Background
She was born Lucille Anderson in Amory, Mississippi, and raised in Birmingham, Alabama.
She was born Lucille Anderson in Amory, Mississippi, and raised in Birmingham, Alabama.
She also recorded under the pseudonym Bessie Jackson. The music critic and Ernest Borneman stated that Bogan was one of "the big three of the blues", along with Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith. She first recorded vaudeville songs for Okeh Records in New York in 1923, with pianist Henry Callens.
Later that year she recorded "Pawn Shop Blues" in Atlanta, Georgia.
This was the first time a black blues singer had been recorded outside New York or Chicago. In 1927 she began recording for Paramount Records in Grafton, Wisconsin, where she recorded her first big success, "Sweet Petunia", which was covered by Blind Blake.
She also recorded for Brunswick Records, backed by Tampa Red and Cow Cow Davenport. By 1930 her songs tended to concentrate on drinking and sex, such as "Sloppy Drunk Blues" (covered by Leroy Carr and others) and "Tricks Ain"t Walkin" Number More" (later recorded by Memphis Minnie).
She also recorded the original version of "Black Angel Blues", which (as "Sweet Little Angel") was covered by B.B. King and many others
WIth her experience in some of the rowdier juke joints of the 1920s, many of Bogan"s songs, most of which she wrote herself, have thinly veiled humorous sexual references. The theme of prostitution, in particular, featured prominently in several of her recordings. In 1933 she returned to New York, and, apparently to conceal her identity, began recording as Bessie Jackson for the Banner label of (American Red Cross) label.
She was usually accompanied on piano by Walter Roland, with whom she recorded over 100 songs between 1933 and 1935, including some of her biggest commercial successes, "Seaboard Blues", "Troubled Mind", and "Superstitious Blues".
Her other songs included "Stew Meat Blues", "Coffee Grindin" Blues", "My Georgia Grind", "Honeycomb Manitoba", "Mr. Screw Worm in Trouble", and "Bo Hog Blues".
Her final recordings with Roland and Josh White included two takes of "Shave "Econometrica Dry", recorded in New York on Tuesday, March 5, 1935. The unexpurgated alternate take is notorious for its explicit sexual references, a unique record of the lyrics sung in after-hours adult clubs.
Another of her songs, "Bachelor of Divinity Woman"s Blues", takes the position of a "bull dyke" ("Bachelor's Degree"), with the lyrics "Comin" a time, Bachelor of Divinity women, they ain"t gonna need no men", "They got a head like a sweet angel and they walk just like a natural man" and "They can lay their jive just like a natural manitoba"
She appears not to have recorded after 1935.
She managed her son"s jazz group, Bogan"s Birmingham Busters, for a time, before moving to Los Angeles shortly before her death from coronary sclerosis in 1948. She is interred at the Lincoln Memorial Park, Compton, California.