Little Miss Cornshucks, who is remembered as a riveting live performer, could easily be labeled as one of the more influential singers in history; unfortunately, hers is a legacy lost to the vagaries of time, bad luck, and personal problems. (Critic Barry Mazor, writing in No Depression in May 2003, did much to unearth her achievements in a definitive article.) Cornshucks' influence can be traced in important early soul singers (Aretha Franklin and Otis Redding), R&B giants (Ruth Brown, LaVerne Baker), even '50s pop singers (Johnnie Ray). In fact, her version of "Try a Little Tenderness" not only bridged the gap between the song's crooner origins and its soul revival, it provided a virtual template for Franklin's and Redding's take on the number. And lest one try to dismiss her as a curiosity for musical obscurantists only, legendary Atlantic Records head Ahmet Ertegun has called her the best blues singer he had ever heard. She was born Mildred Cummings in Dayton, OH, on May 26, 1923 to a large musical family. A Dayton promoter brought Cornshucks to Chicago in 1940, where the singer perfected her "rustic comedienne" stage persona -- complete with straw hat, pigtails, bare feet, and country bumpkin clothing. Indeed, her stage act -- which would delight audiences in Chicago, L.A., and New York -- emphasized her comic timing as well as her heart-wrenching vocals. Cornshucks' career peaked in the late '40s, a period which even saw her appearance in a Hollywood B-movie, Campus Sleuth. Her earliest recordings, including a take on her signature "So Long," were cut for the short-lived Sunbeam label. Among the Sunbeam sides was an affecting Cornshucks co-write, "I Don't Love You Anymore." Amidst her ascending career, she also recorded for Miltone under the helm of sax...