[lbo-talk] Sad Songs Say So Much

Jim Devine jdevine03 at gmail.com
Fri Jun 24 11:53:34 PDT 2005



> On 06/24/05 14:10, joanna wrote:
> > If memory serves, the guy who collaborated on "Strange Fruit" was a commie
> > who wound up adopting the Rosenberg children.
> >

ravi wrote:
> yes a dude named abel meeropol. AFAIK he was the sole author.

In 1937 Abel Meeropol, a Jewish schoolteacher from New York, saw a photograph of the lynching of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith. Meeropol later recalled how the photograph "haunted me for days" and inspired the writing of the poem, Strange Fruit. Meeropol, a member of the American Communist Party, using the pseudonym, Lewis Allan, published the poem in the New York Teacher and later, the Marxist journal, New Masses.

After seeing Billie Holiday perform at the club, Café Society, in New York, Meeropol showed her the poem. Holiday liked it and after working on it with Sonny White turned the poem into the song, Strange Fruit. The record made it to No. 16 on the charts in July 1939. However, the song was denounced by Time Magazine as "a prime piece of musical propaganda" for the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People (NAACP).

Meeropol remained active in the American Communist Party and after the execution of Ethel Rosenberg and Julius Rosenberg he adopted their two sons. He taught at the De Witt Clinton High School in the Bronx for 27 years, but continued to write songs, including the Frank Sinatra hit, The House I Live In.

from http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USACstrangefruit.htm JD



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