April 26, 1886… Ma Rainey was born. Gertrude “Ma” Rainey was born in Columbus, Georgia, and became one of the most important voices in early blues history. Known as the Mother of the Blues, Rainey helped bring blues music from Southern folk tradition into popular stage performance, where audiences could hear the pain, humor, boldness, and survival inside the sound. Before blues became a major recorded genre, Ma Rainey was already performing across the South in vaudeville, tent shows, and traveling productions. Her voice carried something that could not be polished away. It was deep, raw, commanding, and rooted in real life. She did not just sing the blues. She helped shape how the blues would be performed. Her music gave space to stories about love, heartbreak, independence, hardship, desire, and everyday life. At a time when many performers were expected to fit into narrow roles, Ma Rainey stood on stage with presence, confidence, and control. She was not background. She was the main event. Her influence reached far beyond her own recordings. She helped open doors for later blues women, helped define early Black entertainment, and left a mark on American music that can still be heard in blues, jazz, soul, rock, and hip-hop. Ma Rainey’s story matters because she represents more than music history. She represents Southern history, women’s history, stage history, and the long tradition of artists turning lived experience into sound. On April 26, we remember Ma Rainey not only as the Mother of the Blues, but as one of the women who helped give American music its backbone. #MaRainey #History #MusicHistory #BluesHistory #WomenInMusic