Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dec 31, 2023 · Dinah Washington — born Ruth Jones — might have been an Alabama native, but she was Chicago-raised. According to what James Haskins wrote in his biography, "Queen of the Blues: A Biography of Dinah Washington," her family's decision to head north not only shaped her childhood, but had a lasting impact on her.

  2. Dinah Washington August 29, 1924 - December 14, 1963 1991 Inductee . Shifting effortlessly from extraordinary work in gospel, blues, jazz, rhythm-and-blues and pop, Tuscaloosa native Dinah Washington became known one of the most versatile female vocalists in the history of American popular music.

  3. Jul 7, 2023 · Dinah Washington Singer and pianist Dinah Washington (1924-1963) was one of the most popular African American recording artists of the 1950s and was often called the “Queen of the Blues.”. Primarily a jazz vocalist, she performed in a variety of styles, including pop, rhythm and blues (R&B), and country.

  4. Though known later as “Dinah Washington,” she was born Ruth Lee Jones on August 29, 1924, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. As a child, she moved to Chicago and joined the gospel choir at St. Luke’s Baptist Church, playing piano for them while still in elementary school.

  5. Aug 10, 2017 · Dinah Washington's impeccable voice was sleek, bright and high-flying; but beyond her technical power, she made history with style. Hulton Archive/Getty Images. This essay is one in a...

  6. Jun 8, 2018 · Dinah Washington was born Ruth Lee Jones in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, on August 29, 1924. At age three Ruths parents Ollie Jones and Alice Williams took her to Chicago. By age 11 Jones performed as a gospel vocalist and often appeared with her mother (who served her first music instructor) at church recitals across the country.

  7. Dinah Washington. HALL OF FAME. ESSAY. By Michael Hill. Dinah Washington, as she herself would readily acknowledge, was called Queen of the Blues, During a show at the London Palladium, she told an audience that purportedly included Queen Elizabeth, “There is but one heaven, one hell, one queen, and your Elizabeth is an imposter.”

  1. People also search for