Strange Fruit by Billie Holiday
Genre: Jazz
Year: 2007
Year: 2007
"Strange Fruit" is a song performed most famously by Billie Holiday, who released her first recording of it in 1939, the year she first sang it. Written by the teacher Abel Meeropol as a poem, it condemned American racism, particularly the lynching of African Americans. Such lynchings had occurred chiefly in the South but also in all other regions of the United States. The writer, Abel, set it to music and with his wife and the singer Laura Duncan, performed it as a protest song in New York venues, including Madison Square Garden.
The song has been covered by numerous artists, as well as inspiring novels, other poems and other creative works. In 1978 Holidays version of the song was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. It was also included in the list of Songs of the Century', by the Read full article at wikipedia.org
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People who like this song also like Redemption Song, Purple Rain, Bo Diddley, Living For The City, I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry.
More songs by Billie Holiday: You Go to My Head, God Bless the Child, Sugar, Stormy Weather, Gloomy Sunday.
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