Tina

Tina Turner (born November 26, 1939) is an American-born Swiss singer,
songwriter, dancer, actress, and author. Turner rose to international
prominence as a featured singer with Ike Turner's Kings of Rhythm
before recording hit singles both with
Ike Turner

Ike Turner and as a solo
performer. One of the world's best-selling artists of all time, she
has been referred to as The Queen of Rock 'n' Roll.[3][4][5] has sold
more than 200 million albums and singles worldwide to date.[6] She is
noted for her energetic stage presence, powerful vocals,
well-proportioned legs, and career longevity.[4][7] According to
Guinness World Records, Turner has sold more concert tickets than any
other solo performer in history.[8]
Turner was born Anna Mae Bullock to a small Tennessee family. Growing
up throughout the Southeastern
United States

United States she began singing in
local church choirs. She began her career in 1958 as a featured singer
with Ike Turner's Kings of Rhythm, first recording under the name
"Little Ann".[9] Her introduction to the public as
Tina

Tina Turner began
in 1960 as a member of the Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner Revue.[10] Success
followed with a string of notable hits credited to the duo, including
"A Fool in Love",[11] "
River

River Deep – Mountain High" (1966), "Proud
Mary" (1971), and "Nutbush City Limits" (1973), a song that she wrote.
In her autobiography, I,
Tina

Tina (1986), she revealed several
instances of severe domestic abuse against her by
Ike Turner

Ike Turner prior to
their 1976 split and subsequent 1978 divorce. Raised a Baptist, she
encountered faith with
Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism

Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism in 1971, crediting the
spiritual chant of Nam Myoho Renge Kyo, which Turner says helped her
to endure during difficult times.[12][13]
After her divorce from Ike Turner, she rebuilt her career through live
performances. In the 1980s, Turner launched a major comeback with
another string of hits, starting in late 1983 with the single "Let's
Stay Together" followed by the 1984 release of her fifth solo album
Private Dancer

Private Dancer which became a worldwide success. The album contained
the song "What's Love Got to Do with It", which became Turner's
biggest hit and won four Grammy Awards including Record of the Year.
Her solo success continued throughout the 1980s and 90s with
multi-platinum albums including
Break Every Rule

Break Every Rule and Foreign Affair,
and with singles such as "We Don't Need Another Hero (Thunderdome)",
"Typical Male", "The Best", "I Don't Wanna Fight", and "GoldenEye",
for the 1995
James Bond

James Bond film of the same name.
In 1993, What's Love Got to Do with It, a biographical film adapted
from her autobiography, was released along with an accompanying
soundtrack album. In addition to her musical career, Turner has also
garnered success acting in films, including the role of the Acid Queen
in the 1975 rock musical Tommy, a starring role alongside Mel Gibson
in the 1985 action film Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, and a cameo role
in the 1993 film Last Action Hero. In 2008, Turner returned from
semi-retirement to embark on her Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour.[14]
Turner's tour became one of the highest selling ticketed shows of
2008–09.[15] Although an American citizen by birth, Turner renounced
her American citizenship in 2013 after becoming a citizen of
Switzerland.[16]
Throughout her career, Turner has won twelve Grammy Awards, including
eight competitive awards, three
Grammy Hall of Fame awards, and a
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Turner is the only female artist to
garner concurrent Grammy nominations for pop, rock, and
R&B.[17][18] In 1993, the
World Music Awards recognized her years
in the music business by awarding her the Legend Award.In the UK, she
is the first female artist to have a top 40 hit in six consecutive
decades. She has had a total of 34 top 40 hits.[19]Rolling Stone
ranked Turner 63rd on their list of the 100 greatest artists of all
time.[20] and 17th on their list of the 100 greatest singers of all
time. In 1991, Turner was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame.[21] Turner has her own star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame

Hollywood Walk of Fame and
the
St. Louis

St. Louis Walk of Fame.[22]
Contents
1 Early life
2 Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner
2.1 Origins
2.2 Early success
2.3 Mainstream success
2.4 Decline of the duo
3 First solo performances
4
Private Dancer

Private Dancer and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
4.1 Subsequent releases
5 Recent years
6 Personal life
6.1 Relationships and marriages
6.1.1 Early relationships
6.1.2 Ike Turner
6.1.3 Erwin Bach
6.2 Children
6.3 Religion
6.4 Residences and citizenship
7 Discography
8 Tours
9 Filmography
10 Awards and nominations
11 References
11.1 Bibliography
12 External links
Early life[edit]
Turner was born Anna Mae Bullock on November 26, 1939, in Nutbush, an
unincorporated area in Haywood County, Tennessee. Her parents were
Zelma Priscilla (née Currie) and Floyd Richard Bullock. Anna Mae was
born at Poindexter Farm on Highway 180, where her father worked as an
overseer of the sharecroppers.[23][24][25][26][27] She is of
African-American

African-American descent, with approximately 33%
European[28][29][25][30][31] and 1% Native American ancestry. (The
latter was revealed when she appeared on the
PBS

PBS documentary African
American Lives 2, and the host
Henry Louis Gates
.jpg/400px-Henry_Louis_Gates_2014_(cropped).jpg)
Henry Louis Gates shared the results of
Turner's ancestral tests.)[32][33][27]
Anna Mae had an older sister, Ruby Aillene. As young children, Anna
Mae and Aillene were separated when their parents relocated to
Knoxville, Tennessee, to work at a defense facility during World War
II.[24] Anna went to stay with her strict, religious paternal
grandparents, Alex and Roxanna Bullock, who were deacon and deaconess
at the Woodlawn Missionary
Baptist

Baptist Church, which was located on
Woodlawn Road off Highway 19.[34][24] After the war, the sisters
reunited with their parents and moved with them to Knoxville.[24] Two
years later, the family returned to Nutbush to live in the Flagg Grove
community, where Anna attended Flagg Grove Elementary School from
first through eighth grade. In 1889, her great-great uncle had sold
the land on which the school was built to the school trustees.[27][35]
As a young girl, Anna Mae sang in the church choir at Nutbush's Spring
Hill
Baptist

Baptist Church.[36][37] When she was 11, her mother ran off
without warning, seeking freedom from her abusive relationship with
Floyd Bullock.[38] Zelma relocated to
St. Louis

