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British women jazz singers (1 C, 63 P) Pages in category "British women jazz musicians" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
Dusty Springfield. Mary Isobel Catherine Bernadette O'Brien OBE [ 2 ] (16 April 1939 – 2 March 1999), better known by her stage name Dusty Springfield, was an English singer. With her distinctive mezzo-soprano sound, she was a popular singer of blue-eyed soul, pop and dramatic ballads, with French chanson, country, and jazz in her repertoire.
This category has the following 17 subcategories, out of 17 total. British women singers by century (8 C) English women singers (9 C, 312 P) Women singers from Northern Ireland (4 C, 11 P) Scottish women singers (9 C) Welsh women singers (7 C, 3 P)
1961–present. Helen Kate Shapiro (born 28 September 1946) is a British pop and jazz singer and actress. [1] While still a teenager in the early 1960s, she was one of Britain's most successful female singers. With a voice described by AllMusic as possessing "the maturity and sensibilities of someone far beyond their teen years", Shapiro ...
List of best-selling female music artists in the United Kingdom. The following is a list of the best-selling female music artists in the United Kingdom, based solely on sales units published by reliable music industry-related organizations, including the British Phonographic Industry, the Official Charts Company, Music Week and Record Mirror.
Annie Ross (born Annabelle McCauley Allan Short[1][2]; 25 July 1930 – 21 July 2020) was a British-American singer and actress, best known as a member of the influential jazz vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross. She pioneered the vocalese style of jazz singing, [3][4] with a style described by critic Dave Gelly as "a kind of dreamy ...
British jazz is a form of music derived from American jazz. It reached Britain through recordings and performers who visited the country while it was a relatively new genre, soon after the end of World War I. Jazz began to be played by British musicians from the 1930s and on a widespread basis in the 1940s, often within dance bands.