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Presenting Ethel Waters

6.4M streams

6,361,166

Stormy Weather

6.1M streams

6,065,792

Favorite Blues of All Time

5.7M streams

5,704,972

Break City

5.5M streams

5,516,479

100 Super Best

1.4M streams

1,407,578

Ethel Waters 1929 - 1939

704.1K streams

704,138

Sweet Thing

649.6K streams

649,635

Harlem on My Mind! - The Blues of Ethe...

581.3K streams

581,319

Ethel Waters Selected Hits Vol. 1

558.8K streams

558,814

Am I Blue? (Original Recodings from He...

396.4K streams

396,356

Biography

Ethel Waters had a long and varied career, and was one of the first true jazz singers to record. Defying racism with her talent and bravery, Waters became a stage and movie star in the 1930s and '40s without leaving the U.S. She grew up near Philadelphia and, unlike many of her contemporaries, developed a clear and easily understandable diction. Originally classified as a blues singer (and she could sing the blues almost on the level of a Bessie Smith), Waters' jazz-oriented recordings of 1921-1928 swung before that term was even coined. A star early on at theaters and nightclubs, Waters introduced such songs as "Dinah," "Am I Blue" (in a 1929 movie), and "Stormy Weather." She made a smooth transition from jazz singer of the 1920s to a pop music star of the '30s, and she was a strong influence on many vocalists including Mildred Bailey, Lee Wiley, and Connee Boswell. Waters spent the latter half of the 1930s touring with a group headed by her husband-trumpeter Eddie Mallory, and appeared on Broadway (Mamba's Daughter in 1939) and in the 1943 film Cabin in the Sky; in the latter she introduced "Taking a Chance on Love," "Good for Nothing Joe," and the title cut. In later years Waters was seen in nonmusical dramatic roles, and after 1960 she mostly confined her performances to religious work for the evangelist Billy Graham. The European Classics label has reissued all of Ethel Waters' prime recordings and they still sound fresh and lively today. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi