Mildred Rinker Bailey (
February 27, 1907 –
December 12, 1951) was a popular and influential
American jazz singer during the
1930s, known as "
The Queen of
Swing", "The
Rockin' Chair Lady" and "
Mrs. Swing". Some of her best known hits are "
It's So
Peaceful in the
Country", "Trust in Me", "
Where Are You?", "I Let a
Song Go Out of
My Heart", "
Small Fry", "
Please Be Kind", "
Darn That Dream", "Rockin' Chair", "
Blame It on
My Last Affair", and "Says My Heart".
Bailey was born
Mildred Rinker in
Tekoa,] Washington. Her mother,
Josephine, was an enrolled member of the
Coeur d'Alene Tribe[2] and a devout
Roman Catholic. Her father,
Charles, played fiddle and called square dances. Her mother played piano every evening after supper and taught
Mildred to play and sing. Her brothers were the vocalist and composer
Al Rinker, and the lyricist
Charles Rinker.
At the age of seventeen, Bailey moved to
Seattle and worked as a sheet music demonstrator at
Woolworth's. She married and divorced Ted Bailey, keeping his last name because she thought it sounded more American than Rinker.[3] With the help of her second husband,
Benny Stafford, she became an established blues and jazz singer on the
West Coast. According to
Gary Giddins' book
Bing Crosby –
A Pocketful of Dreams –
The Early Years 1903-1940, in 1925 she secured work for her brother, Al Rinker, and his partner Bing Crosby. Giddins further states that
Crosby first heard of
Louis Armstrong and other
Chicago black jazz records from
Bailey's own record collection. Crosby helped Bailey in turn by introducing her to
Paul Whiteman. She sang with Paul Whiteman's band from 1929-33 (According to Gary Giddins, Whiteman had a popular radio program and when Bailey debuted with her version of "
Moanin' Low" in 1929, public reaction was immediate, although she did not start recording with Whiteman until late 1931).
Her first two records were as uncredited vocalist for an
Eddie Lang Orchestra session in 1929 ("What Kind o' Man Is You?", an obscure
Hoagy Carmichael song that was only issued in the UK) and a
1930 recording of "
I Like to Do
Things for You" for
Frankie Trumbauer. She was Whiteman's popular female vocalist through 1932 (recording in a smooth crooning style), when she left the band due to salary disagreements. She then recorded a series of records for
Brunswick in 1933 (accompanied by
The Dorsey Brothers), as well an all-star session with
Benny Goodman's studio band in 1934 that featured
Coleman Hawkins.
In the mid-1930s, she recorded with her third husband
Red Norvo. A dynamic couple, they earned the nicknames "
Mr. and Mrs. Swing". During this period (1936–
1939) Norvo recorded for Brunswick (with Bailey as primary vocalist) and Bailey recorded her own set of recordings for
Vocalion, often with Norvo's band. Some of her recordings instead featured members of
Count Basie's band.
Despite her divorce from Norvo, she and Red would continue to record together off and on until
1945. She also sang on a number of Benny Goodman's
Columbia's in 1939-1940.
Always a large woman, she suffered from diabetes and depression, she only made a few recordings following
World War II.
Mildred Bailey died December 12, 1951, in
Poughkeepsie, New York of heart failure, aged 44, due chiefly to her diabetes. Her ashes were scattered. Red Norvo outlived Bailey by nearly half a century, dying in
April 1999, a week after his 91st birthday
- published: 14 Apr 2016
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