Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 29 de oct. de 2018 · Valaida Snow: Queen Of Trumpet & Song. Valaida Snow (1904-56) was a unique performer. Virtually the only female to become a superior swing trumpeter in the 1930s (she was preceded by Dolly Jones in the 1920s), Snow was an exciting performer who also sang and danced. Originally part of a family that worked in show business, she also played ...

  2. Valaida Snow with The Ali Baba Trio performing Patience and Fortitude (1946)(updated video corrected left/right side-video)

  3. Valaida Snow, née le 2 juin 1904, à Chattanooga dans le Tennessee, morte le 30 mai 1956, à New York est une chanteuse et musicienne américaine de jazz, quelquefois surnommée « Little Louie ». Elle est réputée pour son tempérament, son swing et la puissance de son jeu à la trompette, bien que longtemps snobée par la presse blanche.

  4. Valaida Snow. More images. Profile: US trumpet player and jazz singer, composer and arranger. Her place and date of birth was deliberately blurred by her own statements during her show business career, but has been established (by Mark Miller per her birth records and April 1910 US census) as June 2, 1904, in Chattanooga, Tennessee. After some ...

  5. jazzinfo.org › artist › valaida-snowValaida Snow bio

    If it weren't for fate, Valaida snow might have been considered one of the most influential entertainers of the 20th century. Instead, she is little-known

  6. www.imdb.com › name › nm2003343Valaida Snow - IMDb

    Valaida Snow. Valaida Snow was the product of a musical family; her mother, a music teacher, taught Valaida and her sisters to play a wide variety of instruments, among them cello, bass, mandolin, violin, clarinet, saxophone and accordion. The girls also sang and danced, but when Valaida turned professional at the age of 15, she began focusing ...

  7. 2 de mar. de 2021 · The trumpet was Snow’s primary instrument, but she also played cello, bass, violin, guitar, banjo, mandolin, harp, accordion, clarinet, and saxophone (Charles, 1995). She conducted bands, produced shows, designed costumes, spoke seven languages (Cowans, 1943) and was reportedly a fine painter (“Valaida Snow Engagement at Orpheum,” 1946).