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Billie Holiday - Biography
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Last Editor: lsudumbochic
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Billie Holiday Biography -
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| Name : | Billie Holiday |
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Date of birth :
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7 April 1915
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Birthplace :
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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
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Date of death :
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17 July 1959
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Place of death :
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New York, New York, USA. (effects of heroin addiction)
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Profession :
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Composer (Music Score), Actor, Book Author, Songwriter
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Birth name :
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Eleanora Gough Harris
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Nickname :
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Lady Day
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Billie Holiday Trivia -
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- She died with 70 cents in the bank and $750 strapped to her leg -- a reminder of her life-long fear of poverty.
- In 1959, narcotic addiction was a crime, not an illness. She was arrested on her deathbed.
- Billie had no cabaret card and this kept her from working in New York City clubs for the last 12 years of her life.
- Her given name was Eleanora -- "Billie" came from silent screen star Billie Dove.
- Inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1979.
- Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000 (under the category Early Influence).
- Posthumously inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame for "God Bless The Child" (1976), "Strange Fruit" (1978), "Lover Man" (1989), and "Lady In Satin" (2000)
- Made her recording debut on "Your Mother's Son-In-Law" (1933) with Benny Goodman.
- Was the common-law wife of trumpeter Joe Guy (1951-1957), but they always identified themselves to people as husband and wife. She was separated from her last husband, Louis McKay, at the time of her death.
- Her grandfather was one of 17 children born to a black Virginia slave and her white Irish master.
- At the time of her birth, her mother, Sadie Fagan (born Sarah Harris), was just 13. Her father, Clarence Holiday, was 15. It's uncertian if they ever married. Clarence abandoned Sadie when Billie was an infant.
- Ranked #6 on VH1's 100 Greatest Women of Rock N Roll
- Cousin of former boxing champion turned minister Henry Armstrong.
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Billie Holiday Detailed Biography -
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Billie "Lady Day" Holiday was born in Baltimore in 1915. She endured a hard childhood -- her musician father left the family early, and her mother wasn't able to keep her consistently which resulted in Billie often being put in care or relatives who abused her. She was raped at age 11 and grew up in poverty. She sums it up best in the first line of her famous autobiography Lady Sings the Blues, "Mom and Pop were just a couple of kids when they got married. He was eighteen, she was sixteen, and I was three."
In 1929, she moved to New York, where she worked as a maid and then as a teenage prostitute. According to legend, in 1930 (at the age of 15), to keep her mother from being evicted, she sang Body and Soul and reduced the audience to tears. She began singing in bars and restaurants. Four years later, she made her first record with Benny Goodman. In 1935, she got her big breakthrough when she recorded four sides, which featured What a Little Moonlight Can Do, and Miss Brown to You. She landed her own recording contract, and while the songs given to her were run-of-the-mill (versus the ones saved for the top white singers), she made the songs classics because of her singing ability. Her voice-quality wasn't outstanding and her vocal range was limited, but she had an uncanny ability to breathe life into a song, using things like pauses and slurs -- which made the song become a story or an experience, rather than just a group of notes sang with a voice. She poured her heart and soul into every song and her ability to interpret a song and make you feel it was unheard of. While it is more commonplace today, Billie Holiday pioneered the style, and this is how she took ordinary 2nd-rate songs and made them extraordinary. Her accompanist, Mal Waldron, summed it up best by saying, "She had a way with words."
In 1936, she recorded with pianist Teddy Wilson, where she first worked with Lester Young. These two were made for each other. When he played his phrases with hers, he breathed as she breathed. They perfectly complimented each other stylistically. He nicknamed her "Lady Day" and she nicknamed him "Prez." They sounded like 2 voices from the same person.
Her recording career is divided into 3 periods. The first is the aforementioned period in the 1930s, recorded with Columbia, marked by her time with Wilson, Goodman, and Young. Her music was made for jukeboxes, but she turned them into jazz classics. Her popularity never matched her artistic success, but she was widely played on Armed Forces Radio during World War II. From this period came the anti-racism song Strange Fruit, in which she paints a terrifying picture of lynched black bodies hanging from trees. The lyrics of the song were adapted from a poem by Louis Allen.
The next period is her Decca (record company) years in the Fourties, marked by recordings with string orchestra accompaniment. While the records from this period are impressive, they're not as "jazzy." This period featured Loverman as well as her self-written classics Don't Explain, and God Bless the Child. In late 1947, she was arrested on drug charges and spent 18 months in a federal reformatory.
Unlike her singing, in life, her instincts were far from perfect. She fell in love with men who stole money from her, abused her, and introduced her to heroin. When she got out of prison, she went back to heroin. By the Fifties, the third period, her voice was going her voice was more croaky, and she sometimes missed notes, but her ability to interpret songs was enhanced. Some consider this work, with Verve records, to be some of her finest. Personally, it makes me cringe when she misses notes (to each their own -- I like her Columbia work the best, because her voice is at its strongest). Her classic recording of Lady in Satin was described by Ron David as though it "sounded like her voice had died and come back to haunt us from the grave." It isn't known if misery, drugs, or drink (or all three) killed her, but in an unbearable macabre touch, she was arrested on narcotics charges while on her death bed in 1959.
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