Legendary Singer Tina Turner Dies At 83, some of her biggest hits,she was simply the best.

The legends are dying in the black community. The biggest stars are leaving and it does not feel good. The era of these beautiful souls is over. Her love story was different and she married Ike and she had to fight. She was the success of Tina Turner and she got it together. What has love got to do with it? And she went away. Money can’t bring happiness it has to come from inside and once you find that you are in a good place. Ike Turner was singing in St. Louis when she was visiting her mother. She was singing with Ike Turner he saw her like a sister and then she falls in love with him.

Tina Turner, the dynamic rock and R&B icon whose career spanned decades, died Wednesday, at her home near Zurich, Switzerlanda representative told Reuters. She was 83.

The rep told the news outlet that Turner died peacefully after a long illness.

The singer’s life was marked by perseverance and a knack for reinvention, and she recorded hits like 1971’s “Proud Mary” and 1984’s “What’s Love Got To Do With It.” Touring the globe, she shared stages with the likes of David Bowie and Mick Jagger, starred in a “Mad Max” flick, and watched Beyoncé perform in her honor in 2005.

She may be best remembered for her fiery vocals and onstage energy. But Turner’s offstage presence was a quieter one influenced by an upbringing in the segregated South.

Born Anna Mae Bullock on Nov. 26, 1939, in Nutbush, Tennessee, Turner, and her older sister were abandoned at a young age by their parents, who worked as sharecroppers. The children went to live with their grandparents, and, in her teens, Turner considered becoming a nurse. But she also loved to sing in church choir.

Later on, she and her sister would explore the nightclub scene, where she met the musician Ike Turner. The pair formed their own act ― the Ike & Tina Turner Revue ― and married in 1962.

Though they divorced in the late 1970s, Turner kept the darker sides of her marriage under wraps until the 1980s, when she first publicly shared stories of the domestic violence she endured.

Her 2018 memoir included heart-wrenching stories about the marriage, including her suicide attempt. She wrote that Ike Turner “used my nose as a punching bag so many times” that when she sang, she could still taste the blood.

In one 1997 interview, Larry King remarked on Turner’s status as a feminist hero thanks to her early willingness to speak out on marital abuse.

“I think that if I had not given the story to the world, maybe my life [would not be] what it is,” the singer told King, explaining how she didn’t know what would happen when she went public with her story in the ’80s.

“It wasn’t something that I planned.”

Turner poses for a portrait in 1964.

While Tina’s vocals launched the duo to stardom, Ike never allowed her much financial independence and was very controlling. (It was he who gave her the stage name Tina, simply because it rhymed with the name of a TV character at the time.)

ADVERTISEMENT

When she left him in 1976, with just pennies and a gas card in her possession, the singer said she got by on food stamps.

“As horrible as he treated me, I still felt responsible for letting him down,” she told Rolling Stone. But, free to pursue her own solo career, she kept performing, becoming a smash success again in the early ’80s as she veered from soul into rock. At age 44, “What’s Love Got To Do With It” off the hit album “Private Dancer” made the Billboard Hot 100 ― making Turner one of just a handful of female artists over 40 to make the chart.

Ike and Tina Turner pose together in 1963.

In 2013, Turner married longtime partner Erwin Bach, who lived with her in Zurich, Switzerland, where Turner said she preferred “the freedom.”

The singer sought to trade her American citizenship for a Swiss one in the late 1980s, and finally relinquished her U.S. passport in 2013 after living more than two decades abroad.

ADVERTISEMENT

Turner told Rolling Stone in 1986 that “it hurts to be a minority” in America.

“We’re moving out of it, of course,” she said. “We can stand now, but it’s still there ― it’s a memory, because you are branded. It’s wishing that we, as a Black people, had had a chance to be as fantastic as we were before being knocked down and made slaves. It goes way back, this thing of wanting to be proud, wanting not to feel second-class.”

Throughout her career, Turner won eight Grammy awards out of 21 nominations and two MTV Video Music Awards out of four nominations. She earned herself a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, a place in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and a Kennedy Center Honor.

She always wanted to be the kind of star who was in on the action.

“I don’t want to just be prancing around in some frilly dress singing a song, you know?” she told People in the 1980s. “Ben Hur,” the decades-old Roman epic, was on the singer’s mind.

“I want to drive one of those damn chariots,” she said.

Turner attends the 2011 Armani fashion show in Paris.
Exit mobile version