August 15, 1958 William Lee Conley “Big Bill” Broonzy, blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist, died. Broonzy was born June 26, 1898 in Lake Dick, Arkansas but raised in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. He began playing music at an early age and at the age of ten made himself a fiddle from a cigar box and began [...]

August 15th in African American History – William Lee Conley “Big Bill” Broonzy
Tags: Army, Blues Hall of Fame, blues singer, Gannett Records Walk of Fame, guitarist, singer, songwriter, William Lee Conley “Big Bill” Broonzy, World War I
July 25th in African American History – Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton
Tags: Blues Hall of Fame, blues singer, Hot Harlem Revue, Muddy Waters Blues Band, R&B, singer, songwriter, Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton
July 25, 1984 Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton, R&B singer and songwriter, died. Thornton was born December 11, 1926 in Ariton, Alabama and began to sing at an early age. At the age of 14, she joined the Hot Harlem Revue and performed with them for 7 years. Thornton began her recording career in 1951 [...]

March 18th in African American History – Willie King
Tags: blues guitarist, blues singer, civil rights, Civil Rights Movement, composer, founder, Freedom Creek Blues Festival, Rural Members Association, singer, Willie King
March 18, 1943 Willie King, blues guitarist, composer, and singer, was born in Prairie Point, Mississippi. Prior to recording, he worked at many occupations. King later became active with the Civil Rights Movement which inspired him to write socially conscious blues songs. He described his music as struggling blues because of its focus on the [...]

January 6th in African American History – Louis Allen Rawls
Tags: blues singer, Grammy Award, Hollywood Walk of Fame, jazz singer, soul singer, United Negro College Fund
January 6, 2006 Louis Allen Rawls, soul, jazz, and blues singer, died. Rawls was born December 1, 1933 in Chicago, Illinois. He sang with Sam Cooke in a 1950s gospel group. He also sang background on Cooke’s recording of “Bring it on Home to Me” in 1962 and that same year released his first single [...]

November 24th in African American History – Joseph Vernon “Big Joe” Turner
Tags: Blues Hall of Fame, blues singer, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
November 24, 1985 Joseph Vernon “Big Joe” Turner, blues singer, died. Turner was born May 18, 1911 in Kansas City, Missouri. At the age of fourteen, he began working in Kansas City’s nightclub scene. Turner’s career stretched from the barrooms of Kansas City in the 1920s to the European music festivals of the 1980s.

November 14th in African American History - Cornelius E. Gunter
Tags: blues singer, rhythm, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Coasters
November 14, 1936 Cornelius E. Gunter, rhythm and blues singer, was born in Coffeyville, Kansas. He began recording in 1953 singing backup on Big Jay McNeely’s “Nervous Man Nervous.” In 1957, he sang the title song for the movie “The Green Eyed Blonde.” From 1958 to 1961, Gunter performed as a member of the Coasters [...]
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Other African American History Posts
- January 26th in African American History – Kenneth Spearman “Kenny” Clarke
- June 19th in African American History – Phylicia Ayers-Allen (Phylicia Rashad)
- March 15th in African American History – Harriet E. “Hattie” Adams Wilson
- May 3rd in African American History – Billy Higgins
- August 25th in African American History – Charles Alvin Sanders