BORN:
October 16, 1911, New Orleans, LA
DIED: January 27, 1972, Evergreen Park, IL
General critical consensus holds Mahalia
Jackson as the greatest gospel singer ever
to live; a major crossover success whose
popularity extended across racial divides, she
was gospel's first superstar, and even decades
after her death remains for many listeners a
defining symbol of the music's transcendent
power. With her singularly expressive contralto,
Jackson continues to inspire the
generations of vocalists which follow in her
wake; among the first spiritual perfomers to
introduce elements of blues into her music, she
infused gospel with a sensuality and freedom it
had never before experienced, and her artistry
rewrote the rules forever. Born in one of the
poorest sections of New Orleans on October 16,
1911, Jackson made her debut in the
children's choir of the Plymouth Rock Baptist
Church at the age of four, and within a few
years was a prominent member of the Mt. Moriah
Baptist's junior choir. Raised next door to a
sanctified church, she was heavily influenced by
their brand of gospel, with its reliance on
drums and percussion over piano; another major
inspiration was the blues of Bessie Smith
and Ma Rainey.
By the time she reached her mid-teens, then, Jackson's
unique vocal style was fully formed, combining
the full-throated tones and propulsive rhythms
of the sanctified church and the deep
expressiveness of the blues with the
note-bending phrasing of her Baptist upbringing.
After quitting school during the eighth grade, Jackson
relocated to Chicago in 1927, where she worked
as a maid and laundress; within months of her
arrival, she was singing leads with the choir at
the Greater Salem Baptist Church, where she
joined the three sons of her pastor in their
group the Johnson Brothers. Although
other small choir groups had cut records in the
past, the Johnson Brothers might have
been the first professional gospel unit ever;
the first organized group to play the Chicago
church circuit, they even produced a series of
self-written musical dramas in which Jackson
assumed the lead role. Her provocative
performing style -- influenced by the Southern
sanctified style of keeping time with the body
and distinguished by jerks and steps for
physical emphasis -- enraged many of the more
conservative Northern preachers, but few could
deny her fierce talent.
After the members of the Johnson Brothers
went their separate ways during the mid-1930s, Jackson
began her solo career accompanied by pianist Evelyn
Gay, who herself later went on to major fame
as one half of gospel's Gay Sisters.
During the week, Jackson also went to
beauty school, and soon opened her own salon. As
her reputation as a singer grew throughout the
Midwest, in 1937 she made her first recordings
for Decca, becoming the first gospel artist
signed to the label; curiously, none of the
tracks she recorded during her May 21 session
was by Thomas A. Dorsey, the legendary
composer for whom she began working as a song
demonstrator around that same time. (He even
wrote "Peace in the Valley" with her
in mind.) While her Decca single "God's
Gonna Separate the Wheat from the Tares"
sold only modestly, prompting a lengthy studio
hiatus, Jackson's career continued on the
upswing -- she soon began peforming live in
cities as far away as Buffalo, New Orleans and
Birmingham, becoming famous in churches
throughout the country for not only her
inimitable voice but also her flirtatious stage
presence and spiritual intensity.
Jackson did not record again until
1946, signing with Apollo Records; although her
relations with the label were often strained,
the work she produced during her eight-year stay
on their roster was frequently brilliant. While
her first Apollo recordings, including "I
Want to Rest" and "He Knows My Heart,"
fared poorly -- so much so, in fact, that the
label almost dropped her -- producer Art
Freeman insisted Jackson record W.
Herbert Brewster's "Move on Up a Little
Higher"; released in early 1948, the single
became the best-selling gospel record of all
time, selling in such great quantities that
stores could not even meet the demand. Virtually
overnight, Jackson became a superstar;
beginning in 1950, she became a regular guest on
journalist Studs Terkel's Chicago
television series, and among white intellectuals
and jazz critics, she acquired a major cult
following based in large part on her eerie
similarities to Bessie Smith. In 1952,
her recording of "I Can Put My Trust in
Jesus" even won a prize from the French
Academy, resulting in a successful tour of
Europe -- her rendition of "Silent
Night" even became one of the all-time
best-selling records in Norway's history.
Jackson's success soon reached such
dramatic proportions that in 1954 she began
hosting her own weekly radio series on CBS, the
first program of its kind to broadcast the pure,
sanctified gospel style over national airwaves.
The show surrounded her with a supporting cast
which included not only pianist Mildred Falls
and organist Ralph Jones, but also a
white quartet led by musical director Jack
Halloran; although her performances with Halloran's
group moved Jackson far away from
traditional gospel towards an odd hybrid which
crossed the line into barbershop quartet singing,
they proved extremely popular with white
audiences, and her transformation into a true
crossover star was complete. Also in 1954 she
signed to Columbia, scoring a Top 40 hit with
the single "Rusty Old Halo," and two
years later made her debut on The Ed
Sullivan Show. However, with Jackson's
success came the inevitable backlash -- purists
decried her music's turn towards more
pop-friendly production, and as her fame soared,
so did her asking price, so much so that by the
late 1950s virtually no black churches could
afford to pay her performance fee.
A triumphant appearance at the 1958 Newport
Jazz Festival solidified Jackson's
standing among critics, but her records
continued moving her further away from her core
audience -- when an LP with Percy Faith
became a smash, Columbia insisted on more
recordings with orchestras and choirs; she even
cut a rendition of "Guardian Angels"
backed by comic Harpo Marx. In 1959, she
appeared in the film Imitation of Life,
and two years later sang at John F. Kennedy's
Presidential inauguration. During the 1960s, Jackson
was also a confidant and supporter of Dr. Martin
Luther King, and at his funeral sang his last
request, "Precious Lord"; throughout
the decade she was a force in the civil rights
movement, but after 1968, with King and the
brothers Kennedy all assassinated, she retired
from the political front. At much the same time Jackson
went through a messy and very public divorce,
prompting a series of heart attacks and the
rapid loss of over a hundred pounds; in her last
years, however, she recaptured much of her
former glory, concluding her career with a
farewell concert in Germany in 1971. She died
January 27, 1972. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music
Guide