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・ Sara Lüscher
・ Sara M'Bodji
・ Sara M. Evans
・ Sara M. Gonzalez
・ Sara M. Harvey
・ Sara Mackmin
・ Sara MacLean
・ Sara Macliver
・ Sara Maitland
・ Sara Malakul Lane
・ Sara Maldonado
・ Sara Mandiano
・ Sara Mannheimer
・ Sara Mansoor
・ Sara Markoska
Sara Martin
・ Sara Martins
・ Sara Martínez Puntero
・ Sara Mason
・ Sara Mayhew
・ Sara McGlashan
・ Sara McGreavy
・ Sara McLanahan
・ Sara McMann
・ Sara Mearns
・ Sara Mednick
・ Sara Mendes da Costa
・ Sara Mergenthaler
・ Sara Mesa
・ Sara Michael Foster


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Sara Martin : ウィキペディア英語版
Sara Martin

Sara Martin (June 18, 1884 – May 24, 1955) was an American blues singer, in her time one of the most popular of the classic blues singers. She was billed as "The Famous Moanin' Mama" and "The Colored Sophie Tucker".〔Harrison 1990, p. 234〕 Martin made many recordings, including a few under the names Margaret Johnson and Sally Roberts.〔
==Biography==
Martin was born in Louisville, Kentucky, United States〔 and was singing on the African-American vaudeville circuit by 1915. She began a very successful recording career when she was signed by the Okeh label in 1922. Through the 1920s she toured and recorded with such performers as Fats Waller, Clarence Williams, King Oliver, and Sylvester Weaver.〔 She was among the most-recorded of the classic blues singers.
She was possibly the first to record the famous blues song "T'aint Nobody's Bizness If I Do" with Waller on piano in 1922.〔McWilliams 1996, accompanying CD liner notes.〕
On stage she was noted for an especially dramatic performing style and for her lavish costumes, which she changed two or three times per show.〔Harrison 1990, p. 235〕 In his book, ''Ma Rainey and the Classic Blues Singers'', Derrick Stewart-Baxter says of her:
...she was never a really great blues singer. The records she made varied considerably, on many she sounded stilted and very unrelaxed. ... Occasionally, she did hit a groove and when this happened, she could be quite pleasing, as on her very original "Brother Ben". ... The sides she did with King Oliver can be recommended, particularly "Death Sting Me Blues".〔Stewart-Baxter, 1970, p.80〕

According to blues historian Daphne Duval Harrison, "Martin tended to use more swinging, danceable rhythms than some of her peers ... when she sang a traditional blues her voice and styling had richer, deeper qualities that matched the content in sensitivity and mood: "Mean Tight Mama" and "Death Sting Me" approach an apex of blues singing".〔
Martin's stage work in the late 1920s took her to New York, Detroit, and Pittsburgh, and to Cuba, Jamaica, and Puerto Rico.〔Harrison 1990, p. 236〕 She made one film appearance,〔Harris 1994, p. 351〕 in ''Hello Bill'' with Bill "Bojangles" Robinson in 1929. Her last major stage appearance was in ''Darktown Scandals Review'' in 1930.〔 She performed with Thomas A. Dorsey as a gospel singer in 1932, after which she worked outside the music industry, running a nursing home in Louisville.〔
Sara Martin died in Louisville of a stroke in May 1955.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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