St. Louis to live with Anna
Mae's great-aunt.[38] As a preteen, Anna Mae worked as a domestic
worker for the Henderson family. When Anna Mae was 13, her father
married another woman and moved to Detroit. Anna Mae and her sister
were sent to live with their grandmother Georgeanna in Brownsville,
Tennessee.[38] Anna Mae later stated in her memoir, I, Tina, that she
felt her mother had not loved her, and that she "wasn't wanted",
stating further that her mother had planned to leave her father when
pregnant with Anna Mae.[39] "She was a very young woman who didn't
want another kid", Anna Mae wrote.[39][40] Her relationship with her
mother remained estranged until Bullock's death in 1999.[41]
A self-professed tomboy, Anna Mae joined both the cheerleading squad
and the female basketball team at Carver High School in Brownsville,
and "socialized every chance she got".[23][38] Her first boyfriend,
while she was living in Brownsville, was Harry Taylor, who originally
attended a rival school to hers. Taylor relocated to Anna's school to
be near her.[42] The relationship ended after Anna Mae learned Harry
had married another woman.[43]
When Anna Mae was 16, her grandmother died suddenly. After the
funeral, Anna Mae went to live with her mother in St. Louis, where she
was reunited with her sister. There, Anna Mae graduated from Sumner
High School[44] in 1958. After her graduation, she worked as a nurse's
aide at
Barnes-Jewish Hospital

Barnes-Jewish Hospital and dreamed of becoming a nurse.
Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner[edit]
Origins[edit]
Turner performing with
Ike Turner

Ike Turner at Hamburg, Germany, in 1972
Anna and her sister began to frequent nightclubs in the
St. Louis

St. Louis and
East
St. Louis

St. Louis areas around this time.[38] At Club Manhattan, a
nightclub in the East
St. Louis

St. Louis area, she first saw
Ike Turner

Ike Turner and his
band, the Kings of Rhythm, perform.[38] Anna was impressed by the
band's music and Ike's talent, claiming the bandleader's music put her
"into a trance."[45][38] Anna felt the urge to sing on stage with
Ike's band despite the fact that few women had ever sung with him.[37]
One night in 1957, 17-year-old Anna was given a microphone by Kings of
Rhythm drummer Eugene Washington during an intermission.[46] Upon
hearing her sing, Ike asked her if she knew more songs; she was
allowed to sing that night, becoming a guest vocalist from then
on.[47][48][49] Through this period, Ike taught her the points of
voice control and performance.[47] Her first studio recording was in
1958, singing background, under the name "Little Ann", on the Ike
Turner song, "Box Top", alongside singer Carlson Oliver.
In 1960, Ike wrote an R&B song, "A Fool in Love", originally for
Kings of Rhythm vocalist Art Lassiter. Lassiter failed to show up to
the recording studio and Anna eventually was allowed to sing the song
after much pleading to Ike. Ike agreed to use her voice as a "dummy
vocal", with the intention of erasing her vocals and adding Lassiter's
at a later date.[47] Although some felt that the demo with Anna's
voice was "high pitched" and "screechy", the song received decent
airtime in St. Louis.[50] Local
St. Louis

St. Louis deejay Dave Dixon convinced
Ike to send the tape to Juggy Murray, president of R&B label, Sue
Records.[50] Upon hearing the song, Murray was impressed with Anna's
vocals, later stating that her vocals "sounded like screaming dirt...
it was a funky sound."[51][50] Murray bought the track and paid Ike a
$25,000 (around $208,620 as of 2017) advance for recording and
publishing rights.[50][52][53] Murray also convinced Turner to make
Anna "the star of the show".[53] It was at this point that Ike Turner
renamed Anna Mae Bullock "Tina" because the name rhymed with the
television character Sheena.[50][54] He was inspired by Sheena, Queen
of the Jungle to create her stage persona.[55] Ike trademarked the
name "
Tina

Tina Turner" as a form of protection so that if Anna left him
like his previous lead singers, he could replace her with another
singer and have her perform as Tina.
Early success[edit]
"A Fool in Love" was released in July 1960 and became an immediate
hit, peaking at number 2 on the Hot R&B Sides chart and number 27
on the
Billboard Hot 100

Billboard Hot 100 that October.
Kurt Loder described the track
as "the blackest record to ever creep into the white pop charts since
Ray Charles' gospel-styled 'What'd I Say' that previous
summer."[50][56] A second pop hit, "It's Gonna Work Out Fine" (1961),
reached the top 20 and earned the group a
Grammy Award

Grammy Award nomination for
Best Rock and Roll Performance. Notable singles released during the
duo's
Sue Records period included the R&B hits, "I Idolize You",
"Poor Fool", and "Tra-La-La-La". In 1964, Ike &
Tina

Tina left Sue and
signed with Kent Records, releasing the modest single, "I Can't
Believe What You Say". The following year, they signed with Loma
Records, a subsidiary of
Warner Bros. Records
.svg/360px-Warner_Records_(2019_Logo).svg.png)
Warner Bros. Records and run by Bob Krasnow,
who had become their manager shortly after they left Sue Records.
Between 1964 and 1969, Ike &
Tina

Tina signed with more than ten
labels.[57]
While touring to support the record, Ike created his own musical
revue, the Ike and
Tina

Tina Turner Revue, which included the Kings of
Rhythm and a girl group that Ike named
The Ikettes backing Tina, while
he remained in the background, often playing his guitar to the back of
Tina. Wanting to maintain their base and increase finances, Ike Turner
put
Tina

Tina and the entire Revue through a rigorous touring schedule
across the United States, gigging 90 days straight in dates around the
country.[58] During the days of the chitlin' circuit, the Ike and Tina
Turner Revue built a reputation that a writer for the History of Rock
site cited as "one of the most hottest, most durable, and potentially
most explosive of all R&B ensembles" with its show rivaling that
of the
James Brown

James Brown Show in terms of musical spectacle.[59] The shows,
organized by Ike Turner, provided them financial success. Due to their
successful performances, the couple was able to perform in front of
diverse crowds in the American South due to the money they made from
performing in Southern clubs.[60] Between 1963 and 1966, the band
toured constantly without the presence of a hit single. Tina's own
profile was raised after several solo appearances on shows, such as
American Bandstand

American Bandstand and Shindig!, while the entire Revue appeared on
shows, such as Hollywood A Go-Go, The Andy Williams Show, and, in late
1965, in the concert film The Big T.N.T. Show.[citation needed]
Mainstream success[edit]
In 1965,
Phil Spector

Phil Spector caught an Ike &
Tina

Tina performance in Los
Angeles and sought to work with Tina. Working out a deal, Spector gave
Ike a $20,000 advance to keep out of the studio to which Ike
agreed.[61][62] With Spector,
Tina

Tina produced the song "
River

River Deep -
Mountain High", which was released in 1966 on Spector's Philles label.
Spector considered that record, with Tina's maximum energy over a
symphonic sound, to be his best work.[63] It was successful overseas,
particularly in the United Kingdom, where it eventually reached number
3 on the singles chart, but it failed to go any higher than #88 in the
United States. Crushed, Spector never signed another act to Philles.
But the impact of the record gave Ike and
Tina

Tina an opening spot for The
Rolling Stones' UK tour later that fall, which the Revue later
extended by performing all over
Europe
.svg/400px-Europe-Ukraine_(disputed_territory).svg.png)
Europe and Australia.[64] Signing with
Blue Thumb Records in 1968, the Revue issued the blues-heavy albums,
Outta Season and The Hunter. Outta Season produced the Revue's charted
cover of Otis Redding's "I've Been Loving You Too Long" while the
latter earned
Tina

