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Strange Fruit: Billie Holiday and the Biography of a Song
Contributor(s): Margolick, David (Author)
ISBN: 0060959568     ISBN-13: 9780060959562
Publisher: Ecco Press
OUR PRICE:   $18.04  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 2001
Qty:
Annotation: Recorded by jazz legend Billie Holiday in 1939, "Strange Fruit" is considered the first significant song of the civil rights movement and the first musical assault against racial lynchings. The author discusses his revealing account of the song, chronicles the civil rights movement from the 1930s on, and profiles Holiday and songwriter, Abel Meeropol. Photos.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Music
- Music | History & Criticism - General
- Social Science | Ethnic Studies - African American Studies
Dewey: 782.421
LCCN: 00047688
Physical Information: 0.43" H x 5.42" W x 7.98" (0.33 lbs) 168 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Learn the story behind the song performed by Andra Day in United States vs. Billie Holiday now on Hulu

Recorded by jazz legend Billie Holiday in 1939, "Strange Fruit" is considered the first significant song of the Civil Rights movement and the first direct assault against racial lynchings in the South. First sung in New York's Caf Society, these revolutionary lyrics have taken up a life of their own, as David Margolick discusses in his revealing account of the song and the struggle it came to personify.

Voted the "Song of the Century" by Time, "Strange Fruit" is a searing evocation of lynching. And when Billie Holiday sang it, she held audiences in rapt attention, moving some to tears, others to anger, and all to a heightened awareness of the racist violence that was still, nearly a century after the Civil War, taking the lives of African Americans. Now, David Margolick's account cuts away the myths that have grown up around both Holiday and her most famous song, allowing readers to discover the true origins of "Strange Fruit" and the circuitous paths it took to the center of a nation's conscience.

Margolick establishes the political and cultural context that surrounded "Strange Fruit" in 1939--a year in which there were three recorded lynchings and suspicion of many others, and which saw the publication of Gone with the Wind--and traces the song's journey through the red-baiting 50s and the incipient Civil Rights movement of the 60s, right up to the reverence it still inspires today. Along the way, Margolick includes commentary and reaction to the song from black and white audiences of different eras, and writers and musicians as varied as Lena Horne, Paul Robeson, Pauline Kael, Charles Mingus, Cassandra Wilson, Maya Angelou, among others.

Exploring the intricate nexus between jazz, race, and politics, Strange Fruit opens a window onto an extraordinary song, the woman who sang it, and the role it played in our culture's evolving consciousness of racism.


Contributor Bio(s): Margolick, David: -

David Margolick is a contributor to Vanity Fair and the former National Legal Affairs Editor for the New York Times. A four-time Pulitzer Prize nominee, he is the author of Undue Influence and At the Bar. He lives in New York City.