Merline Johnson (born c. 1912
or 1918,
date of death unknown) was an American
blues
Blues is a music genre and musical form which originated in the Deep South of the United States around the 1860s. Blues incorporated spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the Afr ...
singer in the 1930s and 1940s, billed as The Yas Yas Girl.
"Yas yas" was a euphemism for buttocks in
hokum blues songs such as
Blind Boy Fuller's "Get Yer Yas Yas Out" and
James "Stump" Johnson's "
The Duck's Yas-Yas-Yas".
Little is known of her life. It is generally believed that she was born in Mississippi,
though the researchers Bob Eagle and Eric LeBlanc suggest she may have been born Merline Baker in
Callaway County, Missouri.
She was the aunt of singer
LaVern Baker.
Johnson first recorded in Chicago in 1937. One early song was "Sold It to the Devil". Over the next four years she recorded over 90 songs, including "Don't You Make Me High", "I'd Rather Be Drunk", and "
Love with a Feeling". She recorded a few risqué songs.
Her speciality was a variety of
juke joint blues, with songs such as "Drinking My Blues Away" and "I Just Keep on Drinking", delivered in a tough, unlovable voice.
She was accompanied by
Big Bill Broonzy,
Lonnie Johnson,
Blind John Davis,
Buster Bennett, and
Punch Miller
Ernest Miller, also known as Punch Miller or Kid Punch Miller (June 10, 1894 – December 2, 1971), was an American traditional jazz trumpeter.
Miller was born in Raceland, Louisiana, United States. He was known in New Orleans, Louisiana, where h ...
.
Her final recordings, not issued at the time, were cut in 1947.
See also
*
List of classic female blues singers
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, Merline
1910s births
American blues singers
Classic female blues singers
Year of death missing