Authors: John Szwed
she did own records by Gershwin
: Blackburn,
With Billie,
p. 97.
At one point Aronowitz asked Billie
: Al Aronowitz, “The Saddest Song Ever Sung,” First of the Month, www.firstofthemonth.org/music/music_aronowitz_saddest.html.
She avoids the birdcall-like dips
: Humphrey Lyttelton,
The Best of Jazz
(New York: Taplinger, 1978), pp. 209â11.
All the while she is phrasing across the beat
: A second take of the song at a slower tempo exists but has less energy behind it. In a radio interview Phil Schaap asked Eddie Durham, the guitarist on the record, why the tempo was dropped on the second take. Durham replied that they'd taken a break to smoke a joint.
Preston Love said that she always listened
: Preston Love,
A Thousand Honey Creeks Later: My Life in Music from Basie to Motown and Beyond
(Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1997), p. 219.
“Fitzgerald, entering the microphonic arena”
: “Chick, Basie Battle,”
New York Amsterdam News,
January 28, 1938.
“The reason for her dismissal”
: “Hammond Did Not Have Holiday Fired!”
Down Beat
, September 1938, p. 6.
Shaw wrote a short story
: Artie Shaw,
The Best of Intentions and Other Stories
(McKinleyville, CA: Daniel and Daniel, 1989); Willie the Lion Smith,
Music on My Mind
(New York: Doubleday, 1964).
“In a corner sat a distinguished-looking fellow”
: Timme Rosenkrantz and Inez Cavanaugh, liner notes to
Billie Holiday's Greatest Hits
.
“I gave her a record of Debussy's”
: Blackburn,
With Billie,
p. 97.
“She treated me well”
: Helen Forrest,
I Had the Craziest Dream: Helen Forrest and the Big Band Era
(New York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1982), pp. 58â59.
nightspot without racial barriers
: “Mixed Band at Café Society: Joe Sullivan Organizes 1st Name Negro-White Orchestra Downtown,”
New York Amsterdam News
, November 25, 1939, p. 1.
“I always looked on Billie as a finished performer”
: Kuehl manuscript, Rutgers UniversityâNewark.
Holiday's recording of “Strange Fruit” was released
: The best source for information on this song is David Margolick's
Strange Fruit: Billie Holiday, Café Society, and an Early Cry for Civil Rights
(Philadelphia: Running Press, 2000), but additional material has been added here from the author's research. See also Nancy Kovaleff Baker, “Abel Meeropol (a.k.a Lewis Allan): Political Commentator and Social Conscience,”
American Music
, Spring 2002, pp. 25â79.
earlier pieces such as Bessie Smith's “Haunted House Blues”
: Adam Gussow,
Seems Like Murder Here: Southern Violence and the Blues
Tradition
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002).
Lead Belly's “Hangman's Blues” and “The Gallis Pole”
:
New Masses
, January 1931, p. 17; Lawrence Gellert,
Negro Songs of Protest
(New York: American Music League, 1936), pp. 10â11;
Workers' Song Book, No. 2
(New York: Workers' Music League, 1935), pp. 23â26.
the night in 1958 that she sang it for Maya Angelou
: Maya Angelou,
The Heart of a Woman
(New York: Random House, 1981), pp. 13â14.
“spell out all the things that had killed Pop”
: Holiday and Dufty,
Lady Sings the Blues
, p. 94.
She undoubtedly also knew the widely told account
: Chris Albertson,
Bessie
, revised and expanded edition (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003), pp. 255â71.
A few years later James Baldwin would write
: James Baldwin, “Many Thousands Gone,”
Notes of a Native Son
(Boston: Beacon Press, 1955), p. 25.
“separating the straight people from the squares”
: Holiday and Dufty,
Lady Sings the Blues
, p. 95.
interview that Holiday gave to
PM
newspaper
: Harriott, “The Hard Life of Billie Holiday”; Holiday and Dufty,
Lady Sings the Blues
, p. 94.
PM
's
editors printed a response
: “Letters: âStrange Fruit,'”
PM
, September 23, 1945, p. 19.
Herzog Jr., a publicist and writer of song lyrics
: When the book first appeared, Herzog said that he had written a piece that would give “an accurate accounting of what occurred referring to incidents Billie presents quite differently,” which he'd titled “Blue Lady Sings Off-Key.” It was apparently never published. Letter from Arthur Herzog Jr., to Leonard Feather, August 31, 1956, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers UniversityâNewark.
