Ernestine Anderson, Grammy-Nominated Jazz Singer, Dies at 87

Jazz vocalist Ernestine Anderson, who was nominated for four Grammys over her career, died Thursday.

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  • Over her six-decade career, Anderson performed at events around the world, including at the first Monterey Jazz Festival in 1958, as well as at the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall, according to the Seattle Times.
  • Her voice was once described as “honey at desk” by friend and producer Quincy Jones.
  • The singer performed at Dwight D. Eisenhower’s presidential inauguration, and often played with bands led by Lionel Hampton and Johnny Otis.
  • Anderson was born in Houston and won a talent contest when she was 12. She moved with her family to Seattle in 1944, where she attended the Garfield High School. There, she sang with the Bumps Blackwell Junior Band, which featured Jones.
  • Her first single, “K.C. Lover/Good Lovin’ Babe,” was recorded in 1948.
  • Anderson would go on to release six albums with Mercury Records until she quit singing in the ’60s. She revived her career in the ’70s and released “Hello, Like Before” in 1977, and continued to record for years after.
  • While she frequently moved across the United States, Anderson often returned to Seattle, where she became a jazz staple.
  • The city’s Bumbershoot Arts Festival awarded her with its Golden Umbrella honor in 2002.

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