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Originally from St. Joseph, Missouri, and trained as a music
educator, Etta was selected as one of the 25 Most Powerful Women in Pittsburgh by Pittsburgh Magazine for
1995. She was awarded Woman of the Year in Arts and Music for 1995 by the Pittsburgh Vectors Society and she received
the "Harry" Schwalb award for Excellence in the Arts in 1998. She was also featured on the cover
of Pittsburgh Magazine in September 1998, along with Al Dowe, for receiving the magazine's annual Arts Award for
Jazz. In January 2000, the Pittsburgh Post Gazette awarded her "Performer of the Year" for 1999.
She has appeared on Broadway, in movies, in local productions at the City Theater and the Public Theater, and co-hosted
a television talk show-all between club work and school programs! Etta and Al have collaborated in poetry programs with Pulitzer Prize winner Gwendolyn Brooks and in two
programs with actor Danny Glover reading the poetry of Lanston Hughes. They also tour with their rendition
of the Cotton Club Revisited and a popular Duke Ellington program. Somehow they have recently fond the time to record
a CD called The Sunday Jam, recorded at the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild, which was inspired by the Sunday Night
Jam Session at Club Café on the South Side. More recently, Etta completed her own CD called My Foolish
Heart. 1999-Voted Performer of the Year by Post
Gazette and co- owner of the new jazz club "Dowe's on 9th. With Gateway to the Arts for the past ten seasons, vocalist Etta Cox, along with the Al Dowe Quartet, has
brought the jazz elements of syncopation, improvisation and seat singing to the ears of at least 280,000
of the region's school students. The children and young adults who have seen her Gateway to Music School Program
"A Vocal Journey with Etta Cox" now have a far better understanding of the African-American influence
on American music and how the hoot and holler songs of 200 years ago are related to the rap music of today. Some
of these same elements are traced in her second program with Al Dowe's group, "Bebop to Doo Wop."
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