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Lucille Hegamin
Lucille Hegamin
American singer and entertainer
1
Esther Bigeou
Esther Bigeou
American vaudeville and blues singer
2
Viola McCoy
Viola McCoy
American blues singer
3
Josie Miles
Josie Miles
American singer
4
Ozie Ware
Ozie Ware
A singer from the USA
5
Maggie Jones
Maggie Jones
American blues singer and pianist
6
Edmonia Henderson
Edmonia Henderson
African American classic female blues singer
7
Katie Crippen
Katie Crippen
African American entertainer and singer
8
Sara Martin
Sara Martin
American blues singer
9
Edith Wilson
Edith Wilson
American blues singer and vaudeville performer (1896-1981)
10
Virginia Liston
Virginia Liston
American classic female blues and jazz singer
11
Rosa Henderson
Rosa Henderson
American vaudeville, jazz and blues singer
12
Ma Rainey
Ma Rainey
African-American blues singer
13
Lavinia Turner
Lavinia Turner
musical artist
14
Mattie Hite
Mattie Hite
African-American blues singer
15
Trixie Smith
Trixie Smith
African American blues singer, recording artist, vaudeville entertainer, and actress (1895-1943)
16
Martha Copeland
Martha Copeland
American classic female blues singer
17
Marion Harris
Marion Harris
American musician (1896-1944)
18
Ida Cox
Ida Cox
African American singer and vaudeville performer
19
Ivy Smith
Ivy Smith
American singer
20
Hannah Sylvester
Hannah Sylvester
African American blues singer
21
Mary Stafford
Mary Stafford
American cabaret singer
22
Lizzie Miles
Lizzie Miles
African American blues singer
23
Cleo Gibson
Cleo Gibson
American blues singer
24
Katherine Henderson
Katherine Henderson
American classic female blues singer
25
Mamie Smith
Mamie Smith
American vaudeville singer and actress (1883-1946)
26
Lena Wilson
Lena Wilson
American blues singer (1898-1939)
27
Jelly Roll Morton
Jelly Roll Morton
American ragtime and jazz pianist, bandleader and composer
28
Coot Grant
Coot Grant
American classic female blues and vaudeville singer and songwriter
29
Clara Smith
Clara Smith
American classic female blues singer
30
L. Wolfe Gilbert
L. Wolfe Gilbert
Composer, lyricist, author, publisher
31
Original Dixieland Jass Band
Original Dixieland Jass Band
American jazz band
32
Bessie Brown
Bessie Brown
American classic female blues, jazz, and cabaret singer
33
Lillian Goodner
Lillian Goodner
African American blues singer
34
Memphis Minnie
Memphis Minnie
American blues guitarist, singer, and songwriter
35
Helen Gross
Helen Gross
American classic female blues singer
36
Harold Arlen
Harold Arlen
American composer of popular music (1905-1986)
37
Alice Leslie Carter
Alice Leslie Carter
United States American classic female blues singer
38
Irene Scruggs
Irene Scruggs
American Piedmont blues and country blues singer
39
Lucille Bogan
Lucille Bogan
American blues singer
40
Thomas A. Dorsey
Thomas A. Dorsey
American musician, composer, and Christian evangelist influential in the development of early blues and 20th-century gospel music
41
Tracy Nelson
Tracy Nelson
American singer
42
Lonnie Johnson
Lonnie Johnson
musician from the USA
43
Bonnie Bramlett
Bonnie Bramlett
American singer and occasional actress
44
Lil Johnson
Lil Johnson
African American blues singer
45
Fiddlin' Doc Roberts
Fiddlin' Doc Roberts
American Kentucky-style old-time fiddler
46
Alberta Hunter
Alberta Hunter
American blues singer, songwriter, and nurse
47
Ethel Waters
Ethel Waters
American blues, jazz and gospel vocalist and actress
48
Ford Dabney
Ford Dabney
American conductor and songwriter
49
Joseph E. Howard
Joseph E. Howard
American composer
Daisy Martin
African American actress and blues singer

Daisy Martin

Intro
African American actress and blues singer
Record Labels
Music

Daisy Martin (fl. c. 1914 – c. 1925) was an American actress and blues singer in the classic female blues style.

She toured the eastern and midwestern United States in black vaudeville in the 1910s and early 1920s. In 1914 she appeared in the revue My Friend from Kentucky at the National Theater in Chicago, Illinois. In 1917 she performed in the musical comedy My People, which also featured Sam Gray and Julia Moody. In 1920 she appeared at the Strand Theatre in Chicago in the revue Hello 1919.

Martin was one of the first black women to sing blues on recordings when she recorded for the Gennett and Okeh labels in April 1921. On her first sides, "Royal Garden Blues" and "Spread Yo' Stuff", she was accompanied by the Five Jazz Bell Hops, whose identities are unknown. Her final session was in July 1923. In total she recorded 16 sides.

On January 20, 1922, she competed in a blues-singing contest with Lucille Hegamin, Alice Leslie Carter and Trixie Smith (the eventual winner) at the Manhattan Casino in New York City. For this contest, which was a highlight of the Fifteenth Infantry's First Band Concert and Dance, Noble Sissle was master of ceremonies, and Fiorello la Guardia served as one of the judges.

Blues writer Steve Tracy wrote in 1997 that "Martin is really not one of the better vaudeville blues singers, possessed as she is of a soprano voice with a very stilted vibrato effect". Few of the players who accompanied her on record have been identified, but the band at one of her sessions included Gus Aiken, Jake Frazier, and Garvin Bushell.

Martin's complete recordings were reissued in CD format by Document Records in 1997 on Daisy Martin & Ozie McPherson: Complete Recorded Works 1921–1926 In Chronological Order (DODC-5522).