Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Ida Cox (February 26, 1888 or 1896 – November 10, 1967) sang in church choirs as a child in Georgia. She ran away from home in 1910 when she was a teenager and performed in minstriel and tent shows as a comedienne and singer.

  2. Ida Cox. Natural de Georgia, Ida Cox, (25 de febrero de 1896, Toccoa, Georgia, Estados Unidos – 10 de noviembre de 1967, Knoxville, Tennessee, Estados Unidos), también hizo el obligado aprendizaje en los circuitos de mainstrel y vodevil propios de las cantantes de blues del siglo XIX. Su voz era menos potente que las dos grandes del blues ...

  3. Ida Cox - Complete Recorded Works 1924-40 Vol 1-5 1995/2000 Personnel includes: Ida Cox, Jesse Crump, Roy Palmer, Dickie Wells, Shad Collins, Buddy Tate, Tiny Parham, Shad Collins, James P. Johnson, Jo Jones.

  4. 1 de sept. de 2011 · Ida Cox (February 25, 1896 - November 10, 1967)

    • 4 min
    • 19.6K
    • Traveler Into The Blue
  5. 25 de feb. de 2022 · En la efeméride de hoy, Jazz & Cash recuerda a una de las primeras voces del blues, Ida Cox. Ida Cox nació el 25 de febrero de 1896 en Georgia. De pequeña, comenzó cantando en el coro local de la iglesia metodista africana, hasta que hizo el obligado aprendizaje en los circuitos de mainstrel y vodevil propios de las cantantes de blues del ...

  6. Ida Cox, born February 25, 1896 and died November 10, 1967 in New York City. She was an African American singer, vaudeville performer and musician best known for her recordings and blues performances. Her nickname was “The Uncrowned Queen of the Blues”. Cox was born February 1896 in Toccoa in Habersham County in Georgia.

  7. Ida Cox launched her career by touring with her own tent show in the South. In 1923, she began recording for Paramount, becoming one of the most successful blues recording artists in America. Her "Rambling Blues"—made with her second husband, Jesse Crump, at the piano and Tommy Lanier playing the coronet—is an archetypal blues.