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Strange Fruit: Billie Holiday, Cafe Society and an Early Cry for Civil Rights
Strange Fruit Billie Holiday Cafe Society and an Early Cry for Civil Rights
Author: David Margolick
An exploration of the story of a song that foretold a movement, and the lady who dared to sing it. The powerful, evocative lyrics of "Strange Fruit" - written by a Jewish communist schoolteacher - portray the lynching of a black man in the South. In 1939, its performance sparked controversy (and sometimes violence) wherever Billie Holiday went. ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781841951133
ISBN-10: 1841951137
Publication Date: 4/9/2001
Pages: 160
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Publisher: Payback Press
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
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korri avatar reviewed Strange Fruit: Billie Holiday, Cafe Society and an Early Cry for Civil Rights on + 5 more book reviews
Another edition of Margolick's book has a more brief and accurate subtitle: Biography of a Song. This concise book covers the creation, performance, reception, and myth of the song most closely associated with Lady Day. Margolick asserts that while 'Strange Fruit' has slipped through the cracks of academic study because it defies easy categorization (folk? jazz? protest song?), it has never slipped through the consciousness of those who've heard it.

Margolick contextualizes the composer, singer, song and audiences in well-researched and non-scholarly prose. Billie Holiday first sang 'Strange Fruit' in 1939, the same year that 'Gone With the Wind' thrilled audiences and Hitler marched into Poland. Contemporary reactions and responses to the song are fascinating. Everyone experienced discomfort while some disdained its 'lack of melody'. The depressing and upsetting lyrics kept it off the radio and the expensive, not widely distributed release by Commodore Records meant that large parts of the U.S. didn't hear the song. Though 'Strange Fruit' was powerfully resonant for black intelligentsia and earnestly progressive Northern whites, the black press wrote little about troubled Holiday or the song. Some black people didn't care for the song at all because it represented victimhood.

People's remembrances of hearing the song--live or recorded--were scattered throughout the text, as were other performers' thoughts and feelings about giving voice to the raw and excruciating song that Billie made her own. This is a short and fascinating read