
Bessie
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Narrated by:
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Robertson Dean
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By:
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Chris Albertson
About this listen
Bessie Smith, the great singer known as the "Empress of the Blues", is considered by many to be the greatest blues singer of all time. She was also a successful vaudeville entertainer who became the highest-paid African American performer of the Roaring '20s. Chris Albertson's revised and expanded edition of the biography of this extraordinary artist debunks many of the myths that have circulated since her untimely death in 1937. Albertson writes with insight and candor about the singer's personal life and her career, supplementing his historical research with dozens of interviews with her relatives, friends, and associates, including Ruby Walker Smith, a niece by marriage who toured with Bessie for over a decade.
©2003 Chris Albertson (P)2014 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
What listeners say about Bessie
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- tru britty
- 07-07-15
First-rate bio of a first-rate blues legend
Wow. Chris Albertson's biography of blues legend Bessie Smith is one of those books I love because it has a good story, a great character and an author who cares deeply for his subject.
In 1947, author Chris Albertson was a boy living in Copenhagen when he first heard Bessie on the radio. He was hooked. Years later, he moved to the States and spent two years trying to convince Columbia, which owned the rights to her music, to put out an anthology.
Albertson's biography first appeared in 1972. This audio version is the revision, which includes new information, edits and a compelling afterword.
Following an author introduction, the book slams right into the tragic end of a beautiful, bold and bumpy life. Albertson takes us to 1937 and a train steaming into a Philadelphia station. Bessie is carried off in a coffin. On September 26, the car driven by her lover Richard Morgan had collided with a truck. Bessie's arm, which was probably hanging outside the window, had been severed at the elbow. That and other injuries contributed to her death the next morning.
Bessie's estranged husband, Jack Dee, made sure to meet the train, and to weep loudly for the press.
It's a good thing Albertson began his book in the 1970s. He was able to conduct interviews with many people who'd known Bessie, including Jack Dee and his niece Ruby, who'd toured with Bessie and knew her about as well as anyone.
The story chronicles Bessie's early life in Tennessee. Her parents died young. So she was brought up by an older sister who's meanness probably helped Bessie make up her mind to get out of there. She came into the orbit of Ma Rainey, a mentor to the aspiring singer.
Several big-name blues and jazz legends pass in and out of Bessie's story. She recorded "St. Louis Blues" with Louis Armstrong. She also recorded for John Hammond, the Columbia producer famous for "discovering" Billie Holiday, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen and for putting together the From Spirituals to Swing concerts at Carnegie Hall in 1938.
Albertson was little impressed by Hammond, whom he also interviewed. He details a uncomfortable scene between Hammond and Bessie's niece Ruby in the 1970s. Hammond gives Ruby a ten spot and says, "I'll never see that again." If Hammond was a great promoter of black artists, Albertson also sees him as a Great White Father. (Audible has a biography of John Hammond, if you're interested in getting another perspective.)
What the author does best is bring Bessie Smith to life. She pops off the page with a loud voice, a huge heart and a lot of troubles. Man troubles, woman troubles--she liked both--not to mention troubles with music biz scoundrels.
There's one incredible scene in which Bessie and Jack Dee confront a guy who's refused to pay up. Maybe he was a concert promoter. Can't remember. Well, Bessie and Jack solve the problem. They beat him till he hits the floor and then beat him some more. Bessie got her money.
The singer was no victim, though racism, fraudulent businessmen and the Depression shoved her around. She liked her moonshine. She liked her good times. But she loved music, and Bessie Smith sang the blues to break your heart and breathe life into a too often cruel world.
I wasn't sure I wanted a white guy reading Bessie's story. But narrator Robertson Dean overcame my reservations. He seemed to enjoy pulling off Bessie's saucy putdowns. The woman could burn on and off the stage.
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- Peter Henderson III
- 07-10-15
Imperfect but worthwhile.
With little historical material to draw on the author relied heavily on second and third hand information. His writing was also heavily biased with his own opinions which I found often offputting. That said I would say it's still a worthwhile audiobook for people with an interest in Bessie Smith.
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- Malik Rowe
- 09-17-21
slow start
had a slow start to me where I stopped reading it but after picking it back up .it picked up steam
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- Gayle
- 07-07-15
Keeping it real for Bessie
Good story, even though it reads as a school text book.
This is perfect for research into early American music, Blues, Jazz, and female poplar singers, African American and otherwise. Bessie gives you a good understanding about how the music business and race relations interacted during the 20s and 30s. I highly recommend this book as a reality check for myths and legends and their failure to deliver a better story than the truth.
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- Danielle
- 10-19-15
Great read!. I saw the HBO mini series..and it was
awesome """""""""""""""""""""@@@@@@it was an awesome book and much richer than the HBO doc. great read.
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- D. Blackwell
- 06-13-21
The Quintessential Empress of the Blues Biography
This was an amazing read by Mr. Albertson. I am aware that he compiled more sources on the life and times of Bessie Smith than any other attempted biographer. Though Albertson's personal feelings on the artist gave slight direction to his portrayal of her, he attempted to make the events as objective as possible. It has always been a hard task to accurately document the life and legacy of Blacks in the earlier eras of the United States for many reasons including conflicting interests during their lives and a lack of written first-hand material from those same individuals after they have died. Many of these individuals were either illiterate (many were before the mid 1950s), or there was little that could be said for fear of retaliation. Albertson uses similar phenomena within the recording industry's powerful workings to illustrate their complete control over their artists' portrayal and expression. The fact that Albertson's work is not complete self-written works from the Empress herself, enough was known of her from several sources who worked and lived with her to bring rather opaque events into focus. Every biography can be scrutinized for relying on certain sources over others but that does not mean the story should not be told. Albertson merely uses Ruby Walker and Alberta Hunter as a timeline to place Bessie at a certain place at a certain time, he then relies on material and written review of the event to structure a more vivid picture of what patrons and friends/family would have known during the time the events actually happened. I have deduced that if Queen Victoria, one of the most prolific diarists of the 19th Century, can have conflicting or fabricating material (due to personal bias), other great biographies should be excused for at least offering people like Bessie Smith, who's voice defined so much of her life, a voice about the humanity of her essence in death.
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