Showing posts with label Linda Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linda Jones. Show all posts

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Remembering Linda Jones



from WUNC's The State of Things


Aretha's Favorite Artist
Thursday February 19, 2009

In 1967, singer Linda Jones was making a name for herself with a soulful tune called "Hypnotized." She died just five years later at the age of 27, but not before she made great impressions on other female singers of the day, including Aretha Franklin. Inspired by her story, Mark Anthony Neal, a Duke professor of African-American studies, wrote an essay on Linda Jones called "Bodies In Pain" from the collection The Best African-American Essays, 2009. He joins Frank Stasio in the studio to talk about the greatest singer you've never heard of.

Listen HERE

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Chattin' It Up: The Life & Times of Jimmy Early















from the Independent Weekly (Durham)

Mark Anthony Neal, a professor at Duke University, has written extensively on African-American music and culture, including What the Music Said: Black Popular Music and Black Public Culture and New Black Man: Rethinking Black Masculinity. Here, he will examine the character of James "Thunder" Early from the musical and film Dreamgirls. Thunder was the successful singer who took on the Dreamgirls as his backup vocalists, but he was soon overtaken by their celebrity. He appeared to be based on big figures in soul music of the time, like James Brown, but there are nuances that point to him as both a tragic figure and hero of immense proportions in any realm. Neal will explore Early's life and legacy in this talk, "The Life and Times of James 'Thunder' Early: A Meditation of Soul and the Chitlin Circuit." The free event, which is part of Duke Performances' Soul Power series, starts at 7 p.m. —Chris Toenes

Tuesday, 2/5/08, 7 pm
Auditorium at the
Center for Documentary Studies
Duke University
1317 W Pettigrew St
East Campus, Durham, 660-3663