Billie holiday biography video of barack

  • "Strange Fruit," and more
  • Singer Billie Holiday's civil rights activism
  • Billie Holiday Day

    Singer-songwriter and musician Elanora Fagan famously known as “Billie Holiday” was born April 7, 1915 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    According to author Alex Haley, like Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday was from Irish-Afro-American ancestry, a distinction the two singers share with President Obama.

    (Some day our history will catch up with our reality.)

    After a very difficult childhood, she began performing in Harlem nightclubs as a young teenager. John Hammond discovered her and arranged for her to make her first recording at 18.

    One of the most beloved of all the figures of the jazz pantheon, Holiday was dubbed “Lady Day” by her longtime friend and colleague Lester Young.

    It’s cost me a lot
    But there’s one thing that I’ve got
    It’s my man
    Cold and wet, tired you bet
    But all that I soon forget
    With my man
    He’s not much for looks
    And no hero out of books
    Is my man
    Two or three girls has he
    That he likes as well as me
    But I love him!
    I don’t know why I should
    He isn’t good, he isn’t true
    He beats me too
    What can I do?

    Oh, my man I love him so
    He’ll never know
    All my life is just despair
    But I don’t care
    When he takes me in his arms
    The world is bright, all right
    What’s the difference if I say
    I’ll go away, When I know
    I’ll come back on my knees some day?
    For whatever my man is
    I am his forever more
    Oh, my man I love him

    Sometimes I say
    If I could just get away
    With my man
    He’d go straight sure as fate
    For it never is too late
    For a man
    I just like to dream
    Of a cottage by a stream
    With my man
    Where a few flowers grew
    And perhaps a kid or two
    Like my man
    And then my eyes get wet
    I most forget till he gets hot
    And tells me not to talk such rot

    Oh, my man I love him so
    He’ll never know
    All my life is just despair
    But I don’t care
    When he takes me in his arms
    The world is bright, all right
    What’s the difference if I say
    I’ll go away, When I know
    I’ll come back on my knees some day?
    For what ever my man is
    I am his forever more




    Various

    Down Beat: Sixty Years of Jazz

    Hal Leonard Corporation


    Wynton Marsalis, Geoffrey Ward

    Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life

    Random House Trade Paperbacks


    Geoffrey C. Ward, Ken Burns

    Jazz: A History of America's Music

    Knopf


    David Margolick, Hilton Als

    Strange Fruit: The Biography of a Song

    Harper Perennial


    Billie Holiday, Jr., Arthur Herzog

    God Bless the Child

    Amistad


    Carole Weatherford

    Becoming Billie Holiday

    Wordsong



    Louis Armstrong, Danny Barker, Doc Cheatham, Vic Dickenson, Roy Eldridge

    Billie Holiday - Ultimate Collection

    Verve

    DVD


    (Includes Count Bassie, Billie Holiday, Coleman Hawkins, Jimmy Giuffre, Red Allen, Lester Young, and Milt Hilton)

    The Sound of Jazz (1957)

    DVD


    Billie Holiday

    The Life and Artistry of Lady Day

    Music Video Distributors DVD 0265

    DVD




    Billie Holiday

    Genius of Lady Day

    Efor Films

    DVD


    Billie Holiday

    The Lady Day's Life

    Stars of Jazz

    DVD


    Arturo de Cordova, Marjorie Lord, Irene Rich, Louis Armstrong and His Band, Billie Holiday, Woody Herman, Woody Herman and His Orchestra

    New Orleans

    Kino Video

    DVD


    Joe Williams, Dave Brubeck, Sarah Vaughan, Thelonious Monk, Joshua Redman

    Monterey Jazz Festival: 40 Legendary Years

    Warner Home Video

    DVD


    Diana Ross, Billy Dee Williams

    Lady Sings the Blues

    Paramount

    DVD Biographical film


    Duke Ellington, Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, Cab Calloway, Bing Crosby

    Blue Melodies

    Kino Video

    VHS


    Lester Young & Billie Holiday

    Lester Young & Billie Holiday

    Vidjazz

    VHS

    Billie Holiday

    "Lady Day"
    Eleanora Fagan
    Eleonora De Viese
    Eleanora Fagan Gough

    Vocalist, Bandleader, Composer

    (1915 - 1959)

    Billie Holiday is considered the world’s greatest jazz singer, impossible to imitate but hugely influential

    Billie Holiday, 1915-1959

    "I don't think I ever sing the same way twice. The blues is sort of a mixed-up thing. You just have to feel it. Anything I do sing is part of my life."

    The Child: Eleanora “Billie Holiday” Fagan

    Eleanora Fagan, the soulful songstress we know today as Billie Holiday, was born to Sarah Julia “Sadie” Fagan and Clarence Halliday in Philadelphia, PA. Billie's mother, Sadie, did not have support from her own parents who lived in Baltimore, so she made arrangements for young Billie to stay with her Baltimorean half sister, Eva Miller & Eva’s mother-in-law Martha Miller.

    For the first 10 years of her life, Billie Holiday was cared for mostly by others, because her mother had taken a traveling job with the railroad.

    Billie frequently skipped school and when she was 9 years old, she was sent to a Catholic “reform” school. She was released later that year (1925) into the custody of her mother. Soon after, Billie’s mother moved to New York City for employment, and Billie joined her there in 1929.

    Though Billie’s life was not an easy one, she found escape in music and was soon recognized for her incredible singing style and interpretation of songs. Early musical influences for Billie came from listening to records by Bessie Smithand Louis Armstrong, with whom she would later star in her first and only film feature, New Orleans (1947). In Billie’s composition, “Billie’s Blues” released in 1936, one can hear the influence of Bessie Smith.

    Bessie Smith “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out”

    Louis Armstrong, “Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans”

    “Billie’s Blues,” written and performed by Billie Holiday

    The Rising star: Billie Holiday

    It was in New York City that Eleanora Fagan changed her name to Billie Holiday, inspired by her admiration offilm star Billie Dove.

    And it was at Covan’s, a small jazz club in Harlem, New York that 18 year old Billie Holiday was disco

    .