March 11, 1986 Sonny Terry, blues musician, died. Terry was born Saunders Terrell on October 24, 1911 in Greensboro, North Carolina.
March 11th in African American History – Sonny Terry
Tags: blues, Blues Hall of Fame
January 23rd in African American History – Thomas Andrew Dorsey
January 23, 1993 Thomas Andrew Dorsey, the father of gospel music, died. Dorsey was born July 1, 1899 in Villa Rica, Georgia. He learned to play blues piano as a young man. In the 1920s, Dorsey was known for playing the blues and is credited with composing more than 400 blues and jazz songs, including […]
September 26th in African American History – Bessie Smith
Tags: blues, Broadway, Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame, Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, Library of Congress, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, singer
September 26, 1937 Bessie Smith, blues singer, died. Smith was born on April 15, 1894 in Chattanooga, Tennessee. In 1912, she was hired as a dancer with the Moses Stokes troupe which included Ma Rainey. By the early 1920s, Smith had starred with Sidney Bechet in “How Come?,” a musical that made its way to […]
August 12th in African American History – Luther Allison
Tags: blues, Blues Hall of Fame, Motown Records
August 12, 1997 Luther Allison, blues guitarist, died. Allison was born August 17, 1939 in Widener, Arkansas but raised in Chicago, Illinois. Allison taught himself to play the guitar. During the 1950s and early 1960s, he worked the club circuit. He released his debut album, “Love Me Mama”, in 1968. In 1972, Allison was signed […]
June 10th in African American History – Ray Charles
Tags: blues, gospel music, Grammy Award, Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, Hollywood Walk of Fame, Jazz Hall of Fame, Kennedy Center Honors, National Medal of Arts, R&B, Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
June 10, 2004 Ray Charles, pioneering R&B, gospel, blues and country musician, died. Born Ray Charles Robinson on September 23, 1930 in Albany, Georgia, Charles began to lose his sight at the age of five and was completely blind by the age of seven. In 1943, he began to perform around Tallahassee and Jacksonville, Florida. […]
June 3rd in African American History – Koko Taylor
Tags: blues, Blues Hall of Fame, Grammy Award, National Endowment for the Arts, singer
June 3, 2009 Koko Taylor, blues singer popularly known as the “Queen of the Blues,” died. Born Cora Walton on September 28, 1928 in Shelby County, Tennessee, Taylor moved to Chicago in 1952. During the late 1950s, she began singing in Chicago blues clubs. In 1966, Taylor recorded “Wang Dang Doodle” which became a hit […]
May 31st in African American History – Johnnie Harrison Taylor
Tags: blues, gospel music, Pioneer Award
May 31, 2000 Johnnie Harrison Taylor, gospel, blues and soul singer, died. Taylor was born May 5, 1937 in Crawfordsville, Arkansas. In 1957, he was hired to replace Sam Cooke in the gospel group the Soul Stirrers and in 1962 he recorded his first solo, “Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day.” In 1966, Taylor moved […]
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Other African American History Posts
- January 5th in African American History – Charles Mingus, Jr.
- September 28th in African American History – Constance Baker Motley
- October 13th in African American History – Jerry Lee Rice
- October 27th in African American History – Roy Rudolph DeCarava
- October 3rd in African American History – Felrath Hines
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