Rosa Henderson
Rosa Henderson | |
---|---|
Birth name | Rosa Deschamps |
Born |
Henderson, Kentucky, United States | November 24, 1896
Died |
April 6, 1968 71) Roosevelt Island, New York City, United States | (aged
Genres | Classic female blues, jazz |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Instruments | Vocals |
Years active | 1920s–1930s |
Labels | Paramount, Victor, Columbia, Vocalion, Ajax, Pathe & Perfect, Brunswick, Silvertone, Emerson, Banner, Oriole, Regal, Domino, Edison, Marathon |
Rosa Henderson (November 24, 1896 – April 6, 1968) was an American jazz and classic female blues singer and vaudeville entertainer.
Career
Born Rosa Deschamps in Henderson, Henderson County, Kentucky, she is remembered as one of the greats of the 1920s and 1930s classic blues era. Her career as an entertainer began in 1913 when she joined her uncle's circus troupe.[1]
She married Douglas "Slim" Henderson in 1918 and began travelling with his Mason-Henderson show. Her career as a musical comedian started during the early 1920s, after she moved to New York, where she performed on Broadway. She eventually also performed in London.[1]
Her nine-year recording career began in 1923. During that time she recorded upwards of one hundred songs, using numerous pseudonyms, such as Sally Ritz, Flora Dale, Sarah Johnson, Josephine Thomas, Gladys White and Mamie Harris.[1] She was accompanied by such bands as the Virginians, Fletcher Henderson's Jazz Five, Fletcher Henderson's Orchestra, Fletcher Henderson's Club Alabam Orchestra, the Choo Choo Jazzers, the Kansas City Five, the Three Jolly Miners, the Kansas City Four, the Three Hot Eskimos, and the Four Black Diamonds.
She sang the chorus on Fletcher Henderson's May 28, 1924, Vocalion recording of "Do That Thing", probably the earliest example of a woman singing with a big band.
Although there was a marked decline in the number of her recordings after 1926, she continued performing until 1932, when she took a job in a New York department store.[1] She continued to perform benefit concerts until the 1960s.
Henderson died in Roosevelt Island, New York.
She is no relation to Fletcher, Horace, Katherine, or Edmonia Henderson.[1]
See also
References
External links
- Rosa Henderson
- Rosa Henderson (1896 - 1968) - Find A Grave Memorial
- Biography for Rosa Henderson - WindowsMedia.com Media Guide
- Farewell Rosa Henderson By Derrick Stewart-Baxter (from Jazz Journal July 1968, p.16)