His death was confirmed by Gary King, a longtime friend, who found Albertson’s body.
In 1959, Albertson took what became an inadvertent first step to resurrecting Smith’s recordings, made between 1923 and 1933: He invited John Hammond, the celebrated Columbia Records producer who had supervised her last sessions, to his apartment in Philadelphia.
Albertson, who was then a disc jockey at a jazz station, wanted Hammond to listen to two veteran jazz musicians, guitarist Lonnie Johnson and banjo player Elmer Snowden, in the hope he would sign them.
While no deal was made, Hammond and Albertson stayed in touch over the next decade and spoke often about Bessie Smith. Albertson eventually persuaded Hammond to reissue her recordings, a cache of musical history that includes acknowledged classics like “Downhearted Blues” and “T’ain’t Nobody’s Bizness if I Do.” Her accompanists included Louis Armstrong on cornet and Fletcher Henderson on piano.
In 1968, Hammond agreed to the project, naming Albertson its producer and Larry Hiller its engineer. In “Bessie” (1972), his biography, Albertson described the process of listening to all 159 of Smith’s recorded songs as “a remarkable experience that only the raw power and emotion of an artist like Bessie Smith could keep from becoming mind-numbing.”
In all, 10 LPs of her work were released, in five two-disc sets. The first, “Bessie Smith: The World’s Greatest Blues Singer” (1970), earned Albertson a Grammy Award for best liner notes. The other four were released gradually through 1972.
Reviewing the first four two-album sets in The New Yorker in 1971, Whitney Balliett called the results “a wonder.”
“Columbia, with Chris Albertson heading up the project, has done a herculean job on the Bessie Smith reissues,” he wrote, noting that the strong sales for the first four sets had shown that “what started out as sort of a foundation altruistic project, a musical-archaeological dig into the works of a blues singer who died 34 years ago, has become a thriving investment.”
Albertson’s work on those reissues quickly led to a contract with the publishing house Stein & Day to write Bessie Smith’s biography.
One of his goals in writing “Bessie” was to debunk the many myths about her.
They included the long-held belief — spread early on by Hammond — that after the auto accident in 1937 in Mississippi that would prove fatal to Smith, a white hospital refused to treat her. Albertson reconstructed the accident, which took place on a dark road when Smith’s lover, Richard Morgan, driving a Packard, hit the rear end of a truck.
The impact of the crash forced Smith onto the road and nearly severed her right arm.
Dr. Hugh Smith, who was white, told Albertson in an interview for the book that he had been driving to a fishing trip and stopped to treat her, but that soon after, another car, with a white couple in it, plowed into his. Eventually, two ambulances arrived; one of them took Smith to a black hospital, where she died. No white hospital was involved.
Smith was at first reluctant to speak to Albertson, and referred him to some new Columbia LPs of her music, Albertson recalled in an interview with Terry Gross on the NPR program “Fresh Air” in 2003, when a revised and expanded version of “Bessie” was published. “Read those liner notes and you’ll find the closest thing to the truth,” Smith said.
Albertson said that he responded, “I wrote the liner notes,” and the doctor agreed to talk.
“Bessie” was quickly acknowledged as the definitive Bessie Smith biography. Reviewing it in The Los Angeles Times, jazz critic Leonard Feather called it “the most devastating, provocative and enlightening work of its kind ever contributed to the annals of jazz literature.”
Christiern Gunnar Albertson was born on Oct. 18, 1931, in Reykjavik, Iceland. His father abandoned him and his mother, Yvonne, before his first birthday; she would marry three more times.
He was living in Copenhagen in 1947 when he first heard Bessie Smith on a tiny radio speaker. Impressed by the sincerity of her voice, he borrowed books on African-American music from the United States Information Service library.
The discoveries transformed him, as they transformed other young Danes who dreamed of going to New Orleans to hear its blues and jazz musicians.
“We found magic in such names as Kid Ory, King Oliver, Johnny Dodds, Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey,” he wrote on his blog, Stomp Off, in 2010.
By 1955 he had moved back to his homeland and was a disc jockey for Armed Forces Radio in Keflavik, Iceland. Two years later he immigrated to the United States, where he found radio work in Philadelphia.
In the 1960s he moved to New York, where, as a producer for Riverside Records, he recorded the final sessions of blues singer Ida Cox and pianist Meade Lux Lewis and supervised the label’s “Living Legends” album series, which featured artists like Alberta Hunter, Sweet Emma Barrett and Louis Cottrell Jr.
He returned to radio in 1964, spending about a year as station manager of WBAI, the iconoclastic listener-supported New York FM station.
By then he had begun writing liner notes for jazz albums, and a few years later he started his long associations as a critic for Stereo Review magazine. He also contributed to DownBeat and other publications.
Information on Albertson’s survivors was not immediately available.
In “Bessie,” Albertson wrote about Smith’s final Columbia session, in 1933, at which she recorded “Do Your Duty” and “Gimme a Pigfoot (and a Bottle of Beer).”
“Following Bessie’s session, the studio closed for the weekend,” he wrote. “But when it opened again, Monday morning, a nervous 18-year-old Bessie Smith-inspired singer named Billie Holiday made her debut. Fate had neatly arranged a changing of the guard.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.