman Hawkins, Bubber Miley, Johnny Dunn, and more, and she toured with the bands of Andy Kirk and Fats Pichon in the 1930s. She also appeared in several films, including Paradise in Harlem late in her life (1939). She recorded several sides for OKeh during her heyday; one unissued take of "My Sportin' Man" is included on Columbia's Roots N' Blues Retrospective 1925-1950 box set. In the 1980s, all of her recordings were reissued on LP by the imported Document label. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi