[Dixielandjazz] Topsy Chapman Interprets Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Victoria Spivey on Riverwalk Jazz This Week

Donald Mopsick dmopsick at gmail.com
Thu Jan 12 08:33:00 PST 2012


http://www.riverwalkjazz.org/2012/01/12/blues_queens_tent_shows/

This week on Riverwalk Jazz, actor Vernel Bagneris and singer Topsy
Chapman join The Jim Cullum Jazz Band in a tribute to Ma Rainey, her
Rabbit Foot Minstrels and blues shouters of the Deep South in the
1920s.

The program is distributed in the US by Public Radio International, on
Sirius/XM sattelite radio and can be streamed on-demand from the
Riverwalk Jazz website.

http://riverwalkjazz.org

Long before Mamie Smith had the first hit blues recording in 1921,
“blues shouters" in traveling tent shows stirred things up across the
South. Nothing could draw a crowd like the spectacle of Ma Rainey
moaning the blues on a hot summer night.

Following the harvests throughout the South, tent shows brought
vaudeville to black audiences along dusty back roads. Out of lumber
camps and river settlements, the working-class poor traveled by foot
or packed into train cars for the thrill of seeing live entertainment.

Under a canvas big top, beneath a southern moon, in the early decades
of the 20th century, blues shouters belted out songs like “He May Be
Your Man but He Comes to See Me Sometime." Blues Queens were the stars
of traveling troupes like the Georgia Smart Set, Tolliver's Circus and
Musical Extravaganza, and Ma Rainey's Rabbit Foot Minstrels. A typical
“tent show" included a hot rhythm band, chorus dancers, comedy
sketches, acrobats, animal acts and sometimes sideshows. The
headliners were “black pearls," Blues Queens covered in rhinestones
and bugle beads, who closed the show with a star turn, shouting the
blues. The biggest stars of them all were “the gold throat mamas"—Ma
Rainey and her protégé Bessie Smith.

The blues numbers Ma Rainey sang weren't only about lost love and
sexual innuendo. She sang blues about devastating floods, a blight on
the crops, being broke, or going to prison. As the blues migrated to
big cities in the North and became popular with mainstream audiences,
no one kept more closely to the themes of Ma Rainey's country blues
than Victoria Spivey. In 1929, Spivey had a hit with a chilling number
called “Dirty TB Blues."

Ma Rainey never achieved the mainstream success of younger blues
shouters like Alberta Hunter, Bessie Smith or Ida Cox. But Rainey was
immortalized in a piece published in 1932 by Harlem Renaissance poet
Sterling Brown, excerpted here:

“When Ma Rainey comes to town
Folks from anyplace, miles aroun'
>From Cape Giradeau to Poplar Bluff,
Flocks in to hear Ma do her stuff;
Comes flivverin' in, or ridin' mules,
Or packed in trains, picknickin' fools...
That's what it's like fo' miles on down,
To the New Orleans delta an' Mobile town,
When Ma hits anywheres aroun.'"

-- 
http://about.me/donmopsick



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