As the formidable frontwoman of Coventry 2 Tone group The Selecter, Pauline Black has had to be tough. Performing night after night in front of audiences that often erupted into violence, she firmly held her ground. "We knew what we were getting into," she shrugs today. "If you were black it didn't come as a surprise. We knew we lived in violent times, and we knew what the world thought of us. But we also knew what we were doing was cutting edge; we owned that stage while we were on it, and we were saying who we were and how we felt. We were the embodiment of 2 Tone, of multicultural Britain. We were the future."
Black takes the mantle of 2 Tone incredibly seriously. But there is another side to her, the 'at home', more private side, where she is warm, relaxed, welcoming. Before our interview starts, we talk domestics: she's got a dog called Milo, a Basenji, rescued from Cyprus. He means the world to her. He sits with her husband Terry while we talk. Pauline and Terry have been married for over 40 years. "He makes me laugh," she says, and when she's not fighting the cause she leads "a very ordinary life, just walking the dog, doing stuff like that."
Black's life has never been ordinary, though. Born Belinda Magnus on 23 October 1953, she was adopted by a white couple, renamed Pauline Vickers, and spent her youth in Romford. In later life, she traced her birth parents - her mother was Anglo-Jewish and had settled in Australia; her father was a Nigerian prince who knew Fela Kuti and King Sunny Ade and shared her deep love of music.
"Knowing where I came from helped me understand myself better," she says. "I was no longer the cuckoo in somebody else's nest."
この記事は Record Collector の April 2023 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
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この記事は Record Collector の April 2023 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン
Paperback Blighters - The books every record collector should read.
The books every record collector should read. Vinyl, you may have heard, has made a big comeback. In 2022, sales of vinyl albums surpassed compact discs (CDs) for the first time in more than three decades in terms of global revenue, racking up more than $1.2bn.
"Beware the Savage Lure/of 1984..." - David Bowie is one of the most venerated musicians ever. But even he had his bad periods.
David Bowie is one of the most venerated musicians ever. But even he had his bad periods. For many, 1984 remains the nadir of his Phil Collins” phase; an artistic/sartonial/tonsorial disaster area. But was it really that awful? Forty years on, Matt Phillips explores Bowie's so-called annus horribilis.
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A BUNCH OF MUSICIANS - 45, COUNT 'EM! RHAPSODISE ABOUT THEIR FAVOURITE SINGLE
THE TORTURED SHOPPER'S DEPARTMENT
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Young American
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MOD ALMIGHTY
Steve Ellis began his career as a mod in flower-power clobber as frontman of chart-toppers Love Affair. Quitting in 1970, he worked with The Who's Roger Daltrey then gave up music to become a docker before a near-death experience. Interest in his work was rekindled after hooking up with long-time fan Paul Weller. Lois Wilson hears how his romance with music endures.
ANARCHISTS IN THE UK
EXACTLY 45 YEARS AGO, CRASS, THE ANARCHIST ACTIVIST COLLECTIVE, WERE FINISHING PIVOTAL SECOND ALBUM, STATIONS OF THE CRASS.
The boy with the thorn in his side
David Cassidy was arguably the biggest solo star of the immediate post-Beatles era, yet his fame as well as his boyish good looks and extracurricular excessesovershadow the excellence of his breathily intimate, musically accomplished records. Simon Goddard, RC contributor and author of an acclaimed series of books on David Bowie, hails the work of the tortured pop idol
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