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In What a Difference a Day Makes: Women Who Conquered 1950s Music,
Steve Bergsman highlights the Black female artists of the 1950s, a
time that predated the chart-topping girl groups of the early
1960s. Many of the singers of this era became wildly famous and
respected, and even made it into the Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of
Fame. However, there were many others, such as Margie Day, Helen
Humes, Nellie Lutcher, Jewel King, and Savannah Churchill, who made
one or two great records in the 1950s and then disappeared from the
scene. The era featured former jazz and blues singers, who first
came to prominence in the 1940s, and others who pioneered early
forms of rock ’n’ roll. In a companion volume, Bergsman has
written the history of white women singers of the same era.
Although song styles paralleled, the careers of Black and white
female singers of the period ran in very different directions as
the decade progressed. The songs of African American vocalists like
Dinah Washington and Etta James were R&B segregated or covered
by pop singers in the early and mid-1950s but burst into prominence
in the last part of the decade and well into the 1960s. White
singers, on the other hand, excelled in the early 1950s but saw
their careers decline with the advent of rock music. In this
volume, Bergsman takes an encyclopedic look at both the renowned
and the sadly faded stars of the 1950s, placing them and their
music back in the spotlight.
In What a Difference a Day Makes: Women Who Conquered 1950s Music,
Steve Bergsman highlights the Black female artists of the 1950s, a
time that predated the chart-topping girl groups of the early
1960s. Many of the singers of this era became wildly famous and
respected, and even made it into the Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of
Fame. However, there were many others, such as Margie Day, Helen
Humes, Nellie Lutcher, Jewel King, and Savannah Churchill, who made
one or two great records in the 1950s and then disappeared from the
scene. The era featured former jazz and blues singers, who first
came to prominence in the 1940s, and others who pioneered early
forms of rock ’n’ roll. In a companion volume, Bergsman has
written the history of white women singers of the same era.
Although song styles paralleled, the careers of Black and white
female singers of the period ran in very different directions as
the decade progressed. The songs of African American vocalists like
Dinah Washington and Etta James were R&B segregated or covered
by pop singers in the early and mid-1950s but burst into prominence
in the last part of the decade and well into the 1960s. White
singers, on the other hand, excelled in the early 1950s but saw
their careers decline with the advent of rock music. In this
volume, Bergsman takes an encyclopedic look at both the renowned
and the sadly faded stars of the 1950s, placing them and their
music back in the spotlight.
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