Ida Cox – Mail Man Blues and Other Stories (2024)

  • 30 Sep, 16:40
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Artist:
Title: Mail Man Blues and Other Stories
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Beth Montana
Genre: Oldies, Blues
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 37:00
Total Size: 164 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. So Soon This Morning 3:06
02. Mail Man Blues 3:08
03. Confidential Blues 3:05
04. Bear-Mash Blues 2:57
05. Mean Lovin' Man Blues 2:53
06. Down the Road Bound Blues 3:23
07. Last Time Blues 3:02
08. Worried Any How Blues 3:06
09. Chicago Monkey Man Blues 2:58
10. Mean Papa Turn Your Key 3:05
11. Blues Ain't Nothin' Else But! 3:17
12. Worried in Mind Blues 3:00

One of the finest classic blues singers of the 1920s, Ida Cox was singing in theaters by the time she was 14. She recorded regularly during 1923-1929 (her "Wild Woman Don't Have the Blues" and "Death Letter Blues" are her best-known songs). Although she was off-record during much of the 1930s, Cox was able to continue working and in 1939 she sang at Cafe Society, appeared at John Hammond's Spirituals to Swing concert, and made some new records. Cox toured with shows until a 1944 stroke pushed her into retirement; she came back for an impressive final recording in 1961.
Cox left her hometown of Toccoa, GA, as a teenager, traveling the south in vaudeville and tent shows, performing both as a singer and a comedienne. In the early '20s, she performed with Jelly Roll Morton, but she had severed her ties with the pianist by the time she signed her first record contract with Paramount in 1923. Cox stayed with Paramount for six years and recorded 78 songs, which usually featured accompaniment by Love Austin and trumpeter Tommy Ladnier. During that time, she also cut tracks for a variety of labels, including Silvertone, using several different pseudonyms, including Velma Bradley, Kate Lewis, and Julia Powers.
During the '30s, Cox didn't record often, but she continued to perform frequently, highlighted by an appearance at John Hammond's 1939 Spirituals to Swing concert at Carnegie Hall. The concert increased her visibility, particularly in jazz circles. Following the concert, she recorded with a number of jazz artists, including Charlie Christian, Lionel Hampton, Fletcher Henderson, and Hot Lips Page. She toured with a number of different shows in the early '40s until she suffered a stroke in 1944. Cox was retired for most of the '50s, but she was coaxed out of retirement in 1961 to record a final session with Coleman Hawkins. In 1967, Ida Cox died of cancer.