Tina a Grammy nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal
Performance for her rendition of the title track, originally recorded
by Albert King. The success of the albums led to the Revue headlining
at
Las Vegas

Las Vegas where their shows were attended by a variety of
celebrities including David Bowie, Sly Stone, Janis Joplin, Cher,
James Brown, Ray Charles, Elton John, and Elvis Presley.[65]
Turner performing 1972
In 1969, the Revue's profile in their home country was raised after
opening for the Rolling Stones on their US tour. In 1970, they
performed on The Ed Sullivan Show. The tour's success resulted in the
Revue signing with Liberty Records, where they released two albums,
Come Together
.jpg)
Come Together and Workin' Together, released in 1970 and 1971
respectively.[66]
Come Together
.jpg)
Come Together produced the duo's first top 40 single
with their cover of Sly and the Family Stone's "I Want to Take You
Higher".
Come Together
.jpg)
Come Together marked a turning point in their careers in
which they switched from their usual R&B repertoire to incorporate
more rock tunes. In early 1971, their cover of Creedence Clearwater
Revival's "Proud Mary" became their biggest hit, reaching number 4 on
the Hot 100 and selling over a million copies, winning them a Grammy
for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group.[67][68][69] Later in
1971, their live album, What You Hear Is What You Get, taken from a
performance at Carnegie Hall, was their first to be certified gold. In
1972,
Ike Turner

Ike Turner created the studio, Bolic Sounds, near their home in
Inglewood.[70] After Liberty was bought by United Artists Records, the
duo was assigned to that label, releasing ten albums in a three-year
period. The duo's final major hit single, "Nutbush City Limits", was
released in 1973, reaching number 22 on the Hot 100, and peaking at
number 4 in the UK.[71] In 1974,
Tina

Tina released her first solo album,
Tina

Tina Turns the Country On!, winning a Grammy nomination.[72]
That year,
Tina

Tina traveled to London to participate in the filming of
the rock musical, Tommy, in which she played The Acid Queen, a drug
addicted prostitute who tries to coax Tommy into sex and illegal drug
addiction and sang the song of the same name. Turner's performance was
critically acclaimed. Shortly after filming wrapped, Turner appeared
with
Ann-Margret

Ann-Margret on her TV special in London. Returning to the United
States, Turner continued her career with the Revue. Following the
release of Tommy, another Turner solo album, Acid Queen, was released
in 1975.[73]
Decline of the duo[edit]
By the mid-1970s, Ike Turner's excessive cocaine habit had gotten out
of hand. During this period,
Tina

Tina adopted the
Nichiren Buddhism

Nichiren Buddhism faith
and chanting Nam Myoho Renge Kyo to help her deal with a stressful
marriage and career. Due to Ike Turner's drug abuse, some shows were
either canceled or postponed.[74] In July 1976,
Ike Turner

Ike Turner had plans
to leave
United Artists Records

United Artists Records for a five-year, $150,000 deal with
Cream Records. The deal was to be signed on July 6. On July 2, 1976,
Ike and
Tina

Tina were en route from Los Angeles to Dallas where the Revue
had a gig at the Dallas Statler Hilton. Ike and
Tina

Tina got into a fight
during their ride to the hotel. Shortly after arriving to the hotel,
Tina

Tina fled from the hotel and later hid at a friend's house.[75] On
July 27,
Tina

Tina sued for divorce on the grounds of irreconcilable
differences.[76][77][78] Ike claims in his book that
Tina

Tina initiated
the fight by purposely irritating him so that she'd have a reason to
break up with him before they were scheduled to sign a new 5-year
contract upon their return from Dallas.
Tina

Tina later credited the Nichiren Buddhist faith and chanting Nam Myoho
Renge Kyo with giving her the courage to strike out on her own.
However, by walking out on Ike in the middle of a tour, she learned
she was legally responsible to tour promoters for the canceled shows.
After a year in court, their divorce was made final on March 29, 1978.
In the divorce, she completely parted ways with him, retaining only
her stage name and assuming responsibility for the debts incurred by
the canceled tour as well as a significant Internal Revenue Service
lien.[79]
First solo performances[edit]
In 1977, with finances given to her by United Artists executive
Richard Stewart,
Tina

Tina returned onstage, giving a round of shows in Las
Vegas in a cabaret setting, influenced by the cabaret shows she
witnessed while a member of the Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner Revue. She took
her cabaret act to smaller venues in the United States. Turner earned
further income by appearing on shows such as The Hollywood Squares,
Donny and Marie, The Sonny &
Cher

Cher Show and The Brady Bunch
Hour.[80] Later in 1977, Turner headlined her first solo concert tour,
throughout Australia. In 1978, United Artists released Turner's third
solo album, Rough, with distribution both in North America and Europe
with EMI. That album, along with its follow-up, Love Explosion, which
included a brief diversion to disco rhythms, failed to chart.[81]
The albums completed her United Artists/EMI contracts and Turner left
the labels. Continuing her performing career with her second
headlining tour, Wild Lady of Rock 'n' Roll, she continued to be a
successful live act even without the premise of a hit record.[82]
Following an appearance on Olivia Newton-John's US TV special,
Hollywood Nights, in 1979, Turner sought a contract with Newton-John's
manager Roger Davies. Davies agreed to work with Turner as her manager
after seeing her perform at the Venetian Ballroom in the Fairmont San
Francisco hotel in February 1980.
Davies advised Turner to drop her band and remodel her show into a
grittier rock'n'roll showcase. In 1981, Davies booked
Tina

Tina at The Ritz
in New York City. Following the performance,
Rod Stewart

Rod Stewart hired Turner
to perform a duet version of his hit, "Hot Legs", on Saturday Night
Live, and later hired Turner to open for him on his U.S. tour. One
show with
Rod Stewart

Rod Stewart and Kim Carnes, on 19 December 1981, at the L.
A. Forum, Inglewood, was filmed. Afterwards, Turner opened three shows
for The Rolling Stones. A recorded cover of The Temptations' "Ball of
Confusion" for the UK production team B.E.F. featuring Robert Cray,
became a hit in European dance clubs in 1982.[83] Following
performances with
Chuck Berry

Chuck Berry and several short tours in the U.S. and
Europe, Turner again performed at the Ritz in December of the year,
which resulted in a singles deal with
Capitol Records

Capitol Records under the
insistence of David Bowie.
Private Dancer

Private Dancer and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome[edit]
[...]
Private Dancer

Private Dancer was the beginning of my success in
England

England and
basically
Europe
.svg/400px-Europe-Ukraine_(disputed_territory).svg.png)
Europe has been very supportive of my music. [...] [I am]
not as big as Madonna [in the United States]. I'm as big as Madonna in
Europe. I'm as big as, in some places [in Europe], as the Rolling
Stones [sic].
—Turner in 1997, on her European success[84]
In November 1983,
Tina

