The first album I bought
Nina Simone ā ‘Little Girl Blue’
“I bought it in Brixton market, because I knew the boy selling them and I thought he was cute. Iād never heard of Nina Simone, and I didnāt hear it for quite some months because I wasnāt allowed to go in the front room as a kid, because it was perfect. Iād snuck it under the bed for six months! I never got the boy either. He only flirted with me so Iād buy the recordā¦”
The song that reminds me of home
Tammy Wynette ā ‘Stand By Your Man’
“My mum used to play this all the time when I was really young. I think I must have been around eight. Black people love country and western music.”
The song I can no longer listen to
Michael Jackson ā ‘Donāt Stop Until You Get Enough’
“I find it really difficult to listen to Michael Jackson. I keep trying but I canāt. When I was little, I had a picture of him with his big afro on my wall. It was the only poster Iāve had in my whole life of anyone on the wall. I think he made incredible music, but I went off him in the ’90s. I saw the Netflix thing about him, and when I met him I thought he was creepy. But obviously the music will be there until the end of time. I just canāt shake all the stories about him.”
The song I wish Iād written
Billie Holliday ā ‘Strange Fruit’
“As a songwriter, to have written something that will keep being retold in different ways and different versions is a beautiful idea. I heard this song throughout my childhood, and I loved it. It wasn’t until I was in my 30s that I really checked the lyrics. When you’ve known a song all your life, itās like an ornament on your mantelpiece. And then one day you take off the ornament, clean it up and realise it’s made out of diamonds. I felt like that when I actually sat down and read the lyrics. I didn’t realise what she meant by “strange fruit”, sheās talking about Black men hanging from trees. That just hit me like a ton of bricks. Billie Holliday sang it when people were being lynched, and then Nina Simone sang it during the Civil Rights movement. And weāre always getting to the point where someone can sing it now again. Weāre coming full circle in terms of racism and fascism and white extremism on the rise.”
The song I do at karaoke
Bon Jovi ā ‘Livin’ On A Prayer’
“Iāve done karaoke twice in my life and Iāve hated every second. But if I had to pick a song, it would be this one.”
The song I canāt get out of my head
Lana Del Rey ā ‘Summer Bummer’ (feat. A$AP Rocky & Playboi Carti)
“I keep playing it on my radio show. This record has just got so much Blackness to it. On that album, she manages to nod with what was happening without losing her own soul or making the record too 2017. Itās much better than the new one, to be honest.”
The song that makes me want to dance
CHIC ā ‘Everybody Dance’
“If you canāt get up and dance to this one, youāre dead. Thereās something missing in your life.”
The song I want played at my funeral
Jeff Buckley ā ‘Lover, You Shouldāve Come Over’
“I kind of err towards playing something that would depress everybody and make them want to slit their wrists but then Iām also thinking of one that might be like, ‘Ah itās alright you know, just get over it, just be happy.’ I feel like Spike Milligan, he said he wanted to write on his tombstone: ‘I told you I was ill.’ So half of me would want to make it fun and jovial. This sits in between ā itās not too sad, not too happy.”
The song that changed my life
Betty Davis ā ‘He Was A Big Freak’
“It was the first time Iād heard a song that was similar to what I wanted to be and do. Itās got Black funk all over it. The way she sings ā half rock, half funk. Sheās got this grimy, dirty, high-pitched voice that isn’t singing but just trying to express itself. The groove, the musicianship, it was incredible. She was very strong, very Black, very female, very sexy, and just owned it all by doing her thing. I thought, ‘If she can do it, I can do it.’ā
‘Skin: It Takes Blood And Guts’, the Skunk Anansie singer’s new memoir, is out now
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