Mother of the Blues is the first substantive biography of Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, the pioneering blues vocalist that dominated blues in the 1920s. Through a comprehensive study of Rainey's remarkable career, Sandra R. Lieb analyzes how Rainey combined African American folk traditions with emerging blues styles to help establish and popularize the blues as a national musical phenomenon in the early twentieth century. With close attention to Rainey's recordings, performances, and cultural significance as a Black female artist, Lieb explores the impact of Ma Rainey distinctive deep-throated voice, mesmerizing presence, and songs of love, desire, sexuality, and society in American music history and blues culture.
A freelance writer in Chicago, SANDRA LIEB has taught at the University of Illinois in Chicago and has worked for the American Library Association.