Rainey, Ma

Contemporary Musicians | 1998 | Copyright

Ma Rainey

Singer

For the Record

Discovered by Paramount Records

Madam Rainey, A Reigning Blues Queen

The Wild Cats Jazz Band

Retired from the Music Business

Selected discography

Sources

The first popular stage performer to incorporate au thentic blues in her song repertoire, Ma Gertrude Rainey emerged, during the first two decades of the twentieth century. Known as the Mother of the Blues Rainey enjoyed mass popularity during the women blues singer craze of the 1920s. Described by African American poet Sterling Brown in Black Culture and Black Consciousness, as a person of the folk, Rainey recorded in various musical settings, and made a number of sides which exhibited the influence of authentic rural blues.

Ma Rainey was born Gertrude Pridgett in Columbus Georgiaon April 26, 1886 to minstrel troupersThomas Pridgett Sr. and Ella AllenPridgett. She worked at the Springer Opera House in 1900, performing as a singer and dancer in the local talent show, A Bunch of Blackberries. On February 2, 1904, Pridgett married comedy songster William Pa Rainey. Billed as Ma and Pa Rainey the couple toured Southern tent shows and cabarets. Though she did not hear blues in Columbus, Raineys extensive travels had, by 1905, brought her into contact with authentic country blues, which she worked into her song repertoire. Her ability to capture the mood and essence of black rural southern life, noted Daphane Harrison in Black Pearls: Blues Queens of the 1920s, quickly endeared her to throngs of followers throughout the South.

While performing with The Moses Stokes troupe in 1912, the Raineys were introduced to the shows newly recruited dancer, Bessie Smith. Eight years Smiths senior, Rainey quickly befriended the young performer. Despite earlier historical accounts crediting Rainey as Smiths vocal coach, it has been generally agreed by modern scholars that Rainey played less of a role in the shaping of Smiths singing style. Ma Rainey probably did pass some of her singing experience on to Bessie, explained Chris Albertson in the liner notes to Giants Of Jazz, Bessie Smith, but the instruction must have been rudimentary. Though they shared an extraordinary command of the idiom, the two women delivered their messages in styles and voices that were dissimilar and manifestly personal.

Around, 1915 the Raineys toured with Fat Chappelles Rabbit Foot Minstrels. Afterward, they were billed as the Assassinators of the Blues with Tollivers Circus and Musical Extravaganza. Separated from her husband in 1916, Rainey subsequently toured with her own band, Madam Gertrude Ma Rainey and Her Georgia Smart Sets, featuring a chorus line and a five piece band. She also performed with other such entertainment organizations as Florida Cotton Blossoms Show, and Donald McGregors Carnival Show.

For the Record

Born: Gertrude Pridgett, April 26, 1886, in Columbus, Georgia; died December 22, 1939 in rome, Georgia; daughter of Thomas Priggett and Ella Allen (minstrel troupers); married William Pa Rainey (comedy performer) February 2, 1904.

Performed in local stage show 1900; toured South with husband William Pa Rainey 1904; member of Fat Chappelles Rabbit Foot Minstrels; from the 1910s to the 1920s performed at various venues and concert halls in the south and midwest with shows that included Tollivers Circus and Silas Green from New Orleans minstrel show; made recording debut for Paramount label in 1923; toured with own group Georgia Wild Cats Jazz Band 1924-1926; recorded with various sideman for Paramount until 1928; worked with revue show, Bandanna Babies, 1930; worked with Al Gaines Carnival Show 1933-1935. retired from music in 1935 and became theater owner.

Discovered by Paramount Records

Through the intercession of Mayo Ink Williams, Rainey first recorded for the Paramount label in 1923 (three years following the first blues side recorded by Mamie Smith). Already a popular singer in the Southern theater circuit, Rainey entered the recording industry as an experienced and stylistically mature talent. Her first session, cut with Austin and Her Blue Serenaders, featured the traditional number Bo-Weevil Blues. Fellow blues singer, Victoria Spivey, later said of the recording, as quoted in The Devils Music, Aint nobody in the world been able to holler Hey Boweevil like her. Not like Ma. Nobody. 1923 also saw the release of Raineys side Moonshine Blues, with Lovie Austin, and Yonder Comes the Blues with Louis Armstrong. That same year, Rainey recorded See See Rider, a number that, as Arnold Shaw observed in Black Popular Music in America, emerged as one of the famous and recorded of all blues songs. [Raineys] was the first recording of that song, giving her a hold on the copyright, and one of the best of the more than 100 versions.

In August 1924 Raineyalong with the twelve string guitar of Miles Pruitt (and unknown second guitar accompanist)recorded the eight bar blues number Shave Em Dry. In the liner notes to The Blues, folklorist W.K. McNeil observed that the number is typical of Raineys output, a driving, unornamated vocal propelled along by an accompanist who plays the number straight. Her artistry brings life to what in lesser hands would be a dull, elementary piece.

Madam Rainey, A Reigning Blues Queen

Unlike many other blues musicians, Rainey earned a reputation as a professional on stage and in business. According to Mayo Williams, as quoted in the liner notes to Ma Raineys Black Bottom, Ma Rainey was a shrewd business woman. We never tried to put any swindles on her. During Raineys five-year recording career at Paramount she cut nearly ninety sides, most of which dealt with the subjects of love and sexualitybawdy themes that often earned her the billing of Madam Rainey. As William Barlow explained, in Looking Up at Down, her songs were also diverse, yet deeply rooted in day-today experiences of black people from the South. Ma Raineys blues were simple, straightforward stories about heart break, promiscuity, drinking binges, the odyssey of travel, the workplace and the prison road gang, magic and superstitionin short, the southern landscapeof African Americans in the Post-Reconstruction era.

The Wild Cats Jazz Band

With the success of her early recordings, Rainey took part in a Paramount promotional tour which featured a newly assembled back-up band. In 1924 pianist and arranger Thomas A. Dorsey (one of later founders of gospel music) recruited members for Raineys touring band, The Wild Cats Jazz Band. Serving as both director and manager, Dorsey assembled able musicians who could read arrangements as well play in a down home blues style. Raineys tour debut at Chicagos Grand Theater on State Street marked the first appearance of a down home blues artist atthe famous southside venue. Draped in long gowns and covered in diamonds and a necklace of gold pieces, Rainey had a powerful command over her audiences. She often opened her stage show singing Moonshine Blues inside the cabinet of an over-sized victrola, from which she emerged to a greet a near-frantic audience. As Dorsey recalled, in The Rise of Gospel Blues, When she started singing, the gold in her teeth would sparkle. She was in the spotlight. She possessed listeners; they swayed, they rocked, they moaned and groaned, as they felt the blues with her.

Until 1926, Rainey performed with her Wild Jazz Cats on theTheater Owners Booking Association circuit (TOBA). That year, after Dorsey left the band, she recorded with various musicians on the Paramount labeloften under the name of Ma Rainey and her Georgia Jazz Band which, on various occasions, included musicians such as pianists Fletcher Henderson, Claude Hopkins, and Willie the Lion Smith, reed players Don Redman, Buster Bailey and Coleman Hawkins, and trumpeters Louis Armstrong and Tommy Ladnier. In 1927 Rainey cut sides such as Black Cat, Hoot Owl Blues with the Tub Jug Washboard Band. During her last sessions, held in 1928, she sang in the company of her former pianist Thomas Georgia Tom Dorsey and guitarist Hudson Tampa Red Whittaker, producing such numbers as Black Eye Blues, Runaway Blues and Sleep Talking Blues. As Bruce Cook noted in Listen to the Blues, these numbers are as good as anything she ever recorded. Her voice is rich and full; she really sounds like the Mother of the Blues.

Retired from the Music Business

Though the TOBA and vaudeville circuits had gone into decline by the early 1930s, Rainey still performed, often resorting to playing tent shows. Following the death of her mother and sister, Rainey retired from the music business in 1935 and settled in Columbus. For the next several years, she devoted her time as the owner of two entertainment venuesthe Lyric Theater and the Air-domeas well as activities in the Friendship Baptist Church. Rainey died in Rome, Georgiasome sources cite Columbuson December 22, 1939.

A great contributor to Americas rich blues tradition, Raineys music has served as inspiration for African American poets such as Langston Hughes and Sterling Brown, the latter of whom paid tribute to the majestic singer in the poem Ma Rainey, which appeared in his 1932 collection Southern Road. More recently, Alice Walker looked to Ma Raineys music as a cultural model of African American womanhood when she wrote the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Color Purple. In Black Pearls, Daphane Harrison praised Rainey as the first great blues stage singer: The good-humored, rollicking Rainey loved life, loved love, and most of all loved her people. Her voice bursts forth with a hearty declaration of courage and determinationa reaffirmation of black life.

Selected discography

Gertrude Ma RaineyCompleteMasterTakes Vol. 1:1923-24, King Jazz.

Gertrude Ma RaineyComplete Master Takes Vol. 2: 1924-1926, King Jazz.

Gertrude Ma RaineyComplete Master Takes Vol. 3: 1926-1927, King Jazz.

Gertrude Ma RaineyComplete Master Takes Vol. 4: 1927-1928, King Jazz.

The Immortal Ma Rainey, Roman Record Company.

Ma Raineys Black Bottom, Yazoo, 1991.

Sources

Barlow, William, Looking Up at Down: The Emergence of Blues Culture, Temple University Press, pp. 155-164.

Cook, Bruce, Listen to the Blues, Da Capo, p. 189.

Harris, Michael W., The Rise of Gospel Blues: The Music of Thomas Dorsey in the Urban Church, p.86-95..

Harrison, Daphane Duval. Black Pearls: Blues Queens of the 1920s. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, p. 34-41.

Levine, Lawrence W., Black Culture and Black Consciousness: Afro-American Thought From Slavery to Freedom, Oxford University Press, p. 232.

Oakley, Giles, The Devils Music: A History of the Blues, Tappinger.

Shaw, Arnold, Black Popular Music in America, Schirmer Books, p. 100-101.

Additional information for this profile was also obtained from the liner notes to Jazz Giants, Bessie Smith, Time Life (1982), written by Chris Albertson, Ma Raineys Black Bottom, Yazoo(1992), written by Steve Calt.

John Cohassey

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