BESSIE SMITH Vol.2
'St Louis Blues'
Original Recordings 1924-1925
At the time that Bessie Smith recorded the opening selection
on this release, Haunted House Blues, she was three months shy of turning
thirty and entering the period of her greatest popularity. Smith was headlining in her own show
not only in the South but in such Northern cities as Chicago, Cleveland and
Detroit. She appeared often on the
radio and, most important for today's listeners, was recording frequently and
earning her title of "The Empress Of The Blues".
Born 15 April 1894 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Bessie Smith
never knew her father (who died while she was very young) and her mother passed
away when she was ten. Raised by
an older sister and growing up poor, she first performed at an amateur contest
when she was ten, often raising money for the family by singing in the streets
with her brother backing her on guitar.
In 1912 when Smith was eighteen, she joined the Moses Stokes troupe as a
dancer. The company's vocalist was
Ma Rainey, who is considered the first female blues singer and was an
inspiration. Within a year or two,
Smith was singing at Atlanta's "81" Theatre and quickly becoming a popular
attraction. She worked regularly
on the road with a variety of companies and gained a strong reputation
throughout the South for her powerful voice and highly expressive way of
singing the blues. By 1920 she was
heading her own show.
The blues craze began in 1920 when Mamie Smith had a major
bestseller in "Crazy Blues".
Suddenly the record labels, which had previously excluded black artists
from the recording studios, went out of their way to document scores of female
blues singers in hopes of duplicating Mamie Smith's success. Among the many discoveries were Ethel
Waters, Alberta Hunter, Ida Cox and Ma Rainey, but none made a greater impact than
Bessie Smith.
After auditioning unsuccessfully for the Edison label and
recording two selections for Columbia on 15 February 1923 that for unknown
reasons were rejected, Bessie Smith made her recording debut the following
day. Her very first recording,
Alberta Hunter's "Downhearted Blues", became a major hit and within a year she
was the most famous and popular of the classic blues singers. That seemed only fitting because she
had the strongest and most memorable voice. While many other singers on early recordings were defeated
by the inferior technical quality of both the recording equipment and their
accompanists, the Empress simply overrode both. Few other singers from 1923 are listenable today but Smith,
whether introducing "'Tain't Nobody's Bizness If I Do" or putting a great deal
of passion into "Jailhouse Blues" and "Mistreatin' Daddy" (all to be found on Bessie Smith Vol.1:
"Downhearted Blues", Naxos Jazz Legends 8.120660), was way ahead of her contemporaries. In fact, she can be considered not only
the finest blues singer of the 1920s but the first female jazz singer.
During the period covered by Naxos' second Bessie Smith
reissue (9 January 1924 to 27 May 1925), the singer recorded 38
selections. The eighteen best are
on this set and most of the selections have the singer accompanied by players
taken from the leading jazz big band of the time, the Fletcher Henderson
Orchestra. Haunted House Blues,
which has Smith dealing with both haunting spirits and sound effects, and
Eavesdropper's Blues (discussing the perils of eavesdropping) team the Empress
with pianist Henderson and clarinetist Don Redman (Henderson's brilliant
arranger). Haunted House Blues is
particularly unusual for having a one-bar extension in the middle of each
chorus, making it a very rare 13 (rather than 12) bar blues.
Violinist Robert Robbins' playing would distract most other
singers but not Smith, who on Frankie Blues is heard at her most powerful. Rainy Weather Blues and Salt Walter
Blues have Bessie interacting with the great trombonist Charlie Green. One of the first jazz players to swing
consistently on record, Green's tonal distortions and witty ideas always
inspired Smith. Weeping Willow
Blues adds cornettist Joe Smith to the group and he immediately became a great
favorite of Bessie, who loved his mellow tone and the way that he complemented
her. Sinful Blues has Bessie
joined by her new accompanist, pianist Fred Longshaw, a better player than
Fletcher Henderson and a regular in her live performances. A particularly unique aspect to this
performance is that Smith takes her only kazoo solo on records, ending the song
quite effectively.
On 14 January 1925, Bessie Smith recorded the first of her
sessions with Louis Armstrong. She
may have preferred Joe Smith, but there was no better musical partner for her
(at least among horn players) than the 23-year old Armstrong, who answers her
statements with note-bending ideas that are both supportive and
competitive. On a dramatic version
of St Louis Blues (one of the finest ever recorded) and Reckless Blues,
Longshaw switches to a reed organ which gives a church feel to the music. Sobbin' Hearted Blues, Cold In Hand
Blues and You've Been A Good Old Wagon (But You Dun Broke Down), with Longshaw
back on piano, continues the musical magic between the singer and the
cornetist.
Smith is joined by seven musicians from the Henderson band
on 5 May, including the first major tenor-saxophonist Coleman Hawkins and the
fluent clarinetist Buster Bailey along with Joe Smith, Charlie Green and the
Henderson rhythm section (sans drums).
Although most famous for her blues singing, Smith was quite capable of
swinging popular songs, as she shows on the spirited Cake Walkin' Babies From
Home. At the same session she
waxed the definitive version of W. C. Handy's Yellow Dog Blues.
The final four selections on this collection all have Smith
assisted by Charlie Green (who is showcased on Soft Pedal Dance) and Fletcher
Henderson. Buster Bailey helps out
on Dixie Flyer Blues (one of the earlier train songs) but it is the two
reunions with Louis Armstrong (Careless Love Blues and I Ain't Gonna Play No
Second Fiddle) that are the obvious classics.
In 1925, Bessie Smith had great success with her show in
Chicago, she toured in the South, North and Midwest, and she made as much as
$2,000 a week, a tremendous amount of money at the time, especially for a black
performer. She was at the height
of her powers, both artistically and commercially. And although there would be some hard times later in life,
Bessie Smith would remain the unchallenged Empress of the Blues up until the
time of her death on 26 September 1937.
No one ever sang the blues with her power and passion.
Scott Yanow
- author of seven jazz books including Classic Jazz (which
covers the 1920s), Swing and Trumpet Kings