Priscilla Stewart
43 top tracks
Priscilla Stewart
43 top tracks
Albums

Priscilla Stewart (1924-1928)
Priscilla Stewart

Complete Recorded Works
Priscilla Stewart

Cherokee Boogie
Priscilla Stewart

Classic Blues, Jazz And Vaudeville Singers Vol. 3 (1922-1927)
Priscilla Stewart

The Roots Of Billie Holiday - Ladies Sing The Blues Of The 1920s
Priscilla Stewart

Classic Blues & Vaudeville Singers (1921-1930)
Priscilla Stewart

Tall Brown Blues
Priscilla Stewart

Saga Blues: Cherokee Boogie "Indians and the Blues"
Priscilla Stewart

Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order (1924-1928)
Priscilla Stewart

Cherokee Boogie - Indians And The Blues
Priscilla Stewart

The Great Race Record Labels Volume 1 : Paramount
Priscilla Stewart

Complete Recorded Works (1924-1928)
Priscilla Stewart
Biography
Priscilla Stewart was a blues singer active in the 1920s. Virtually nothing is known about Priscilla Stewart. An excellent second-level classic blues singer, Stewart recorded 25 performances during 1924-1928, all of which are on Document DOCD-5476. In the majority of the cases, she is accompanied by pianist Jimmy Blythe, who is in excellent form throughout. Altoist Stump Evans and cornetist Shirley Clay make one appearance apiece, while “Charleston <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Priscilla+St...Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Priscilla Stewart was a blues singer active in the 1920s. Virtually nothing is known about Priscilla Stewart. An excellent second-level classic blues singer, Stewart recorded 25 performances during 1924-1928, all of which are on Document DOCD-5476. In the majority of the cases, she is accompanied by pianist Jimmy Blythe, who is in excellent form throughout. Altoist Stump Evans and cornetist Shirley Clay make one appearance apiece, while “Charleston, South Carolina” (which is really “The Charleston”) and the two versions of “Charleston Mad” have Stewart sounding somewhat exuberant while joined by Lovie Austin’s Blues Serenaders, a quartet with cornetist Tommy Ladnier and clarinetist Jimmy O’Bryant. While basically a blues singer, Stewart shows the ability to switch comfortably to non-blues material, including “Someday Sweetheart.” Perhaps that is why she was still recording in 1928, long after the blues craze of the 1920s had subsided.
All Stewart’s recordings were made in Chicago, and most of them have piano by Jimmy Blythe. She co-wrote ‘Delta Bottom Blues’ with him, but it’s not known whether ‘I was born in Arkansas, raised in Memphis, Tennessee’ is autobiography. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Priscilla+Stewart">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
