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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page -- The Blues Profile Page
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Wallace was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1982, and was inducted into the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame in 1993. Biography Wallace came from a musical family; her brothers George W. Thomas, became a notable pianist, bandleader, composer, and music publisher, and Hersal Thomas, pianist and composer, and her niece was Hociel Thomas, pianist and composer (daughter of brother George). In 1915 Wallace moved New Orleans, Louisiana with brother Hersal; two years later she married Matt Wallace, and changed her name. After following her brothers to Chicago, Illinois in 1923, Wallace worked her way into the city's bustling jazz scene. Her reputation led to a recording contract with Okeh Records in 1923. Wallace's first recorded songs, "Shorty George" and "Up the Country Blues," the former written with her brother George, sold well enough to make Wallace a blues star in the early '20s. Other successful recordings followed, including "Special Delivery Blues" (with Louis Armstrong), "Bedroom Blues" (written by George and Hersal Thomas), and "I'm a Mighty Tight Woman." Her younger brother Hersal died of food poisoning in 1926 at age sixteen. Wallace moved to Detroit in 1929, her husband Matt and brother George both died in 1936. Wallace for some forty years was a singer and organ player at the Leland Baptist Church in Detroit. Mercury Records reissued "Bedroom Blues" in 1945. Aside from an occasional performance or recording date, Wallace did little in the blues until she launched a comeback in 1966 after her longtime friend Victoria Spivey coaxed her out of retirement and on the folk and blues festival circuit. In 1966 recorded an album on Halloween night, Copenhagen, Denmark, Women Be Wise, with Roosevelt Sykes and Little Brother Montgomery sharing the piano stool. Another 1966 album Sings the Blues, on the latter song, Wallace accompanied herself on piano; otherwise she is backed by either Roosevelt Sykes or Little Brother Montgomery on piano. Includes Wallace's signature song, "Women Be Wise", "Don't Advertise Your Man," The album helped inspire blues-pop singer Bonnie Raitt to take up the blues in the late '60s. In 1971 Raitt recorded a rendition of Sippie Wallace's "Women Be Wise" on her self-titled album Bonnie Raitt. Wallace toured and recorded with Raitt in the 1970s and 1980s, while continuing to perform on her own. The bond between Wallace and Raitt helped bridge the gap between two generations of blues queens.
In 1966 and 1967 she appeared at the Newport Folk Blues Festival, Copenhagen, Denmark performance in 1966, the Chicago Blues Festival, 1967, the Ann Arbor Blues Festival, 1972, and appeared at Lincoln Center in New York, 1977. She sings one song in John Mayall's concert DVD "Jammin' with the Blues Greats" (1982). Then in Ann Arbor, Michigan she got together with German boogie
woogie pianist Axel Zwingenberger, with whom she recorded a studio album
in 1983. Wallace included many of her own groundbreaking compositions as
well as other classic blues songs, on his album, And the Friends of
Boogie, Vol. 1: Sippie Wallace, released in 1992. In 1983 and 1984 she
traveled to Germany to tour with Axel. Michelle Paymar and Roberta Grossman produced and directed "Sippie Wallace: Blues Singer and Song Writer" a documentary film portrait featuring concert footage, interviews, historic rare recordings, and photographs.
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