Artist's albums
Pickin' the Blues
2000 · album
Hoodoo Lady (1933-1937)
1991 · album
Memphis Minnie: Down Home Girl
2023 · album
Out in the Cold - Blues Songs for Winter Days
2022 · album
Born Lizzie Douglas
2022 · compilation
Down home girl
2022 · album
In My Girlish Days - Memphis Minnie in the 40's
2021 · album
Good Morning
2021 · album
Please Set a Date
2020 · single
The First Lady of Blues (Digitally Remastered)
2019 · album
100% Blues
2018 · album
Her Greatest Tracks
2018 · album
Killer Diller Blues
2018 · album
Chauffuer Blues
2016 · album
Good Morning
2016 · album
Moonshine
2015 · album
Guitar Women, Vol.4
2015 · album
Kid Blues
2015 · album
Blues Legends pres. Memphis Minnie
2011 · album
When The Levee Breaks - The Best Of
2010 · album
Blues Greats
2009 · album
Hot Stuff
2009 · album
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Biography
Tracking down the ultimate woman blues guitar hero is problematic because woman blues singers seldom recorded as guitar players and woman guitar players (such as Rosetta Tharpe and Sister O.M. Terrell) were seldom recorded playing blues. Excluding contemporary artists, the most notable exception to this pattern was Memphis Minnie. The most popular and prolific blueswoman outside the vaudeville tradition, she earned the respect of critics, the support of record-buying fans, and the unqualified praise of the blues artists she worked with throughout her long career. Despite her Southern roots and popularity, she was as much a Chicago blues artist as anyone in her day. Big Bill Broonzy recalls her beating both him and Tampa Red in a guitar contest and claims she was the best woman guitarist he had ever heard. Tough enough to endure in a hard business, she earned the respect of her peers with her solid musicianship and recorded good blues over four decades for Columbia, Vocalion, Bluebird, OKeh, Regal, Checker, and JOB. She also proved to have as good taste in musical husbands as music and sustained working marriages with guitarists Casey Bill Weldon, Joe McCoy, and Ernest Lawlars. Their guitar duets span the spectrum of African-American folk and popular music, including spirituals, comic dialogs, and old-time dance pieces, but Memphis Minnie's best work consisted of deep blues like "Moaning the Blues." More than a good woman blues guitarist and singer, Memphis Minnie holds her own against the best blues artists of her time, and her work has special resonance for today's aspiring guitarists. ~ Barry Lee Pearson, Rovi