“If Allan wants to come into court with his sheet music”
: Letter from William Dufty to A. D. Weinberger, Esq., October 21, 1956, p. 2, H. Dennis Fairchild archive. As far as Milt Gabler was concerned, the band at Café Society had worked up the music.
“nothing happened until Miss Holiday did the song”
: Letter from William Dufty to Le Baron Barker, Doubleday and Co., October 26, 1956, p. 1, H. Dennis Fairchild archive.
“When black face is lifted”
: Gellert,
Negro Songs of Protest
, pp. 10â11.
“For years both American fellow travelers and the FBI”
: Dufty to Barker, October 26, 1956, pp. 1â3, H. Dennis Fairchild archive.
“We give this statement to clarify the facts”
: www.icollector.com/BILLIE-HOLIDAY-D-S_i559529.
“I can understand the psychological reasons”
: Quoted in Margolick,
Strange Fruit,
pp. 128â29.
not based on making a social statement
: Gilbert Millstein, “For Kicks: I,”
New Yorker
, March 9, 1946, p. 34.
there are downward arcs of notes
: Robert Cogan,
New Images of Musical Sound
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1984), pp. 35â37.
The melody she creates is quite different
: William T. Dargan,
Lining Out the Word: Dr. Watts Hymn Singing in the Music of Black Americans
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006), pp. 218â20.
White had never met Billie
: Josh White, “A Fighter: That's the Billie I Remember,”
Melody Maker
, August 8, 1959, p. 5.
An article titled “Strange Song”
: “Strange Record,”
Time
, June 12, 1939.
African American press was far more sympathetic
:
Atlanta Daily World
, June 19, 1939, p. 2.
Breit later wrote in a review
: Harvey Breit, “Implanting Bitterness,”
New York Times
, July 21, 1956.
“It was one of the first modern blues”
: Kuehl notes, Rutgers UniversityâNewark.
the music she told him she wanted to sing
: Milt Gabler quoted in John McDonough, “On Disc: The Three Voices of Billie,”
Wall Street Journal
, December 16, 1991, p. A12.
The original version of “Gloomy Sunday”
: “Gloomy Sunday” was composed in 1933 by Rezso Seress, whose title in Hungarian translates as “The World Is Ending.” A later version with new Hungarian lyrics was written by László Jávor and retitled “Sad Sunday.” “Gloomy Sunday” was first recorded in English with lyrics by Sam M. Lewis, and rewritten again with another set of English lyrics by Desmond Carter. Billie Holiday's version used Lewis's lyrics.
It could also be played by an orchestra
: Paul Bailey, “Tong Sung Long,”
Times Literary Supplement
, October 29, 2004.
CHAPTER
EIGHT
:
The Songs II
“But then he contradicted himself”
: Clarke,
Wishing on the Moon
, p. 191.
“We changed the lyrics in a couple of spots”
: Holiday and Dufty,
Lady Sings the Blues
, p. 101.
“Trav'lin' Light” was an instrumental tune
: Thomas A. DeLong,
Pops: Paul Whiteman, King of Jazz
(Piscataway, NJ: New Century, 1983), pp. 251â52.
It is a song that has had a long life
: For a deeper look at this song, see the excellent chapter on Holiday's and Crosby's versions of “I'll Be Seeing You” in Brackett,
Interpreting Popular Music,
pp. 54â74.
feelings she may have had about her drug use
: Albert Murray interviewed by Robert O'Meally, unpublished, n.d., Robert O'Meally archive.
The song on the other side of the Decca single
: “Roger Ramirez” in Stanley Dance,
The World of Swing
(New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1974), p. 327.
She paused frequently
: Maya Gibson, “Alternate Takes: Billie Holiday at the Intersection of Black Cultural Studies and Historical Musicology,” PhD dissertation, 2008, University of WisconsinâMadison; Mistinguett,
Mistinguett: Queen of the Paris Night
(London: Elek Books, 1954).
she remained in a torch mode
: Toft, “Lady Day the Torch Singer,” pp. 917â21.
“She'd walk over”
: Quoted in Chris Ingham,
Billie Holiday
(London: Unanimous, 2000), pp. 30â31.
