Bea Booze

Bea Booze

Person from United States

Genres: blues, jazz, r&b, female vocalists

Bea Booze

About Bea Booze

Bea Booze (May 23, 1920 – 1975), often credited as Wee Bea Booze, was an American rhythm & blues and jazz singer most popular in the 1940s. She was born Muriel Nicholls in Baltimore, and made her name as a singer in Harlem. She was signed by Decca Records to cover the songs and emulate the style of Lil Green, and, under the guidance of Sammy Price, first recorded in 1942. Her version of "See See Rider Blues", first recorded by Ma Rainey, reached # 1 on the R&B chart, after which she was billed as 'The See See Rider Blues Girl'. As well as singing, she played guitar in performance and on many of her recordings. Later in the 1940s, Booze recorded as a jazz vocalist with the Andy Kirk band, which featured trumpeter Fats Navarro, and also with a jazz quartet that included saxophonist George Kelly and organist Larry Johnson. She retired from the music business in the early 1950s to settle first in Baltimore and later in Scottsville, New York, although she recorded with Sammy Price in 1962.

Taken from Last.fm

893 listeners  ·  2,059 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

3
stations playing
2
countries
2
tracks tracked
most active station (The Russian Federation)

Bea Booze — Top 2 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Wee Bea Booze See See Rider Blues [2T0I]
Wee Bea Booze Uncle Sam Come And Get Him
See See Rider Blues [2T0I]
Uncle Sam Come And Get Him