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Dinah Shore
Dinah Shore
American singer and actress
1
Margaret Whiting
Margaret Whiting
American recording artist; singer
2
Yuri
Yuri
Mexican recording artist; singer
3
Les Baxter
Les Baxter
American musician, singer, composer
4
Sarah Vaughan
Sarah Vaughan
American jazz singer
5
Ofra Haza
Ofra Haza
Israeli singer
6
Wanda Jackson
Wanda Jackson
American singer, songwriter, pianist and guitarist
7
Yma Sumac
Yma Sumac
Peruvian-American soprano (1922-2008)
8
Al Jolson
Al Jolson
American entertainer, actor, and singer (1886-1950)
9
Mickey Guyton
Mickey Guyton
American singer
10
Lisa Dalbello
Lisa Dalbello
Canadian songwriter
11
Nelson Riddle
Nelson Riddle
American arranger, composer, bandleader and orchestrator (1921-1985)
12
Barbra Streisand
Barbra Streisand
American singer, actress, and filmmaker
13
Rose Maddox
Rose Maddox
American musician
14
Maria Callas
Maria Callas
American-born Greek operatic soprano
15
Suzy Bogguss
Suzy Bogguss
American musician
16
Roberta Peters
Roberta Peters
American operatic soprano
17
Big Mama Thornton
Big Mama Thornton
American rhythm and blues singer and songwriter
18
Celia Cruz
Celia Cruz
Cuban singer (1925-2003)
19
Jo Stafford
Jo Stafford
American singer (1917-2008)
20
Regina Resnik
Regina Resnik
American opera singer
21
June Christy
June Christy
American singer
22
Ella Fitzgerald
Ella Fitzgerald
American jazz singer
23
Jo Ann Greer
Jo Ann Greer
American jazz singer
24
Esma Redžepova
Esma Redžepova
Macedonian-Romani vocalist, songwriter, and humanitarian (1943-2016)
25
Linda Ronstadt
Linda Ronstadt
American singer
26
Ilse DeLange
Ilse DeLange
Dutch country and pop singer
27
Teri DeSario
Teri DeSario
American singer
28
Valeria Lynch
Valeria Lynch
Argentine singer
29
Lila Downs
Lila Downs
Mexican American singer-songwriter
30
Jocelyn Brown
Jocelyn Brown
American musician
31
Evelyn Lear
Evelyn Lear
American operatic soprano
32
Eddie Cantor
Eddie Cantor
American actor, singer, dancer and comedian
33
Ashley Tisdale
Ashley Tisdale
American recording artist; actress, singer
34
Bonnie Raitt
Bonnie Raitt
blues singer-songwriter and slide guitar player from the United States
35
Ann Richards
Ann Richards
American singer
36
Angela Bofill
Angela Bofill
American R&B singer
37
Mel Tormé
Mel Tormé
American recording artist, singer, songwriter, actor, writer, music arranger (1925-1999)
38
Blanche Calloway
Blanche Calloway
American singer, bandleader and composer
39
Leila Mourad
Leila Mourad
Egyptian actor and singer
40
Keely Smith
Keely Smith
American singer (1928-2017)
41
Kreesha Turner
Kreesha Turner
Canadian singer
42
Kvitka Cisyk
Kvitka Cisyk
American opera singer of ukrainian descent
43
Melba Moore
Melba Moore
American singer, actress
44
Roza Eskenazi
Roza Eskenazi
Greek singer
45
Judy Rodman
Judy Rodman
American singer
Intro
American singer
Record Labels

Bas Sheva (July 25, 1925 – February 11, 1960), the stage name of Bernice Kanefsky, was a Jewish-American singer, prominent in the 1950s. Although she began singing Jewish traditional and cantorial music, her career branched out into popular music.

Bas Sheva was born Bernice Kanefsky, to the family of Cantor Joseph Kanefsky of the Crotona Park North section of the Bronx on July 25, 1925. She studied voice with the intent of honoring her family's wishes that she become a cantor. Her voice was extremely powerful and had extraordinary dexterity. However, instead of cantorial music, she decided to move into popular music, adopting the stage name "Bas Sheva", the Ashkenazi pronouciation of the Biblical "Bathsheba". Her career began in the Borscht Belt of New York's Catskill Mountains, performing for audiences of Jewish vacationers. Her recording career began around 1950 with a small number of obscure singles of standard hits, none of which sparked much commercial interest.

In 1953 Bas Sheva was engaged by bandleader Hal Mooney as the principal singer for the album "Soul of a People", a collection of traditional Jewish songs issued by Capitol Records. This disk sold well in the Jewish market, and Bas Sheva's performances of this familiar material contributed much to its success.

In 1954, Les Baxter, a composer and producer at Capitol Records, offered her the role of star vocalist on his suite "The Passions". Bas Sheva's performance on "The Passions" is startling even 50 years after it was recorded; she screams, wails, whimpers, howls, grunts, and even acts a little to the pulsating rhythms of Baxter's dark, gritty, and complex musical score. Even in an age where musical innovation was beginning to be encouraged, "The Passions" was far too innovative and edgy and the album was not a commercial success. Despite this showcase of the astounding range of her voice, Bas Sheva never recorded again.

Bas Sheva died on February 11, 1960, at the age of 34, as a result of a diabetic reaction suffered while entertaining on board a cruise ship off the coast of South Carolina.