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Edna Hicks (October 14, 1891

(2025). 9780313344237, Praeger Publishers.
or 1895 – August 16, 1925) was an American singer and musician. Her recorded songs include "Hard Luck Blues" and "Poor Me Blues". She also recorded "Down Hearted Blues", and "Gulf Coast Blues" on the Brunswick label in 1923.


Biography
She was born in , Louisiana. Although most sources state that her birth name was Edna Landreaux, the daughter of Victor Landreaux and Rena Moore,
(1979). 9780306801556, Da Capo Press, Inc.. .
researchers Bob Eagle and Eric LeBlanc suggest that her birth name was Lucille Landry, the daughter of Victor Landry and Rosa Moore. She was the half-sister of .

She is believed to have moved north in her mid-. In 1910 she is listed as working as a nurse and still living at home, but on 10 June 1912, as Edna Landry, she married performer and touring company manager , and performed in his shows, but they separated after a few years. William Benbow, DoctorJazz.co.uk. Retrieved 8 March 2017

She was popular in black in the American Midwest in the late 1910s and 1920s, appeared often in Chicago and , and made recordings for seven different record labels in 1923 and 1924: , , , , Brunswick, , and Paramount. Her most frequent accompanist was Fletcher Henderson; some of her recordings featured accompaniment by and Lemuel Fowler. In 1916, she appeared was in a show called Follow Me at Casino Theater in New York City. She also appeared in Billy King's musical comedy Over the Top, and the musical comedies The New American, A Trip Around the World, and A Derby Day in Dixie, all in The Lafayette Theatre in New York City.

In August 1925, while assisting her husband in filling their automobile's gasoline tank, she was burned after splashed gasoline was ignited by a candle she was holding. She died in a Chicago hospital two days later, on August 16."Edna Hicks Perishes in Fire", (national edition), August 22, 1925. She is buried at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Worth, Illinois.

In 2023 The Killer Blues Headstone Project placed a headstone for Edna Hicks at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery in Chicago, IL.


Discography
"Bleeding-Hearted Blues"July 6, 1923New York City, New York
"Down-Hearted Blues"June 18, 1923New YorkBrunswick Records
"Goin' Home"November 1923New York
"Gulf Coast Blues"June 18, 1923New YorkBrunswick Records
"I'm Goin' Away" ("Just To Wear You Off My Mind")March 21, 1923New York
"Kansas City Man Blues"November 1923New YorkParamount Records
"Kind Lovin' Blues"November 1923New YorkAjax Records
"Mistreatin' Daddy"October 1923New YorkParamount Records
"No Name Blues" ("Same Blues")September 1923New YorkGennett Records
"Oh Daddy Blues"August 18, 1923New YorkGennett Records
"Sad 'n' Lonely Blues"July 6, 1923New YorkGennett Records
"Satisfied Blues" ("A Barrel House Blues")September 1923New YorkGennett Records
"Save Your Man and Satisfy Your Soul"October 11, 1923New YorkColumbia Records
"Squawkin' the Blues"August 24, 1923New York
"Tain't A Doggone Thing But the Blues"October 1923New YorkAjax Records
"Tin Roof Blues"August 18, 1923New YorkGennett Records
"Uncle Sam Blues"November 1923New YorkParamount Records
"Walking and Talking Blues"August 7, 1923New YorkVocalion Records
"Wicked Dirty Fives"August 24, 1923New YorkVocalion Records


Bibliography
  • Harris, Sheldon (1994). Blues Who's Who (Revised Ed.). New York: Da Capo Press.


External links

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