MUSIC

I AM WOMAN – Elena Reddy, the pop queen of the 70s

When a song becomes the soundtrack of an era

Due to her parents’ constant tours, at the age of 12 she moved in with her aunt, who gave her stability in addition, determination for her possible career as a singer. Born in Melbourne in October 1941, Helen Reddy https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0714761/bio won a TV competition for singing talent that allowed her to go to New York City, where she had an unsuccessful record audition. Yet she, moving between Chicago and Los Angeles, with her song I Don’t Know How to Love Him, she reached the top of the Canadian magazine RPM.

Married very young to a musician considerably older than her, after the divorce she resumed her musical career on radio and television. During the 1970s, Helen Reddy https://artscentre.frankston.vic.gov.au/Whats-On/Events-directory/Invincible-The-Helen-Reddy-Story was especially successful in the United States, where six of her songs made the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100. She was the first Australian to host a prime-time variety TV show on an American network. She at the 1974 American Music Awards she won the award as Favorite Pop / Rock Female Artist.

After her second marriage to an American, she settled in a Greenwich Village hotel with him and his daughter. They experienced a short period of economic precariousness but she, finally in Chicago and singing in city bars, she managed to be notice and obtained an agreement with a record company, from which her single One Way Ticket was born. She became know as a feminist poster girl. In the mid-1980s, her single I Can’t Say Goodbye to You became her last hit song in the United States. Back in Australia, Helen Reddy https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/29/arts/music/helen-reddy-dead.html earned her bachelor’s degree and practiced as a clinical hypnotherapist. In 2011, she returned to performing live.

In search of her roots, after researching her family history, she discovered that that interest in genealogy had turned into a passion. Helen Reddy https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/sep/30/helen-reddy-obituary discovered had an actor, singer and dancer for her mother, while her father was a writer, producer and actor. In a 2014 interview, she made it clear that the phrase I am woman occurred to her repeatedly; therefore, she decided that a song could be born out of it. Her greatest success, the hymn I Am Woman that was widely successful within the women’s liberation movement in the United States, contributed to the success of the amendment on equal rights between men and women.

I AM WOMANhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rptW7zOPX2E I am woman, hear me roar in numbers too big to ignore, and I know too much to go back an’ pretend ’cause I’ve heard it all before, and I’ve been down there on the floor. No one is ever going to keep me down again. Oh yes I am wise, but it is wisdom born of pain. Yes, I have paid the price. However, look how much I gained. If I have to, I can do anything. I am strong. I am invincible. I am woman. You can bend but never break me, ’cause it only serves to make me more determined to achieve my final goal. I come back even stronger, not a novice any longer, ’cause you have deepened the conviction in my soul. Oh yes I am wise, but it is wisdom born of pain. Yes, I have paid the price. But look how much I gained. If I have to, I can do anything. I am strong. I am invincible. I am woman. I am woman watch me grow. See me standing toe to toe, as I spread my lovin’ arms across the land. But I’m still an embryo with a long long way to go. Until I make my brother understand. Oh yes I am wise, but it is wisdom born of pain. Yes, I have paid the price. But look how much I gained. If I have to, I can face anything. I am strong. I am invincible. I am woman.

From the musical Jesus Christ Superstar, in 1971, her I Don’t Know How to Love Him hit the top of the Billboard charts. Helen Reddy https://www.npr.org/2020/09/30/918651061/i-am-woman-singer-helen-reddy-is-dead-aged-78?t=1654240642357 was of Irish, Scottish and English descent. About her the adorable shorthaired, red-haired composer and singer is still remember for her, I Am Woman, the anthem of the 1970s feminist movement. In 2017, she was diagnos with senile dementia. She died in Los Angeles in the fall of three years later.

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