Tina released her cover of Al Green's "Let's Stay
Together" with Capitol. The record became a hit, reaching several
European charts, including a top 10 placement in the United Kingdom.
The song peaked at number 26 on the
Billboard
.jpg/800px-2013_01_15_Somali_Artists_Shoot_II_d_(8404019559).jpg)
Billboard Hot 100, becoming
Turner's first solo entry into the U.S. charts. It also peaked at the
top 10 of the
Hot Dance Club Songs

Hot Dance Club Songs and Hot Black Singles
charts.[85][86][87][88][89] The success of the song forced Capitol to
rethink its contract with Turner, offering the singer a three album
deal, demanding an album on short notice, which had Turner staging
what Ebony magazine later called an "amazing comeback".[90] Recorded
in two months in London, the album, Private Dancer, was released in
June 1984. That same month, Capitol issued the album's second single,
"What's Love Got to Do with It", earlier recorded by the rock group
Bucks Fizz

Bucks Fizz in 1984. It reached the top 10 within a month and in
September had reached number 1 on the Hot 100 in the U.S. Featuring
hit singles, such as "Better Be Good to Me" and "Private Dancer", the
album peaked at number 3 on the
Billboard
.jpg/800px-2013_01_15_Somali_Artists_Shoot_II_d_(8404019559).jpg)
Billboard 200, selling five million
copies alone in the states and selling over twenty million copies
worldwide, making it her most successful album.[91][92][93][94]
Turner's comeback culminated in early 1985 when she won four Grammy
Awards, including Record of the Year for "What's Love Got to Do with
It". In February of that year, she embarked on her second world tour
supporting the
Private Dancer

Private Dancer album, where she toured to huge crowds.
One show, filmed at Birmingham, England's NEC Arena, was later
released on home video. During this time, she also contributed on
vocals to the
USA for Africa

USA for Africa benefit song "We Are the World".
Turner's success continued when she travelled to
Australia

Australia to star
opposite
Mel Gibson

Mel Gibson in the 1985 post-apocalyptic film Mad Max Beyond
Thunderdome. The movie provided her with her first acting role in ten
years—she portrayed the glamorous Aunty Entity, the ruler of
Bartertown.[95] Upon release, critical response to her performance was
generally positive, and the film became a global success, making more
than $36 million in the
United States

United States alone.[96] Turner later received
the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actress for her role in the
film. She also recorded two songs for the film, "We Don't Need Another
Hero (Thunderdome)" and "One of the Living"; both became hits, with
the latter winning Turner a
Grammy Award

Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal
Performance. In July, Turner performed at
Live Aid

Live Aid alongside Mick
Jagger.[97] Encouraged by a performance together during Tina's filmed
solo concert in England, singer
Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams released their duet single
together, "It's Only Love", later resulting in a Grammy nomination for
Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.
Subsequent releases[edit]
Turner on tour with special guest Eric Clapton, June 17, 1987, in
Wembley Arena, England
Turner followed up
Private Dancer

Private Dancer with
Break Every Rule

Break Every Rule in 1986.
Featuring "Typical Male", "Two People" and "What You Get Is What You
See", the albums that sold more than four million units in the
U.S.,[98] Prior to the album's release, Turner published her memoirs,
I, Tina, which later became a bestseller, and received a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame. Turner's European
Break Every Rule

Break Every Rule Tour, which
culminated in March 1988 in Munich, Germany, contributed to
record-breaking sales and concert attendances. In January 1988, Turner
made history alongside
Paul McCartney

Paul McCartney when she performed in front of
the largest paying audience (approximately 180,000) to see a solo
performer in
Maracanã Stadium

Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, earning her
a Guinness World Record.[99] The success of Turner's two live tours
led to the recording of
Tina Live

Tina Live in
Europe
.svg/400px-Europe-Ukraine_(disputed_territory).svg.png)
Europe which was released that
April. Turner lay low following the end of her
Break Every Rule

Break Every Rule Tour,
emerging once again with
Foreign Affair which included one of Turner's
signature songs, "The Best." She later embarked on a European tour to
promote the album. While
Foreign Affair went gold in the United
States, with its singles "The Best" and "Steamy Windows" becoming Top
40 hits there. It was hugely successful in Europe, where Turner had
personally relocated.
In 1991, Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner were inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame.
Phil Spector

Phil Spector later accepted on their behalf. That same year,
the ex-couple signed away their rights to have their lives dramatized
in the semi-autobiographical film What's Love Got to Do with It, later
released in 1993 and starring
Angela Bassett

Angela Bassett as
Tina

Tina and Laurence
Fishburne as Ike, with the actors receiving Best Actress and Best
Actor
Academy Award

Academy Award nominations for their portrayals of the former
husband-and-wife team. Turner contributed to the soundtrack for What's
Love Got to Do with It, re-recording songs from her Revue days and
recording several newer songs, including what turned out to be her
last Top 10 U.S. hit, "I Don't Wanna Fight". Other than helping
Bassett with her wardrobe and teaching her dance steps as well as
providing songs for the soundtrack, and appearing as herself at the
end of the film, she refused to be involved fully in the film, telling
an interviewer, "Why would I want to see
Ike Turner

Ike Turner beat me up again?
I haven't dwelled on it; it's all in the past where it belongs."[100]
Following the film's and soundtrack's release, Turner embarked on her
first US tour in seven years. Following the tour's end, Turner moved
to
Switzerland

Switzerland and took a year off from the road at the end of the
tour.
Turner's handprints at the Rotterdam Walk of Fame on May 26, 1996
Turner returned in 1995 with the U2 composition, "GoldenEye" for the
James Bond

James Bond film of the same name. Its huge success in
Europe
.svg/400px-Europe-Ukraine_(disputed_territory).svg.png)
Europe and
modest success in her native
United States

United States led Turner to record a new
album, releasing the Wildest Dreams album in 1996. Though the album
itself was not as hugely successful in the United States, thanks to a
world tour and a much played
Hanes

Hanes hosiery commercial, the album went
gold in the United States. The album reached platinum success in
Europe
.svg/400px-Europe-Ukraine_(disputed_territory).svg.png)
Europe where Turner had hits with "Whatever You Want", "Missing You",
which briefly charted in the U.S., "Something Beautiful Remains", and
the sensual
Barry White

Barry White duet, "In Your Wildest Dreams". Following the
tour's end in 1997, Turner took another break before re-emerging again
in 1999 appearing on the
VH-1

VH-1 special Divas Live '99.
In 1998, the duet with Italian musician
Eros Ramazzotti

Eros Ramazzotti in "Cose della
vita" became a European hit. Before celebrating her 60th birthday,
Turner released the dance-infused song, "When the Heartache Is Over"
and its parent album,
Twenty Four Seven

