Dinah Washington (born August 29, 1924, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, U.S.—died December 14, 1963, Detroit, Michigan) was an American jazz and blues singer noted for her excellent voice control and unique gospel-influenced delivery. Often called the Queen of the Blues, she was a profoundly influential vocal artist, especially on female rock and roll singers.
As a child, Ruth Jones moved with her family from Alabama to Chicago’s South Side. She sang in and played the piano for her church choir, following the lead of her devoutly religious and musically inclined mother, Asalea (later Alice) Williams. In 1939, after winning an amateur talent contest at the Regal Theater, Jones began to sing and play piano in various Chicago nightclubs, despite her mother’s disapproval of secular music. In addition, she toured the gospel circuit with Sallie Martin’s gospel group. About 1942–43 she adopted the stage name Dinah Washington while working as a singer in the house band at the Garrick Stage Lounge.
From 1943 to 1946 Washington sang with the Lionel Hampton band and in 1946 began a successful solo career. During the period from 1949 to 1955, her recordings were consistently among the top 10 hits on the rhythm-and-blues (R&B) charts. Her first hit song was “Evil Gal Blues,” and it was followed by such others as “Am I Asking Too Much” and “Baby Get Lost.” She later crossed over to the popular music market, in which she had her greatest commercial success, notably with “What a Diff’rence a Day Makes.” The song won her a Grammy Award in 1959 for best R&B performance.
Throughout the 1950s Washington continued performing at jazz festivals, including the Newport Jazz Festival in Rhode Island in 1958, a performance that yielded the live album Newport ’58. However, she retained many of her earlier fans because of her passionate supple style. She was married at least seven times (“I change husbands before they change me,” she once said) and was known for her love of fine clothing. During a performance at the London Palladium, Washington reportedly told the audience, “There is but one heaven, one hell, one queen, and your [Queen] Elizabeth is an imposter.”
Washington died at age 39 from an accidental overdose of prescription medications for weight control and insomnia. In 1993 she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Among the performers who owe a debt to her talent are early rock and roll and R&B singers such as Etta James and Ruth Brown as well as 21st-century artists such as Amy Winehouse, who once called Washington “my goddess.” In his autobiography, Q (2001), Quincy Jones (who worked as Washington’s arranger) wrote of her impeccable musical skill:
She had a voice that was like the pipes of life.…Every single melody she sang she made hers. Once she put her soulful trademark on a song, she owned it and it was never the same.