In her late teens and early twenties, McRae played piano at a New York club called Minton's Playhouse, Harlem's most famous jazz club, sang as a chorus girl, and worked as a secretary. It was at Minton's where she met trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, bassist Oscar Pettiford, and drummer Kenny Clarke. Had her first important job as a pianist with the Benny Carter's big band (1944), worked with Count Basie (1944) and made first recording as pianist with Mercer Ellington Band (1946–1947). But it was while working in Brooklyn that she came to the attention of Decca’s Milt Gabler. Her five year association with Decca yielded 12 LPs.
In 1948 she moved to Chicago with comedian George Kirby. She played piano steadily for almost four years before returning to New York. Those years in Chicago, McRae told Jazz Forum, "gave me whatever it is that I have now. That's the most prominent schooling I ever had." Back in New York in the early 1950s, McRae got the record contract that launched her career. In 1954, she was voted best new female vocalist by Down Beat magazine. She married bassist Ike Isaacs in the late 1950s.
Among her most interesting recording projects were Mad About The Man (1957) with composer Noël Coward, Boy Meets Girl (1957) with Sammy Davis, Jr., participating in Dave Brubeck's The Real Ambassadors (1961) with Louis Armstrong, a tribute album You're Lookin' at Me (A Collection of Nat King Cole Songs) (1983), cutting an album of live duets with Betty Carter, The Carmen McRae-Betty Carter Duets (1987), being accompanied by Dave Brubeck and George Shearing, and closing her career with brilliant tributes to Thelonious Monk, Carmen Sings Monk (1990), and Sarah Vaughan, Sarah: Dedicated to You (1991).
Carmen McRae sang in jazz clubs throughout the United States—and across the world—for over fifty years. McRae was a popular performer at the legendary Monterey Jazz Festival (1961–1963, 1966, 1971, 1973, 1982). Performing with Duke Ellington's at the North Sea Jazz Festival in 1980, singing "Don't Get Around Much Any More", and at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1989.
Carmen McRae was forced to retire in 1991 due to emphysema.McRae died on November 10, 1994, in Beverly Hills, California from a stroke, following complications from respiratory illness.
Carmen Mercedes McRae (*8 de abril de 1920 -† 10 de noviembre de 1994) Conocida con el apodo "Cantante de Cantantes" fue contemporánea de Ella Fitzgerald y Sarah Vaughan, considerada la virtual sucesora de Billie Holiday, fue una de las más importantes cantantes de jazz y compositoras de su era, a través de 60 álbums registrados y una carrera que la llevó a Europa, Sudamérica y Japón.
Trabajó a lo largo de su carrera con figuras de la talla de Sammy Davis Jr, Noel Coward, Sarah Vaughan, Nat King Cole, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington y Thelonius Monk. Fumadora empedernida debió retirarse en 1991 a causa de enfisema pulmonar muriendo poco después de un derrame en Beverly Hills, California.
Fue siete veces nominada al Grammy.
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