Artist

Carrie Smith

Genre: Jazz ,Swing ,Jazz Blues ,Blues Gospel
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
A blues belter steeped in classic tradition, Carrie Smith entered the world on August 25, 1941, in Fort Gaines, GA. Her first public appearance came at the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival as part of a New Jersey church choir, yet she waited until the early 1970s to surface on the jazz scene alongside Big “Tiny” Little. International attention arrived in November 1974 when her commanding portrayal of Bessie Smith—no relation—in Dick Hyman’s Carnegie Hall staging of Satchmo Remembered electrified audiences across the global music community. She soon launched a solo touring career and entered the recording studio, though later collaborations with the New York Jazz Repertory Orchestra, Tyree Glenn, and the World’s Greatest Jazz Band failed to lift her beyond cult status in the United States while earning warmer acclaim across Europe. Anchored in blues and gospel yet displaying striking range and emotional depth, she demonstrated those qualities on the 1976 album Do Your Duty and its 1977 successor When You’re Down and Out. Though commercial breakthrough remained elusive, she stayed active both live and on record well into the 1990s.