Estelle Yancey

Estelle Yancey
Birth name Estelle Harris
Also known as Mama Estella Yancey
Born (1896-01-01)January 1, 1896
Cairo, Illinois, United States
Died April 19, 1986(1986-04-19) (aged 90)
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Genres Blues, boogie-woogie
Occupation(s) Singer
Years active 1950s1980s
Labels Atlantic
Associated acts Jimmy Yancey

Estelle "Mama" Yancey (January 1, 1896 April 19, 1986) was an American blues singer. She was nominated four times for Blues Music Awards as Traditional Blues Female Artist.[1]

Life and career

Yancey was born Estella Harris in Cairo, Illinois, and grew up in Chicago, where she sang in church choirs and learned to play the guitar.[2] In 1925, when she was 29, she married Jimmy Yancey,[3] who had traveled in the United States and Europe as a vaudeville dancer. She often sang with him at informal gatherings and house parties in the 1940s and performed with him at Carnegie Hall in 1948. Jimmy Yancey was a boogie-woogie and blues piano player, and Estelle recorded several times with him. In 1943, the Yanceys recorded for Session Records. They recorded the album Pure Blues for Atlantic Records in 1951, just a few months before Jimmy Yancey's death that same year.[4]

Estelle continued to perform and record. In her later years, she often performed with Chicago pianist Erwin Helfer, especially at the University of Chicago Folk Festival. One of the best examples of her soulful, expressive vocals is the album Jimmy and Mama Yancey: Chicago Piano, vol. 1 (Atlantic Records, 1952), which includes "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor," "Four o'Clock Blues," "Monkey Woman Blues," "Santa Fe Blues," and "How Long Blues."

Yancey's recordings with other pianists include Mama Yancey, Singer, Don Ewell, Pianist (Windin' Ball Recordings, 1952); Chicago—The Living Legends: South Side Blues" (Riverside, 1961); Mama Yancey Sings, Art Hodes Plays Blues" (Verve Records, 1965); Maybe I'll Cry, with Erwin Helfer (Red Beans, 1983) recorded when she was 86 and 87 years old; and "The Blues of Mama Yancey: Axel Zwingenberger and the Friends of Boogie Woogie, vol. 4 (Vagabond Records, recorded in 1982 and 1983 and released in 1988.

Yancey died on April 19, 1986, in Chicago.

Selective discography

Year Title Genre Label
1943 "How Long Blues," "Pallet on the Floor," and "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor" Blues Session
1951 Jimmy and Mama Yancey: Chicago Piano, vol. 1 (originally released asMa and Jimmy Yancey Specia) Blues Atlantic
1983 Maybe I'll Cry Blues Red Beans

References

  1. The Blues Foundation Blues Music Awards
  2. Harris, Sheldon (1994). Blues Who's Who (rev. ed.). New York: Da Capo Press. p. 591. ISBN 0-306-80155-8.
  3. Bowers, Jane (2000). "Writing the Biography of a Black Woman Blues Singer". In Moisala, Pirkko; Diamond, Beverley. Music and Gender. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 145.
  4. Santelli, Robert (2001). The Big Book of Blues: A Biographical Encyclopedia. p. 532. ISBN 0-14-015939-8.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.