Twenty Four Seven the following month in Europe,
releasing both the song and the album in North America in early 2000.
The success of "When the Heartache Is Over" and Turner's tour
supporting the album once again helped in the album going gold in the
U.S. The
Twenty Four Seven

Twenty Four Seven Tour became her most successful concert
tour to date and became the highest-grossing tour of 2000 according to
Pollstar grossing over $100 million. Later, Guinness World Records
announced that Turner had sold more concert tickets than any other
solo concert performer in music history.[7][15] Afterwards, Turner
announced a semi-retirement.
Recent years[edit]
In 2002,
Tennessee State Route 19

Tennessee State Route 19 between Brownsville and Nutbush was
named "
Tina

Tina Turner Highway".[101][102][103] The following year, she
recorded the duet "Great Spirits" with
Phil Collins

Phil Collins for the Disney
film, Brother Bear. In 2004,
Tina

Tina made her first professional
appearances following her semi-retirement, releasing the compilation
album, All the Best, which produced the single "Open Arms", and sold
more than a million copies in the US.
U.S. President
George W. Bush

George W. Bush congratulates Turner during a reception
for the
Kennedy Center Honors

Kennedy Center Honors in the
East Room

East Room of the
White House

White House on
December 4, 2005. From left, the other honorees are singer Tony
Bennett, dancer Suzanne Farrell, actress Julie Harris, and actor
Robert Redford.
In December of the following year, Turner was recognized by the
Kennedy Center Honors

Kennedy Center Honors at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts in
Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C. and was elected to join an elite group of
entertainers.[104] President
George W. Bush

George W. Bush commented on Turner's
"natural skill, the energy, and sensuality",[105] and referred to her
legs as "the most famous in show business".[106] Several artists paid
tribute to her that night including Oprah Winfrey, Melissa Etheridge
(performing "
River

River Deep – Mountain High"),
Queen Latifah

Queen Latifah (performing
"What's Love Got to Do with It"),
Beyoncé

Beyoncé (performing "Proud Mary"),
and
Al Green

Al Green (performing "Let's Stay Together"). Winfrey stated, "We
don't need another hero. We need more heroines like you, Tina. You
make me proud to spell my name w-o-m-a-n,"[107] In November, Turner
released All the Best – Live Collection and it was certified
platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. Turner
participated in the soundtrack to All the Invisible Children,
providing duet vocals to the song "Teach Me Again", with singer Elisa,
finding success in Italy where it peaked at the top spot.
In 2007, Turner gave her first live performance in seven years,
headlining a benefit concert for the Cauldwell's Children Charity at
London's Natural History Museum. That year, Turner performed a
rendition of Joni Mitchell's "Edith and The Kingpin" on Herbie
Hancock's Mitchell tribute album, River: The Joni Letters. Turner's
original vocals for Carlos Santana's "The Game of Love" were included
in a Santana greatest hits compilation. Label demands led to Turner's
vocals being replaced at the last minute by Michelle Branch.
On December 12, 2007, Turner's former husband
Ike Turner

Ike Turner died from a
cocaine overdose. He had also been suffering from emphysema and
cardiovascular disease. Reached for comment, Turner issued a brief
statement through her spokesperson stating: "
Tina

Tina hasn't had any
contact with Ike in more than 30 years. No further comment will be
made."[108] Turner made her public comeback in February 2008 at the
Grammy Awards where she performed alongside Beyoncé.[109][110] In
addition, she picked up a Grammy as a featured artist on River: The
Joni Letters. In October 2008, Turner embarked on her first tour in
nearly ten years with the Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour.[111] In
support of the tour, Turner released another hits compilation. The
tour became a huge success and culminated in the release of the live
album/DVD,
Tina

Tina Live. In 2009, Turner participated in the singing
project Beyond with fellow musicians Regula Curti, Selda Bagcan, and
Dechen Shak Dagsay. Their first album Buddhist And Christian Prayers
combined Buddhist chants and Christian choral music along with a
spiritual message read by Turner. The album was released only in
Germany and a handful of other countries. It peaked at number 7 in
Switzerland.
In April 2010, mainly due to an online campaign by fans of Rangers
Football Club, Turner's 1989 hit, "The Best", returned to the UK
singles chart, peaking at number 9 on the chart. This made Turner the
first recording artist in UK chart history to score top 40 hits in the
1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s and 2010s.[112] In 2011, Beyond's
second album Children – With Children United In Prayer followed and
charted again in Switzerland. Turner promoted the album by performing
on TV shows in Germany and
Switzerland

Switzerland in December that year. In May
2012, Turner was spotted attending a fashion show in
Beijing

Beijing to
support Giorgio Armani.[113] Turner appeared on the cover of the
German issue of
Vogue magazine

Vogue magazine in April 2013, becoming at the age of
73 the oldest person worldwide to feature on the cover of Vogue.[114]
On February 3, 2014,
Parlophone Records

Parlophone Records released a new compilation
titled Love Songs. Later in the year, Beyond's third album Love Within
was released with Turner contributing some gospel tracks.
Turner announced in December 2016 that she has been working on Tina, a
new musical based on her life story, in collaboration with Phyllida
Lloyd and Stage Entertainment.[115] Her second autobiography, Tina
Turner: My Love Story, is due for release in October 2018.[116] In
January 2018, it was announced that Turner will be one of the
recipients of the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.[117]
Personal life[edit]
Relationships and marriages[edit]
Early relationships[edit]
Tina

Tina (then called Anna Mae Bullock) fell in love for the first time
with Harry Taylor, to whom she lost her virginity.[55] They met at a
school basketball game. She spoke about this relationship in her 1986
interview with Rolling Stone. "Harry was real popular and had tons of
girlfriends, but eventually I got him, and we went steady for a
year."[118] Their relationship ended when she discovered that Taylor
had impregnated and married another girl he was dating.[118]
After moving to St. Louis, Anna Mae and her sister became acquainted
with members of the Kings of Rhythm, and Anna Mae dated the band's
saxophonist, Raymond Hill. At 18 she became pregnant. After her mother
found out, she went to stay with Hill who lived with Ike Turner.
Speaking on Hill she said, "I didn't love him as much as I'd loved
Harry. But he was good-looking. I thought, 'My baby's going to be
beautiful.[119]
After she gave birth to their son Craig in 1958, the couple's
relationship became strained. Allegedly, after a fight between the two
broke out,
Ike Turner

Ike Turner and other
Kings of Rhythm members confronted
Hill and beat him up, with one member tackling him to the ground and
instantly breaking his leg. The injury was so severe that Hill had to
return to his hometown of Clarksdale, Mississippi.[120] Ike Turner
later adopted Anna Mae and Hill's son, adding his own last name
legally.[121]
Ike Turner[edit]
After first performing in his band, the Kings of Rhythm, young Anna
Mae was given the name Little Ann by Ike and the two became
friends.[122] In 1958 after Tina's mom put her and her infant son
Craig out of the house, she moved into Ike's home in East St.
Louis.[123] During that period, Ike began musically training
Tina.[124] The two felt no mutual attraction in the beginning; Tina
felt Ike was not the "ideal-looking man" and felt he was like a
brother.
Tina