“We never had time”
: Ibid., p. 102. An amateur recording of a 1955 Rowles-Holiday rehearsal is included in
The Complete Billie
Holiday on Verve, 1945â1959
.
“
display the complete interplay between us”
: Ibid., p. 96.
best audiences had been white
: Blackburn,
With Billie,
p. 302.
The strings were a comfort
: Ibid. For the record, Marilyn Moore, a singer with the Woody Herman and Charlie Barnet bands in the late 1950s, said she was very close to Billie at the time this record was being made and claimed that Billie said she had nothing to do with the planning of the
Lady in Satin
album, did not know who Ray Ellis was before this, and hated the
songs she did with violins because there were too many of them and she couldn't hear herself. When the record began to get airplay and reviews, however, she changed her mind about it (Ted Ono, liner notes to
Billie Holiday at Stratford '57
). There is a possibility that this is true, since Ellis said when she first saw how many string players there were she left the studio in tears and had to be talked into coming back. Such contradictions in accounts such as this one are not uncommon when the subject has not given many interviews and most of what we know of her comes from others.
The “ideal accompaniment for a jazz vocal”
: Glen Coulter, “Billie Holiday,” in Martin Williams, ed.,
Jazz Panorama
(New York: Crowell-Collier, 1962), p. 147.
Brooks's comments for the same CD reissue
: Michael Brooks's notes were dropped from the digitally remastered CD reissue in 1997.
The results may sound a bit weird
: My thanks to Andrew Homzy for his discussion of this recording on the Jazz Research List, August 29, 2013.
If that was so, Billie suggested
: Earle Zaidins, quoted in Blackburn,
With Billie,
p. 307.
“I'm Billie Holiday”
: Max Jones,
Talking Jazz
(New York: Norton, 1988), p.
257.
The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. To find the corresponding locations in the text of this digital version, please use the “search” function on your e-reader. Note that not all terms may be searchable.
“A Sailboat in the Moonlight,” 138â39
Adès, Thomas, 40
Afro-Latin music, 118
albums
Billie Holiday
, 194â96
Essential Billie Holiday: Carnegie Hall
, 47â48
Lady Day: The Complete Billie Holiday
, 191
Lady in Satin
, 128, 168, 191â95
Lady Sings the Blues
, 46â48
Last Recording
, 191, 194â96
alcohol use, 3, 24, 39, 44, 51, 68, 127, 192
Alexander, Willard, 146, 148, 155
Alhambra Grill (Harlem), 28
“All of Me,” 121, 128
Allan, Lewis, 158, 160â63, 167
“Am I Blue?,” 89, 171
American Federation of Musicians, 176
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), 172â73
American South, 35â37, 64, 69, 78, 83, 86, 126, 151â53, 165
Anderson, Marian, 157, 163
Angelou, Maya, 44, 158â59
“Any Old Time,” 152â53
Apollo Theater (Harlem), 95, 101, 146, 187
Armstrong, Louis, 27, 35, 42, 89, 123, 188
autobiography of, 15, 57
Holiday's duets with, 186
influences Holiday, 4, 98â99, 108, 110â11
on film/TV, 56â59, 61â63
Aronowitz, Al, 143
Astaire, Fred, 82, 132, 145
audiences, 1, 28, 47, 110, 168, 198
African American, 49, 83, 93, 98â99, 127, 154
and Holiday's shows, 102â3, 107â8
Holiday's views on, 50
national/worldwide, 127â28
white, 50, 80â81, 83, 134â35, 154â55, 164, 192
“Autumn Leaves,” 92
Avakian, George, 168
“Back in Your Own Backyard,” 145â46
“Backwater Blues,” 85â86
