"Ma" Rainey with her late 20's Wild Cat Jazz band with Thomas Dorsey at the piaon |
Last week Sister Rosetta Tharpe, who died back in 1973 was finally inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. It was way
overdue. Although there are many claimants
for the title of the inventor of
Rock and Roll—Big Bill Broonzy, Ike
Turner, Fat Domino, and late-to-the-party
White guys Bill Haley and the Comets to name a few— the Gospel singer and guitarist was the first to use a driving, blues inspired electric guitar as a lead
instrument. Others were using the
guitar as a chord and rhythm while piano, saxophones, even accordions dominated
the sound.
Sister Rosetta Tharpe, another pioneer reognied long after she was gone. |
Unlike the other claimants, Tharpe never developed much of a white
audience thus languished in obscurity in popular
culture. It wasn’t until more than
twenty years after her death that interviews
and memoirs of Rock guitar gods regularly cited as a pioneering influence that she slowly gained public attention. Rare clips posted
on YouTube became internet sensations and a PBS documentary spread her fame. A
steady but low key campaign over a number of years finally let to Tharpe’s inclusion in this year’s class at the Hall of Fame.
It is reminiscent of a pioneering
earlier journey by another Black Woman
present at creation of a unique
American musical form. “Ma” Rainey deserved her recognition as
almost the literal Mother of the Blues. Although she did win a narrow White
audience in the 1920s, most of her career that stretched from late 19th
Century tent shows to the Southern Chitlin
circuit of the 1930s was spent recording
for and performing to Black
audiences. It took a Pulitzer Prize winning play to put here
back on the cultural radar.
“Ma”
Rainey had been retired from recording and
touring since 1935 and had taken the
money she earned from decades in show business to operate two local theaters in her home town of Columbus, Georgia when she died suddenly of a heart attack on December 22, 1939.
She was believed to be about 53 years old. Her bold
and brassy style of delivering the blues
may have already gone out of style,
but she had helped lay the groundwork
for a new era of Black music.
Later in life Rainey would recall
that she was born in Columbus on April 26, 1886. Census
records, however, do not confirm
this and indicate that she may have been born in September 1882 in Alabama. Such confusion
over birth dates and even places of
origin were common in Black families at the time who were
often illiterate and lived lives
where events flowed more like a river
than a succession of compartmentalized
dates and years. And there were numerous reasons to fudge birth dates one way or the
other.
At any rate Gertrude Malissa Nix Pridgett, the
fistful of a names she was given, did grow up in Columbus and had at least two surviving brothers and a sister, Malissa,
whose personal records were often confounded
with Gerturde’s. She had some rudimentary education, enough to read, write, and cypher and grew up in the First
African Baptist Church where she first performed with the choir.
When she was about 12—assuming the 1886 birth date—she began
performing in Black minstrel shows.
Minstrel shows were a highly stylized form of entertainment,
and the most popular stage shows of
the last half of the 19th Century. The form was invented and developed by White
performers in black face, doing songs, dances, jokes, and sketches either imitative of Black music or invented
out of thin air.
By the late years of the Century the
form was as popular with Black audiences
as white and Black troupes started
touring. These tent shows—unlike White
troops—Blacks had no access to local
theaters or opera houses—then re-interpreted faux Black music for
their people, often absorbing elements
of real folk culture.
It was an odd and slow process. Young
Gertrude Pridgett was not the only performer learning the ropes in Black Minstrelsy. W. C.
Handy, who claimed to have “invented
the blues,” toured on the Black Minstrel
Circuit and rose to be the band leader
in a leading company. So did Jelly Roll Morton, who would stake his own claim to being a founder
of the blues.
Gertrude would recall that she first
heard the blues around 1902. She quickly
incorporated it into her Minstrel act.
In 1904 she married fellow
minstrel Will Rainey and the two launched their own act. They were successful enough that they were
able to start their own show, the Alabama
Fun Makers Company. Two years later
in 1906 they folded their show into Pat Chappelle’s more successful much
larger Rabbit’s Foot Company. They were billed as Rainey and Rainey, “Black Face Song
and Dance Comedians, Jubilee Singers,
and Cake Walkers”. Those
referred to traditional minstrel forms
and indicate that as yet the blues were only a minor part of their act.
These blury images are the only ones known of Rainey and her husband when their act was billed as Rainey and Rainey Assassins of the Blues. |
But it kept getting bigger. By 1910 Mrs. Rainey was being advertised independently of her husband
as “Mrs. Gertrude Rainey, our coon
shouter,” a strong indication that most of her material was now Blues. Management of the company changed hands in
1912 when Chappelle, a Black
showman, died. White entrepreneur F. S. Wolcott took over
the show. He had the money to expand
it—often sending out two companies
of more than 50 performers each including a 10 piece band under circus-like big tops.
By 1914 Rainey and Rainey, Assassinators
of the Blues were headlining the
show. That year in New Orleans Rainey first met Joe
“King” Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet and Pops Foster who were incorporating blues forms into the creole sounds of traditional street brass bands and inventing jazz. In turn their experimentations influenced the Raineys.
About the same time Rainey
encountered a young, aspiring blues shouter, Bessie Smith. Legend has it that Rainey kidnaped the rising star and held her captive to sing in the Rabbit’s
Foot Company. Although it is true that
Rainey mentored the younger singer
during her two year stay with the show, there is no indication that Smith was held against her will.