Tina preferred light-skinned guys better than dark-skinned
guys.[125] Ike viewed her as a sister and favored "curvaceous women".
Ike was still married to his common-law wife, Lorraine Taylor, during
this period.[123]
However, by 1959, Ike and Anna's relationship became sexual, much to
Anna's chagrin.[126] Ike also felt guilt over the relationship,
stating later that having sex with
Tina

Tina felt as if he were having sex
with his sister.[127]
Tina

Tina later discussed to
Rolling Stone

Rolling Stone that the
first night they had sex, she was escaping another musician who wanted
to have sex with her and ran to Ike's bedroom, thinking Ike would
"protect her". She said the first time it happened, she agreed to do
it once.[125] Shortly after the group found musical success as Ike
&
Tina

Tina Turner, they relocated to Los Angeles and began performing
to promote their hit single "A Fool in Love", all while
Tina

Tina was
pregnant with their son, Ronnie, who was eventually born on October
27, 1960. The first account of physical abuse committed by Ike
happened after
Tina

Tina complained of financial issues and ask to end
their confusing relationship; Ike responded by hitting her in the head
with a wooden shoe stretcher.[128][129] Afterwards, Ike asked her to
have sex with him.[128][56]
Tina

Tina wrote in her memoirs, I, Tina, that
the incident was the first time Ike had "instilled fear" in
her.[128][56]
Ike Turner

Ike Turner would later admit in an interview with Spin,
"yeah, I hit her, but I didn't hit her more than the average guy beats
his wife... if she says I abused her, maybe I did."[130] He worded
this slightly differently in his memoirs, Taking Back My Name (1999),
writing: "Sure, I've slapped Tina.... There have been times when I
punched her to the ground without thinking. But I have never beat
her."
Ike also claimed to interviewer Terry Gross on NPR that Tina's real
legal name was Martha Nell Bullock, before family started calling her
Anna Mae. In 1962, Ike and
Tina

Tina married in Tijuana.[131] According to
Tina, they got married because Taylor was looking for alimony payments
for their children Ike Jr. and Michael. Shortly after marrying, Taylor
brought Ike Jr. and Michael to live with Ike, Tina, Craig and Ronnie.
Ike would claim they weren't legally married and that
Tina

Tina took his
name to discourage her ex-boyfriend, Raymond Hill, from returning to
her.[132]
Tina

Tina herself later admits that she "never felt like [she]
was married" to Ike.[133] Before a show in Los Angeles, in 1968, Tina
tried to commit suicide by swallowing 50 Valiums after being assaulted
by Ike.[37] After a final fight with Ike in Dallas in early July 1976,
Tina

Tina filed for divorce on July 27.[134] In the final divorce decree,
Tina

Tina took responsibility for missed concert dates as well as an IRS
lien and requested to be allowed to retain use of her stage name as a
means to find work as a performer.[135] In the settlement,
Tina

Tina gave
Ike her share of their studio, publishing companies, four cars, and
real estate — a gift worth close to $500,000. "My peace of mind was
more important," she said. After she left Ike, several promoters lost
money and sued to recoup their losses. For almost two years she
received food stamps, lived with friends, and played small clubs to
pay off debts.[136]
Friends and family members claimed Ike struggled to get over
Tina

Tina and
her son Ronnie once mentioned that Ike used to go to his house and
snoop through his phone book to locate Tina.[137] After divorcing Ike
in 1978,
Tina

Tina abstained from serious relationships for a long time, as
she set on bringing her career back on track.[138] In 1986 she said,
"People have to realize that I just got out of a very difficult
marriage. I'm not the type of woman who needs to jump back into
another. I liked my freedom when I got out of that one. I've had a few
love affairs, but nothing important."[125] In 2018, while promoting a
musical based on her life,
Tina

Tina told The Sunday Times she has forgiven
Ike. "As an old person, I have forgiven him, but it would not work
with him. He asked for one more tour with me, and I said, 'No,
absolutely not.' Ike wasn’t someone you could forgive and allow him
back in. It’s all gone, all forgotten."[139]
Erwin Bach[edit]
While at a record label party in London in 1985, Turner met German
music executive Erwin Bach. Initially friends, Turner and Bach began
dating the following year, and have remained together ever since. In
July 2013, after a 27-year romantic partnership, the couple married in
a civil ceremony on the banks of Lake Zürich, in Küsnacht, northern
Switzerland.[140]
Children[edit]
Tina

Tina has two biological sons, Craig, by Raymond Hill, and Ronnie, by
Ike Turner. She also adopted two of Ike's children whom she raised as
her own, Michael and Ike Jr.
Her first son, Raymond Craig was born on August 20, 1958 when she was
18. He is the child of
Kings of Rhythm saxophonist Raymond Hill.[47]
Her second and only child with Ike, Ronald Renelle Turner was born on
October 27, 1960. He is married to French-American singer Afida
Turner.[141] Ronnie is a musician and has performed with both of his
parents as an adult. He used to play bass in the band, The Prophets,
before they became Black Angel in 2000. Ronnie has two children and
two grandchildren.
In her book Turner reveals she became pregnant again in 1968 but she
had an abortion when she discovered one of the Ikettes, Ann Thomas,
was also pregnant with Ike’s baby.
After moving to Los Angeles in 1960, Ike Turner's estranged wife,
Lorraine Turner, left her and Ike's sons, Ike Jr. (born October 3,
1958) and Michael (born 1960), to be raised by Ike and Tina. During
Ike and Tina's divorce trial, Ike sent the four boys to live with Tina
at her home.[142] In 1985, Ike accused
Tina

Tina of bad parenting, even
alleging she had sent Michael to a mental hospital.[143]
Tina

Tina denied
his claims, telling Australian magazine TV Week, "he gave me those
children and not a penny to look after them with."[144]
Religion[edit]
Turner has sometimes referred to herself a "Buddhist-Baptist",
alluding to her upbringing in the
Baptist

Baptist church and her later
conversion to Buddhism.[145] Throughout her childhood and early
adulthood, Turner was Baptist.[146] In a 2016 interview, Turner stated
that "I consider myself a Buddhist."[13]
Turner was introduced to
Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism

Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism in 1973 by a friend
of Ike's named Valerie Bishop.[147] Turner wrote in her autobiography
I, Tina

I, Tina that after Valerie taught her to recite the
Buddhist chant

Buddhist chant Nam
Myoho Renge Kyo,
Tina

Tina observed that Ike, instead of hitting her for
singing supposed wrong notes during recording sessions, would give her
money to go shopping, something she regarded as a benefit of her
newfound spiritual practice.[148]
In an August 2011 interview with Shambhala Sun Buddhist magazine,
Turner stated she adheres to the teachings and values of the Buddhist
association Soka Gakkai International.[149]
Turner has collaborated with Tibetan Buddhists and met with the 14th
Dalai Lama,
Tenzin Gyatso