Bailey, Mildred, 60, 87â88, 90, 147â49
Baldwin, James, 66, 143, 159
Balliett, Whitney, 11, 63, 117
Baltimore Afro-American
, 23
Baltimore, Maryland, 4, 12, 18, 23, 34, 67, 77
Bankhead, Tallulah, 22, 32, 34â38, 60, 100
Barker, Lee, 19, 21â22
Barnet, Charlie, 153
Barrymore, Ethel, 100
Bayes, Nora, 83
bebop, 100, 109, 127, 150, 178
Bechet, Sidney, 15, 38
Belly, Lead, 155, 157
Bennett, Tony, 90â91
Berg, Billy, 30, 188
Berigan, Bunny, 141â42
Berlin, Irving, 82, 157
Bernstein, Leonard, 28, 40, 132, 181â82, 185
Bernstein, Shirley, 181
Biberman, Herbert, 61â62
“Big Stuff,” 40, 132, 181â82
Billboard
charts, 139, 142, 176
Billie Holiday Orchestra, 121
“Billie's Blues,” 90, 116, 128, 132
Birdland, 143
Bishop, Elizabeth, 39â40
blackface, 79â80, 82â87, 95, 162
Bless My Bones
, 197
blues, 27, 81, 122, 124, 135â36, 170, 174
of Armstrong, 108, 110â11
and big bands, 146, 148, 151
falls out of favor, 86, 89
history of, 93â94
sung by black women, 77, 85â86, 88â96, 108â11
sung by Holiday, 3â4, 92, 94, 96, 100, 119, 143, 151, 165â67, 187
BMI, 173
Bob Haggart Orchestra, 121
boogie-woogie, 57, 180
Boswell Sisters, 96
Bowles, Paul, 106, 185
Breit, Harvey, 11â12, 167
Brice, Fanny, 4, 95, 132, 183
Broadway, 6, 32â33, 56, 67â68, 94, 110, 141, 176, 181, 192
Brooks, Michael, 194
Brooks, Shelton, 32, 60
Brunswick Record Company, 117, 137
Bryant, Marie, 188
cabaret, 103, 154
in Harlem, 35, 55, 98, 101, 134â35, 141, 156, 177
and Holiday, 4, 91, 94, 121, 156
traditions of, 91â92, 94â95, 133â34
Café Society (downtown), 40, 45, 61, 91, 114, 153â60, 163â66, 168, 173, 181
Café Society (Los Angeles), 187â88
Café Society (uptown), 156
California, 19â20, 37, 72
Calloway, Cab, 49, 170
Camarata, Toots, 168, 180
Capitol Records, 174â75
Carnegie Hall, 46â49, 106â7, 155, 187
Carney, Harry, 100, 140
Carpenter, Thelma, 28, 88, 143
Carroll, Diahann, 65, 68
Carter, Benny, 182, 189
Carter, Betty, 78
Carter, Desmond, 169
chanteuses, 1, 13, 90â91, 164, 170, 177, 183
Charles, Jacques, 183
Cheatham, Doc, 124
Chicago, 57, 60, 98, 105, 120
Chick Webb band, 139, 147
Christy, June, 2
Clayton, Buck, 144â46, 155
Clef Records, 19, 46, 127, 184
Cleveland, Jimmy, 195
Clooney, Rosemary, 2, 44â45, 90, 139
Cole, Cozy, 142
Cole, Nat, 91
Colona, Jerry, 187
Columbia Records, 67, 126, 128, 141, 168, 171, 174â75, 191â92
Commodore Records, 126, 164, 167â68, 171, 179, 185
Confidential
magazine, 51
Connie's Inn (Harlem), 32, 134
coon songs/singers, 77, 81â86, 93, 95
copyrights, 161â63, 172â74, 179
Coronet
magazine, 25, 48
Cory, George, 91, 182
Cotton Club, 87, 94, 134, 142
Coulter, Glen, 193
Count Basie band, 47, 63, 124, 146â48, 150, 187, 191
Cowan, Lester, 64â66
Coward, Noël, 77, 95, 155
Crane, Louise, 40â43
“Crazy He Calls Me,” 180, 187
Crosby, Bing, 2â3, 90, 132, 174, 176
Cross, Douglass, 91, 182
Crouch, Stanley, 3
Crystal, Jack, 44, 126
Cuban music, 118, 150â51
dance, 132, 151, 155, 162, 169â70, 177, 181â82, 184
Dandridge, Dorothy, 64â65, 67, 143
Davis, Jimmy, 179
Davis, Miles, 6, 20, 44, 49, 100, 107, 115, 143, 170, 194
Davis, Ossie, 67
Day, Doris, 2, 191
“Day Lady Died, The,” 197
de Beauvoir, Simone, 42â43
Decca Records, 126â27, 143, 146, 164, 168, 171, 173â74, 179â81, 184â85, 187, 189
“Deep Song,” 91, 133, 182, 186
del Rio, Dolores, 30â31
DeSylva, Buddy, 174
Dickenson, Vic, 124
discrimination, 50, 52, 124, 135, 151â53, 157, 159, 178, 188.
