David Margolick, Hilton Als

Cover Image

$8.99

Recorded by jazz legend Billie Holiday in 1939, "Strange Fruit" is considered to be the first significant song of the civil rights movement and the first direct musical assault upon racial lynchings in the South. Originally sung in New York's Cafe Society, these revolutionary lyrics take on a life of their own in this revealing account of the song and the struggle it personified. Strange Fruit not only chronicles the civil rights movement from the '30s on, it examines the lives of the beleaguered Billie Holiday and Abel Meeropol, the white Jewish schoolteacher and communist sympathizer who wrote the song that would have an impact on generations of fans, black and white, unknown and famous, including performers Lena Horne, Eartha Kitt, and Sting.

Paperback

Music

True

False

False

False

True

0060959568

May 16, 2004

168

$12.00

Unread

January 23, 2001

Ecco

7

Strange Fruit : The Biography of a Song

View or Purchase Online
Page mangled? Get an up-to-date browser. Try Mozilla.