Tenzin Gyatso in Einsiedeln,
Switzerland

Switzerland in 2005, citing
this as an inspiration for a spiritual music project she later
co-founded called Beyond.[150][151] In a 2011 public interview with
Shambala Sun, Turner indicated that she no longer follows the morning
and evening
Gongyo

Gongyo practice in a regimented schedule and hosts various
types of Buddhist statues in her home altar located in the upper attic
of one of her guesthouses in Switzerland.[13][152]
In a March 2016 interview with Lion's Roar magazine, Turner says she
prays and chants each day, stating the following:
"Nam Myoho Renge Kyo is like a song. In the Soka Gakkai tradition we
are taught how to sing it. It is a sound and a rhythm and it touches a
place inside you. That place we try to reach is the subconscious mind.
I believe that is the highest place."[13]
Residences and citizenship[edit]
Turner has been living in a lake house, Château Algonquin in
Küsnacht, next to
Zürich

Zürich since moving there in 1994.[153][154][155]
She owned property in Cologne, London, and Los Angeles, and a villa on
the
French Riviera

French Riviera named Anna Fleur.[156]
On January 25, 2013, it was announced that Turner had applied for
Swiss citizenship,[157][158] and that she would relinquish her U.S.
citizenship.[159][160] In April, she undertook a mandatory citizenship
test which included advanced knowledge of the
German language

German language and of
Swiss history. On April 22, 2013, she became a citizen of Switzerland
and was issued a Swiss passport.[161] Turner signed the paperwork to
give up her American citizenship at the U.S. embassy in
Bern

Bern on
October 24, 2013.[160]
Discography[edit]
Main article:
Tina

Tina Turner discography
Tina Turns the Country On!

Tina Turns the Country On! (1974)
Acid Queen

Acid Queen (1975)
Rough (1978)
Love Explosion

Love Explosion (1979)
Private Dancer

Private Dancer (1984)
Break Every Rule

Break Every Rule (1986)
Foreign Affair (1989)
What's Love Got to Do With It (1993)
Wildest Dreams (1996)
Twenty Four Seven

Twenty Four Seven (1999)
Tours[edit]
Book:
Tina

Tina Turner
1977: Australian Tour
1978–79: The Wild Lady of Rock Tour
1982: Nice 'n' Rough Tour
1984: 1984 World Tour
1985:
Private Dancer

Private Dancer Tour
1987–88:
Break Every Rule

Break Every Rule World Tour
1990: Foreign Affair: The Farewell Tour
1993: What's Love? Tour
1996–97: Wildest Dreams Tour
2000:
Twenty Four Seven

Twenty Four Seven Tour
2008–09: Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour
Filmography[edit]
Film
Year
Film
Role
Notes
1970
Gimme Shelter
Herself
Documentary
1971
Taking Off
Herself
1975
Tommy
The Acid Queen
1976
All This and World War II
Herself
Documentary
1978
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Our Guests at Heartland
1979
John Denver and the Ladies
Herself
Variety Show
1985
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
Aunty Entity
Won (1986) – NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actress in a Motion
Picture
1993
What's Love Got to Do with it
Herself
Singing voice for Angela Bassett, also archive footage
1993
Last Action Hero
The Mayor
Television
Year
Title
Role
Notes
1966
The Big T.N.T. Show
Herself
Documentary
1970
It's Your Thing
Herself
Documentary
1971
Soul to Soul
Herself
Documentary
1985
Saturday Night Live
Herself
Performed "What's Love Got to Do With It", "Better Be Good to Me", and
"Private Dancer"; appeared as Mrs. Malone in skit with
Martin Short
.jpg/440px-Martin_Short_at_PaleyFest_2014_(cropped).jpg)
Martin Short as
Ed Grimley
2000
Ally McBeal
Herself
Cameo appearance
One episode: "The Oddball Parade"
Awards and nominations[edit]
Main article: List of awards and nominations received by
Tina

Tina Turner
In 2008, Turner was listed at the 17th place on Rolling Stone's list
"The 100 Greatest Singers of All Time".[8]
Turner is often referred in the media as "The Queen of Rock and Roll"
(eight competitive Grammy Awards, highest grossing female concert
performer in history)[162]
Turner is a
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee.[163]
Three of her recordings, "
River

River Deep – Mountain High" (1999), "Proud
Mary" (2003), and "What's Love Got to Do with It" (2012), are in the
Grammy Hall of Fame.[164]
Turner has won eight competitive and three honorary achievement Grammy
Awards.[7]
Bryan Adams, who performed with her on the
Private Dancer

Private Dancer Tour,
praised Turner's live performances, saying: "I never saw
Tina

Tina walk
through a performance, she always put on a great show, and was
gracious and grateful to her audience.[165]
When Turner became a recipient of the 2005 Kennedy Center Honors, her
legs were noted specifically by President George W. Bush.[166]
At age 73, Turner became the oldest person to be featured on the front
cover of Vogue, surpassing Meryl Streep, who covered American Vogue in
2012, aged 62.[5]
In 1996, Turner received the accolade of
Légion d'Honneur

Légion d'Honneur from the
French education minister[167]
Turner has her own star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame

Hollywood Walk of Fame and the St.
Louis Walk of Fame.[22]
References[edit]
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Tina

Tina Turner Net Worth".
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Tina

Tina Turner Net Worth 2018". January 28, 2018. Retrieved March 4,
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Tina

Tina Turner: Queen of Rock 'n'
Roll". The New York Times. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
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Tina

Tina Turner on Stage". Gallery of The Popular
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Tina

Tina Turner Covers
Vogue Germany". Billboard. Retrieved October 24, 2015.
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Tina

Tina Turner Live in
Concert' 2008". Reuters.com. July 10, 2008. Archived from the original
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^ Collis 2003, p. foreword.
^ Bego 2005, pp. 60–62.
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Tina

Tina Turner – A Fool in Love" on YouTube
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Tina Turner is back by
popular demand". USA Today. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
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Tina

Tina Turner Live Tickets –
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Tina Turner formally 'relinquishes'
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HISTORY.com. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
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St. Louis

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St. Louis Walk of Fame

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^ Preston 1999, p. 4.
^ a b c Gates 2005, p. 114.
^ African American Lives on YouTube
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner Happy Birthday
Tina

Tina Turner". Contactmusic. Retrieved
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Tina

Tina Turner: Girl from Nutbush (video).
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^ "Celebrities of Native American Heritage". U.S. Department of
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2009. Retrieved February 9, 2010.
^ Duster, Troy (2008). "Deep Roots and Tangled Branches". Chronicle of
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of the Mississippi for blacks established in 1875 (among graduates are
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Tina