See also
race; racism
Dodge, Roger Pryor, 100
Donahue, Jimmy, 32â34
“Don't Explain,” 120, 132, 161, 173â74
doo-wop, 177
Dorsey brothers, 149, 151, 176
Doubleday, 14, 17, 19, 21â23, 27â28, 38, 51, 161, 163
Down Beat
, 12, 18, 49, 99, 151
Downbeat Club (New York City), 42
drugs, 62â63, 65, 67â68
Holiday arrested for, 12, 43, 47, 51, 72, 196
Holiday jailed for, 34, 37, 49, 64, 70, 106, 179, 187
and Holiday's life, 3, 25, 29, 41, 45, 48, 60, 106â7, 127, 175
Holiday's views on, 49, 51, 53, 179
and jazz musicians, 11, 16, 20, 43, 49, 69, 178â79
and
Lady Sings the Blues
, 20, 22â23, 27, 43
dual-track time, 118, 121
Dufty, Bevan, 45
Dufty, Maely Daniele, 16, 23
Dufty, William, 46â47, 52, 67, 143
articles on Holiday, 43â44, 48, 50â51, 53, 197
career of, 15â17
as coauthor, 6, 14â25, 28, 32
and
Lady Sings the Blues
film, 64, 66, 69
on “Strange Fruit,” 161â63
Early, Gerald, 48
Ebony
, 17, 20, 35, 49
Eckstine, Billy, 100â1
Ed Sullivan Show
, 95
Edison, Harry “Sweets,” 189, 195
Ehrlich, Jake, 64
Ellington, Duke, 55â56, 59, 73, 100â1, 132, 139â40, 142, 147, 149, 180, 188
Ellis, Ray, 128, 191â96
Esquire
, 50
Europe, 138, 154, 156, 168â69.
See also
musical traditions: European
Evans, Herschel, 146
“Falling in Love Again,” 103
Fancy Free
ballet, 132, 181â82
FBI, 4, 37, 49, 160, 162
Feather, Leonard, 44, 63
films, 110, 157
about African Americans, 55â62, 64â68
about Holiday's life, 64â71
Holiday's roles in, 1â2, 55â57, 59â62, 197
Holiday's songs in, 55, 60, 66, 170
“Fine and Mellow,” 41, 90, 105, 120, 124, 132â33, 167
Fitzgerald, Ella, 78, 109â10, 138â40, 145, 147â48, 185, 189â90
flappers, 77, 87
Florida, 17, 40
folk music, 40, 93, 110â11, 122, 142, 150, 155, 157, 165, 167, 172
“Foolin' Myself,” 113, 115â17
Forrest, Helen, 99â100, 138, 151â52
Franklin, Aretha and R. L., 80
French music, 92, 94â95, 121, 162, 177, 183
Friedwald, Will, 99
Furie, Sidney, 69
Gable, Clark, 28, 33
Gabler, Milt, 126, 154, 164, 167â68, 179, 181â82, 186, 189
Gardner, Ava, 28, 65â66
Gershwin, George, 132, 141â45, 161, 174
Gillespie, Dizzy, 100
“Gimme a Pigfoot,” 109, 186
Glaser, Joe, 22, 60, 68, 191â92, 197
“Gloomy Sunday,” 4, 132â33, 168â71, 184
“God Bless the Child,” 63, 120, 132, 161, 168, 170â73, 187
Golden Gate Quartet, 61, 155
“Good Morning Heartache,” 183
Goodman, Benny, 33â34, 56, 63, 125â26, 136, 146â47, 149, 153, 155
Gordon, Dexter, 123
Gordon, Robert, 158
Gordy, Berry, 68â69
gospel music, 88, 122
Granz, Norman, 19, 22, 127, 154, 188â92
Great Depression, 136, 154, 169, 177
Griffin, Farah, 13â14
Guarnieri, Johnny, 117â18
Hal Kemp Orchestra, 169
Hammond, John, 28, 41, 63, 67, 88, 126â27, 135â38, 141, 146, 148, 153â55, 164, 167
Hampton, Lionel, 33, 164, 188
Hanighen, Bernie, 141, 150, 183
“Hard Life of Billie Holiday” (Harriott), 18
Hardwick, Elizabeth, 42, 105, 184
Harlem, 16, 30, 63, 83, 94, 178
clubs in, 27â29, 35, 95, 98, 101, 107, 135, 149â50