The blues were beginning to catch on around the World War I era when some White artists were adapting it for vaudeville
acts and making some recordings. It wasn’t until 1920, however, that sides were issued by veteran Black vaudevillian Mamie Smith
and scored a million copy seller
with Crazy
Blues. It was considered the first commercial vocal recording of the
blues by a Black artist. That got the
attention of other labels and there
was a scramble to sign similar artists.
In 1923 Rainey’s former protégée Bessie Smith began her
recording career for Columbia Records.
In December 1923, two months after
Bessie Smith’s first release, Rainey laid down her first tracks for J. Mayo Williams
in Chicago for Paramount Records. Among the
eight songs recorded in that first session were Bad Luck Blues, Bo-Weevil
Blues, and Moonshine Blues each were hits, released under the name “Ma” Rainey, a bow to her senior
status among female blues shouters.
The label snatched her up to a long
term contract and began to market her heavily as the Mother of the Blues, the Songbird
of the South, Gold-Neck Woman of the
Blues and the Paramount
Wildcat. Over the next five years
the label would release over 100 Ma Rainey records and discovered that not only
did she sell in the expected race
records markets of the South, but in some northern cites to white audiences.
Ma Rainey's Paramount recordings were raw, frank, down, and dirty just the way her audience like it. |
In some ways despite her success with Paramount, it was an unfortunate match for her.
Unlike competitors in race
records including Okeh, Blue Bird, and RCA Victor
subsidiaries, the quality of
Paramount’s recordings were inferior and
muddied due to their production
process and an inferior shellac used
on the discs. So although scores of
Rainey’s performances were recorded, they never adequately captured her full power.
In 1924 Rainey made some records
with her old friend Louis Armstrong who in those days frequently teamed up with other artists in a variety of genres. Together they made Jelly Bean Blues, Countin’
the Blues and See See Rider, the latter a seminal song in blues history that has
been enshrined in the Grammy Hall of
Fame, and was included by the National
Recording Preservation Board in the Library
of Congress National Recording Registry.
The song’s origins date back to the
first decade of the 20th Century and
are about a semi-legendary bluesman
named See See Rider, a former slave who
sawed a homemade, single string fiddle.
After the Rainey/Armstrong version more than 100 recordings have
been made, several classics of urban blues, rhythm and blues, and rock
and roll later often under the title C.C. Rider.
Another highly influential song was Ma
Rainey’s Black Bottom, her version of the ‘20’s dance craze based on earlier Rounder dances—referring to pimps
and whores. Rainey’s version virtually crackled with sexual tension and innuendo compared to the sanitized version staged by George White on Broadway in his Scandals.
In 1982 playwright August
Wilson built his play, also named Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom around a fictionalized version of the recording
session.
With the success of her records,
Rainey was now a star in her own right. She launched her own touring company under
the auspices of the Theater Owners
Booking Association (TOBA). She covered a circuit in the South and
Midwestern United States. It was an illustrious company. Her first band leader was pianist Thomas Dorsey and his band was known as the Wild Cat Jazz Band. Their first tour began in Chicago where they played before integrated audiences as they would in northern sections of the tour. In the South, they played Black theaters, and
occasionally in tents like in the old days.
Dorsey left the company temporarily
in 1926 due to ill health and was
replaced on piano by Lillian Hardaway
Henderson whose husband was the combo’s
cornetist, Fletcher Henderson. Fletcher took over Dorsey’s duties as band
leader, his first outing in that role.
Dorsey would re-unite with Rainey in 1928 for a series of Paramount
recordings before they went their separate ways. Dorsey was billed as Georgia Tom Dorsey and Tampa Red played guitar on the sessions.
Dorsey went on to virtually invent modern Black Gospel
music as a composer, arranger,
conductor, impresario, and music
publisher.
By 1928 Rainey was successful enough
to purchase her own touring coach with
her name emblazoned on the side, a
symbol of a hugely successful touring
act.
Rainey flaunted convention sexual morality and identity in Prove It on Me. |
By this time Rainey sometimes
appeared in a suit and tie rather than a dress sparking rumors of lesbianism
which she addressed in songs like Prove It on Me in which she
sang:
They said I do it, ain’t nobody caught me.
Sure got to prove it on me.
Went out last night with a crowd of my friends.
They must’ve been women,
‘cause I don’t like no men
… It’s true I wear a collar and a tie
... Talk to the gals just like any old man.
Modern feminist and gay cultural
historians call the song an early
preview of the anthems of the
‘70’s.
Although Rainey’s records continued
to sell well, Paramount did not renew
her contract when it expired.
Whether potential scandal
about her sexuality played a part, or if the company was anticipating changes in the public’s taste has long been debated.
For her part Rainey never pursued a new recording contract,
preferring to concentrate on her tours, which she continued until 1935 when her
increasing weight made the strain too
much. Her raw barrel house style had gone out of style replaced by a big band vocalist style on one hand
represented by younger singers like Ella
Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday and
the primitive, guitar based Delta blues of Memphis Minnie and Robert
Johnson on the other. That’s when
she headed home to Columbus.
August Wilson's 1983 Play Ma Rainey's Black Bottom re-introduced her to popular culture. |
Rainey was nearly forgotten by all but hard
core blues fans until Wilson’s play revived interest in her career. The next year, 1983, she was elected to the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame. In 1990 she was inducted as a roots influence into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She was honored by a Postal Service commemorative stamp in 1994.
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