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Always the queen : the Denise LaSalle story / Denise LaSalle with David Whiteis.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Music in American lifePublisher: Urbana : University of Illinois Press, [2020]Description: 1 online resource (x, 234 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 0252051939
  • 9780252051937
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Always the queenDDC classification:
  • 782.421643092 B 23
LOC classification:
  • ML421.L3715 A3 2020
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Prelude: "Far Away Places" -- 1 Mississippi Girl -- 2 Music and Life Lessons -- 3 "There's Got to Be a Better World Somewhere" -- 4 "That Was God Talking to You!" -- 5 "Mama Says It's in My Blood!" -- 6 The Road to "Trapped"-and Stardom -- 7 Dreams Come True -- 8 Going through Changes -- 9 "One Life to Live . . . Let's Live It Together" -- 10 A New Label and a New Era -- 11 Steppin' In on Some Down Home Blues -- 12 Cry of the Black Soul -- 13 Still the Queen -- 14 God Don't Make Mistakes -- Coda: "Speak to God on My Behalf"
A Note on the Text -- Index -- Back Cover
Summary: "This is the autobiography of soul and blues singer Denise LaSalle "as told to" the blues scholar David Whiteis. The book documents Ms. LaSalle's move from rural Mississippi to Chicago as a teenager, where she eventually established herself as a successful songwriter and performer in gospel and blues. She also founded several record labels and demonstrated considerable savvy as a businesswoman. In the early 1980s, realizing that her brand of emotionally resonant soul music had lost ground in the marketplace to newer forms - first disco, and then rap/hip-hop - Ms. LaSalle began to write songs and perform in the modern-day blues genre usually referred to as "soul-blues" (a term she takes credit for inventing) or "southern soul." Her songs in this genre conveyed a bold, often provocative message of womanly assertiveness and pride, including explicitly drawn demands for both sexual and financial satisfaction, that both invoked and modernized the classic blueswoman's stance of power and independence, a trope that links her directly to such legendary blues singers as Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, and Ida Cox. Armed with this new material but still capable of pleasing long-time fans with renditions of her earlier hits, Ms. LaSalle became one of the dominant figures on the "southern soul"/"soul-blues" circuit, which was actually a newly revitalized incarnation of the old "chitlin' circuit," the network of predominantly African-American performance venues that crisscrossed the south and also extended into some northern and western urban strongholds (tracing, more or less, the geographic pattern of the early/mid-20th Century Great Migration). She remains one of the most beloved figures on that circuit, admired by listeners and fellow artists alike for her legacy and her ongoing dedication to her music and fans. LaSalle's story thus complements the overall story of blues and soul music as the cultural expression of a diasporan people who reinvented themselves to adjust to Northern life while retaining many of the cultural, religious, and social traditions with which they had grown up in the South"-- Provided by publisher.
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Includes index.

"This is the autobiography of soul and blues singer Denise LaSalle "as told to" the blues scholar David Whiteis. The book documents Ms. LaSalle's move from rural Mississippi to Chicago as a teenager, where she eventually established herself as a successful songwriter and performer in gospel and blues. She also founded several record labels and demonstrated considerable savvy as a businesswoman. In the early 1980s, realizing that her brand of emotionally resonant soul music had lost ground in the marketplace to newer forms - first disco, and then rap/hip-hop - Ms. LaSalle began to write songs and perform in the modern-day blues genre usually referred to as "soul-blues" (a term she takes credit for inventing) or "southern soul." Her songs in this genre conveyed a bold, often provocative message of womanly assertiveness and pride, including explicitly drawn demands for both sexual and financial satisfaction, that both invoked and modernized the classic blueswoman's stance of power and independence, a trope that links her directly to such legendary blues singers as Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, and Ida Cox. Armed with this new material but still capable of pleasing long-time fans with renditions of her earlier hits, Ms. LaSalle became one of the dominant figures on the "southern soul"/"soul-blues" circuit, which was actually a newly revitalized incarnation of the old "chitlin' circuit," the network of predominantly African-American performance venues that crisscrossed the south and also extended into some northern and western urban strongholds (tracing, more or less, the geographic pattern of the early/mid-20th Century Great Migration). She remains one of the most beloved figures on that circuit, admired by listeners and fellow artists alike for her legacy and her ongoing dedication to her music and fans. LaSalle's story thus complements the overall story of blues and soul music as the cultural expression of a diasporan people who reinvented themselves to adjust to Northern life while retaining many of the cultural, religious, and social traditions with which they had grown up in the South"-- Provided by publisher.

Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on June 08, 2020).

Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Prelude: "Far Away Places" -- 1 Mississippi Girl -- 2 Music and Life Lessons -- 3 "There's Got to Be a Better World Somewhere" -- 4 "That Was God Talking to You!" -- 5 "Mama Says It's in My Blood!" -- 6 The Road to "Trapped"-and Stardom -- 7 Dreams Come True -- 8 Going through Changes -- 9 "One Life to Live . . . Let's Live It Together" -- 10 A New Label and a New Era -- 11 Steppin' In on Some Down Home Blues -- 12 Cry of the Black Soul -- 13 Still the Queen -- 14 God Don't Make Mistakes -- Coda: "Speak to God on My Behalf"

A Note on the Text -- Index -- Back Cover

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