Holiday dies in, 51, 196â97
Holiday lives in, 64, 101
musicals about, 32, 67, 82
and racial interaction, 154â55
white audiences in, 154â55, 164
See also
cabaret;
specific club names
Harlem Renaissance, 71, 77, 106, 134
Harriott, Frank, 7, 18
Harris, Sarah (Sadie),
see
Holiday, Billie: and mother, Sadie
Hawkins, Coleman, 63, 124, 165
Hayworth, Rita, 31
“He Ain't Got Rhythm,” 125
Held, Anna, 83
Hentoff, Nat, 12, 63
Herzog, Arthur Jr., 63, 161â62, 172â74, 182â83
Heywood, Eddie, 179
Higginbotham, Irene, 183
Hildegard (supper club singer), 169â70, 176
Hines, Earl, 174
Hodges, Johnny, 100, 139â40, 144
Holiday, Billie
abused by men, 3, 34, 36, 70, 107
biographies on, 1â5, 13â14, 52, 104, 106, 186, 194
celebrity fans of, 28â30, 32, 40â42, 149
childhood of, 4, 12â13, 16, 18, 23, 25, 28, 34, 44, 50, 67, 70, 94
and children, 44â45
darkens skin, 80
death of, 38, 48, 51â53, 66, 68, 194, 196â97
descriptions of, 39, 42â43, 47, 63, 72, 104â6, 149â50, 156â57, 166, 190
fame/popularity of, 1â4, 69, 71, 128, 137, 182
financial troubles of, 16, 22, 29, 101, 175, 191
as godmother, 16, 44â45
good ear of, 147, 151, 180
on her inspirations, 108â9
on her own singing, 51, 100â101, 131, 168, 198
husbands of, 16, 25, 30, 49, 51, 67, 69â71, 106, 173
influence of, 1â4, 6â7, 40, 93, 120, 170
influences on, 4, 6, 87â91, 94, 118â19, 167
lovers of, 16, 22, 40â43, 56, 160
and mother, Sadie, 29, 40, 44, 60, 64, 77, 88, 101, 166, 172â73, 175
musicals about, 2, 67
pay of, 29, 34, 42, 51, 101, 106, 141, 152, 179
personality of, 1, 4, 17â18, 36, 100, 107, 124, 146â47, 156
photographs of, 1, 14, 71â73, 106, 185, 196
and the police, 16, 36, 43, 151
poor health of, 47, 124â25, 128, 192â96
public persona of, 1, 13, 25, 107, 124
religious beliefs of, 52â53
and songwriters, 182â83
on “Strange Fruit,” 159â61
as unreliable performer, 16â17, 148, 185
as untrained singer, 101â2, 181
voice of, 12, 97, 105â6, 109â10, 127â29, 131â32, 147, 168, 193â95
writings by, 2, 5, 12, 15, 17, 20, 49â52, 197
Holiday, Billie: performances, 3, 5, 94, 177, 187
acting style of, 102â5
with big bands, 117, 146â48, 150â53
booking of, 17, 40, 192
and cabaret card, 12, 34, 47, 49, 63, 72, 163
and onstage persona, 5, 107â8, 124
her views on, 186
at party, 33â34
praise of, 47, 104â6, 156â57, 185â86, 197
reactions to, 39, 47, 50, 101, 104â8, 115, 124, 160
See also
films; television;
specific venue names
Holiday, Billie: recordings, 2, 108, 152â53
of 1930s, 97â98, 136â37, 141, 189â91
of 1940s, 121â22, 126â27, 186
of 1950s, 127â29, 184, 189â96
with backup singers, 186, 191, 193, 195
with bands/orchestras, 121, 128, 179â81, 184, 191, 193â95
contracts for, 152, 179
criticism of, 168, 193â94
for jukeboxes, 98â99, 123, 137
live, 47, 147â48
rerecordings of, 46, 127â29, 132, 173â74, 181â83, 186â87, 192
under her name, 123, 141
See also
albums; music producers;
specific record companies
;
specific song titles