Messingstar, zum Gedenken an Sarah Vaughan, Sarah Lois Vaughan, amerikanische Jazzsängerin, Spitznamen: „Sassy“, „The Divine One“, Grammy Awards, NEA Jazz.
5200 x 3456 px | 44 x 29,3 cm | 17,3 x 11,5 inches | 300dpi
Ort:
Plymounth City England.
Weitere Informationen:
In 1942, Vaughan entered and won an amateur-night contest for which she sang "Body and Soul." Her award was ten dollars and a week of performances at the Apollo, an engagement which led to her being hired as a vocalist and second pianist in Earl "Fatha" Hines's big-band. In 1944, she joined singer Billy Eckstine's band. She recorded the hit "Lover Man" (1945) with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, also members of Eckstine's ensemble, before launching her solo career in 1946 at the New York Cafe Society. In 1949, she landed a five-year recording contract with Columbia Records. Vaughan sustained her success as a singer through the early 1980s, recording on numerous labels, performing with a variety of jazz artists, and touring several countries. Nicknamed "Sassy" and the "Divine One, " Vaughan repeatedly was voted the top female vocalist by Down Beat and Metronome jazz magazines between 1947 and 1952. Her 1982 album Gershwin Live! won a Grammy Award, and in 1989 she received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Vaughan was inducted into the Jazz Hall of Fame in 1990.