This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Etta Moten Barnett

November 5, 2012 5:00 am by: Haley Howle

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a singer who blazed new trails both on and off the stage. Etta Moten Barnett was born in Weimar, Texas, on November 5, 1901. She began her singing career on Broadway in 1931 with productions of Fast and Furious and Zombie. Her first movie appearance was in Busby Berkley’s Gold Diggers of 1933, in which she helped break the Hollywood stereotype of African-American women as domestic servants. She also appeared with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in Flying Down to Rio, in which she played a Brazilian singer performing the Oscar-nominated song, “The Carioca.” On January 31, 1934, Etta Moten Barnett became the first African-American woman to perform at the White House. In the 1940s, she won acclaim on Broadway in the title role of George Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess. During the 1950s and 1960s, Barnett also served as...
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Hank Thompson

This Week in Texas Music History

Hank Thompson

This week in Texas music history, scholar Gary Hartman remembers a singer whose biggest hits were based on a most unlikely theme. ...
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Buster Smith

This Week in Texas Music History

Buster Smith

This week in Texas music history, Dr. Gary Hartman helps us celebrate a successful artist whose musical career almost ended before it began. ...
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Seals and Crofts

This Week in Texas Music History

Seals and Crofts

This week in Texas music history, music scholar Gary Hartman introduces us to a duo whose first taste of success involved tequila ...
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DJ Screw

This Week in Texas Music History

DJ Screw

This Week in Texas Music History, historian Gary Hartman looks at a musician who died young but still helped to revolutionize rap and hip hop music. ...
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Jules Bledsoe

This Week in Texas Music History

Jules Bledsoe

This week in Texas music history, historian Gary Hartman helps us honor a man who studied to be a doctor but instead made his mark as a Broadway singer. ...
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This Week in Texas Music History

Clifton Chenier

On This Week in Texas Music History, we remember a singer who narrowly escaped death before going on to become a Texas music icon. ...
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This Week in Texas Music History

Texas Ruby

This Week in Texas Music History, Texas State University music historian Gary Hartman remembers a pioneering musician who helped open doors for other female artists in country m…...
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Jimmie Rodgers

This Week in Texas Music History

Jimmie Rodgers

This week in Texas music history, scholar Gary Hartman remembers a giant in American music who considered Texas his second home. ...
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Laura Canales

This Week in Texas Music History

Laura Canales

This week in Texas music history, music scholar Gary Hartman helps us honor a pioneering female in Tejano music. ...
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Teddy Wilson

This Week in Texas Music History

Teddy Wilson

This Week in Texas Music History, historian Gary Hartman helps us celebrate a musician who played in one of the first racially-integrated bands to gain national popularity. ...
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Ima Hogg

This Week in Texas Music History

Ima Hogg

This week in Texas music history, music historian Gary Hartman helps us remember a governor’s daughter who became a successful musician and a patron of the arts. ...
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Willie Nelson’s 4th of July Picnic

This Week in Texas Music History

Willie Nelson’s 4th of July Picnic

This week in Texas music history, we’ll celebrate a legendary Texas event that became a success almost in spite of itself. ...
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This Week in Texas Music History

“The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez&#...

This week, Texas music historian Gary Hartman takes a look at a popular Texas ballad based on an actual gunfight. ...
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This Week in Texas Music History

Mingo Saldivar

This week, Texas music historian Gary Hartman, honors a musician who is known by many as ‘the dancing cowboy.’ ...
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