People, Locations, Episodes

Mon, 12.22.1919

Lillian Green, Blues Singer born

Lillian Green

*Lillian Green was born on this date in 1919. She was a Black blues singer and songwriter.

She was born in Mississippi, but after the early deaths of her parents, she went to Chicago, where she began performing in her teens and where she would make all her recordings. Lil Green was noted for superb timing and a distinctively sinuous voice.

In the 1930s, she and Big Bill Broonzy had a nightclub act together. Her two biggest hits were her composition “Romance in the Dark” (1940), later covered by Billie Holiday (actually a different song with the same title), and her version of Joe McCoy’s “Why Don’t You Do Right?” (1941), which was later covered by Peggy Lee covered. As well as performing in Chicago clubs, she toured with Tiny Bradshaw and other bands but never really broke away from the Black theatre circuit.

She was already in poor health when she signed with Atlantic Records in 1951. She died in Chicago of pneumonia on April 14, 1954, and is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Gary, Indiana.

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Black is what the prisons are, The stagnant vortex of the hours Swept into totality, Creeping in the perjured heart, Bitter in the vulgar rhyme, Bitter on the walls; Black is where the devils... THE AFRICAN AFFAIR by Bruce M. Wright.
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