White Phonograph Companies Object To Colored Enterprise 1921

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Roaring20s
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White Phonograph Companies Object To Colored Enterprise 1921

Post by Roaring20s »

As we approach the 100th anniversary of Crazy Blues, I was surfing he internet and came upon the some clamor over African American Harry Pace getting in the action.

First, here's an overview from Blues.org
https://blues.org/blues_hof_inductee/ma ... okeh-1920/
Mamie Smith: “Crazy Blues” (OKeh, 1920)
“Crazy Blues” by Mamie Smith was the record that launched a new era for blues in the music business. Smith was not the first person to sing the blues on record, but up until “Crazy Blues,” almost all the others had been white, catering to a white clientele. Only when “Crazy Blues” created a sensation among African American buyers did the record companies realize the potential for black music. By various news accounts, “Crazy Blues” sold anywhere from 10,000 to 2,000,000 copies, enough at any rate for OKeh and other labels to look for more black women to sing the blues and launch “race record” series for the newly discovered blues market. Smith had been singing an early variant by composer Perry Bradford, “Harlem Blues,” in a theatrical production in New York, and it was Bradford who pushed for OKeh to record her doing “Crazy Blues” with a black band, the Jazz Hounds, on August 10, 1920. The song brought wealth and fame to both Smith and Bradford during the 1920s and paved the way for Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey and many more to follow.

This is what I came upon, both published February 19,1921...
Phoenix Tribune, 02-19-1921.1.jpg
Phoenix Tribune, 02-19-1921.2.jpg
James.

VanEpsFan1914
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Re: White Phonograph Companies Object To Colored Enterprise

Post by VanEpsFan1914 »

Notice the names of the two "white Phonograph Companies" are not given. This makes me wonder how much of the record-buying public at this time was actually black instead of the monolithically white population that we armchair historians like to see it as. Giving the names would definitely have hurt their sales, I imagine, and this is making me wonder whether or not there was a larger 78rpm fanbase of black customers back then.

Props to Mr. Handy & Mr. Pace for starting their own company! and thanks Roaring20s for posting this piece, because it's good to remember the way things were so we don't double back & repeat it again.

Charles.

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