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Dinah Washington

DINAH WASHINGTON

YEAR

1993

INDUCTED BY

Natalie Cole

CATEGORY

Early Influences

Her career was brief but dazzling.

Music icon Quincy Jones said, “She could take the melody in her hand, hold it like an egg, crack it open, fry it, let it sizzle, reconstruct it, put the egg back in the box and back in the refrigerator and you would’ve still understood every single syllable.”

Dinah Washington

Dinah Washington

HALL OF FAME
ESSAY

By Michael Hill

Dinah Washington, as she herself would readily acknowledge, was called Queen of the Blues, During a show at the London Palladium, she told an audience that purportedly included Queen Elizabeth, “There is but one heaven, one hell, one queen, and your Elizabeth is an imposter.”

Washington was born Ruth Lee Jones in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, in 1924, but grew up in Chicago’s Southside. Washington was raised by a devoutly religious mother who sang in church and taught piano in the neighborhood, Washington learned to play piano at an early age and proved to be a powerful gospel singer.

She and her mother became a popular attraction at local churches, earning little money but considerable respect.

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Class of 1993
intricate, penetrating vocals
Natalie Cole
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