Tina Turner)...
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Tina Turner: Break Every Rule. Taylor Trade
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^ Callahan, Michael. "The
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Tina

Tina Turner". History-Of-Rock.com. Retrieved March 14,
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of the best from rock 'n' roll's dark ages. Part 2: UNT Digital
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^ Bogdanov, Vladimir; Chris Woodstra; Stephen Thomas Erlewine (2003).
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ed.). Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 0-87930-736-6. Retrieved
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^ Gulla, p. 182.
^ Turner 1986, p. 160.
^ Spin 1985, pp. 37–38.
^ McCue, Margi Laird (March 1, 2000) [1995]. Domestic Violence: A
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^ "
Tina

Tina Turner - Acid Queen". Discogs. Retrieved 30 January
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^ Gulla 2008, p. 174–175.
^ Ebony 1986, p. 38.
^ Turner 1986, pp. 187–190.
^ Bronson 2003, p. 593.
^ Tyehimba, Cheo (August 2, 1996). "Tina's Independence Day". EW.com.
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^ Mabery 1986, pp. 88–90.
^ Wynn 1985, p. 70.
^ Koenig 1986, pp. 20–30.
^ Fissinger 1985, p. 82.
^ "Why
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^ "
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Tina Turner (R&B/Hip-Hop Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved December
26, 2010.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner (Dance/Club Play Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved December
26, 2010.
^ "The Official Charts Company – Let's Stay Together by
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Tina Turner
Search". The Official Charts Company. 3 May 2016.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner: Let's Stay Together (song)". Hung Medien. Retrieved
December 26, 2010.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner (Hot 100)". Billboard. Retrieved December 26,
2010.
^ Ebony 1985, p. 77.
^ "Biography on
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Tina Turner". Biography.com. A&E Television
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^ "
Tina

Tina Turner Biography". Rolling Stones Online. Archived from the
original on June 18, 2008. Retrieved September 3, 2008.
^ Sharon Norris. "
Tina

Tina Turner". Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and
Culture. Retrieved September 3, 2008.
^ "Roger Miles Producer Autobiography". Milesago.
^ Lichtenfeld, Eric (2007). Action Speaks Louder: Violence, Spectacle,
and the American Action Movie. Wesleyan University Press. p. 153.
ISBN 0-8195-6801-5.
^ Allen, Robert Clyde (1995). To be Continued: Soap Operas Around the
World. Routledge. p. 115. ISBN 0-415-11006-8.
^ Denisoff, R. Serge (1988). Inside MTV. Transaction Publishers.
pp. 274, 278. ISBN 0-88738-864-7.
^ "sold more than four million units in the U.S." by Billboard.
1986-12-25. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
^ Jet 1988, p. 54.
^ Weekly World News 1993, p. 13.
^ Wilder, John S. (January 17, 2002). "SB 2798: Highway Signs –
"
Tina

Tina Turner Highway"" (PDF). Legislation Archives – Bills and
Resolutions: 102nd General Assembly. Nashville, TN: Tennessee Senate.
Retrieved June 26, 2010.
^ Fitzhugh, Craig (January 22, 2002). "HB 2535: Highway Signs –
"
Tina

Tina Turner Highway"" (PDF). Legislation Archives – Bills and
Resolutions: 102nd General Assembly. Nashville, TN: Tennessee House of
Representatives. Retrieved June 26, 2010.
^ "Highway to Be Named for
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Tina Turner". AP Online News Wire.
Associated Press. September 25, 2002. Retrieved June 26, 2010.
^ Files, John (December 5, 2005). "At Kennedy Center Honors, 5 More
Join an Elite Circle". The New York Times. Retrieved October 27,
2008.
^ December 5, 2005, Long Beach Press-Telegram (CA)
^ December 6, 2005, Kansas City Star.
^ Thomas, Karen (December 4, 2005). "Kennedy Center honors five
performing greats". USA Today. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner: 'No Comment' on Ike Turner's Death". People. December
12, 2007. Retrieved February 16, 2009.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner wows Grammy crowd with comeback". Reuters. February 11,
2008. Retrieved February 17, 2008.
^ "Grammy Awards:
Tina

Tina Turner, Kanye West sizzle onstage". The Dallas
Morning News. February 11, 2008. Archived from the original on June
17, 2009. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner says she's hitting the road again". USA Today. April
30, 2008. Retrieved May 21, 2008.
^ "Rangers fans prove Simply the Best, taking
Tina

Tina Turner hit back
into the Top 10". The Scotsman. Edinburgh. Retrieved December 14,
2010.
^ Ralston, Mark (May 31, 2012). "This picture taken on May 31, 2012
shows singer
Tina

Tina Turner arriving on the red carpet for the fashion
show by 77-year-old designer
Giorgio Armani

Giorgio Armani at the 798 art complex in
Beijing". Agence France-Presse. Retrieved March 9, 2013.
^ Wilson, Julee (March 8, 2013). "
Tina

Tina Turner Vogue Germany Cover,
Singer's First Time Gracing Glossy". Huffington Post. Retrieved March
9, 2013.
^ "A West End Tale of
Tina

Tina Turner Announced". londonboxoffice.co.uk.
Retrieved December 20, 2016.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner autobiography set for 2018 release". Entertainment
Weekly. December 11, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
^ Swertlow, Meg (January 8, 2018). "Queen,
Tina

Tina Turner & More
Honored With The Recording Academy's Lifetime Achievement Award".
Retrieved January 9, 2018.
^ a b "
Tina

Tina Turner: Queen of Rock & Roll". Rolling Stone.
Retrieved 2017-11-02.
^ "THE REAL TINA TURNER". Rockhall.com. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
^ Bego 2005, p. 55.
^ "Profile on
Tina

Tina Turner: What's age got to do with it?". Scotland On
Sunday. March 7, 2009. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner left Ike 20 years ago". EW.com. 1996-08-02. Retrieved
2017-10-31.
^ a b Turner 1986, pp. 60–62.
^ Turner 1986, pp. 62–65.
^ a b c "
Tina

Tina Turner: Queen of Rock & Roll". Rolling Stone.
Retrieved 2017-10-31.
^ Turner 1986, pp. 62–64.
^ Turner 1986, pp. 74.
^ a b c Ebony 1986, p. 34.
^ Turner 1986, p. 78.
^ Spin 1985, pp. 35–37.
^ Gulla 2008, p. 178.
^ "Fresh Air Interview". WHYY. NPR.
^ Orth 2004, pp. 40–42.
^ Spin 1985, p. 42.
^ Turner 1986, p. 210.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner left Ike 20 years ago". EW.com. 1996-08-02. Retrieved
2017-10-31.
^ Christian, Margena A. (October 2008). The Last Days of Ike Turner.
Ebony. Retrieved March 25, 2018.
^ Turner 1986, pp. 210–212.
^ Leckie, Michael (March 18, 2018). "
Tina

Tina Turner interview: the singer
on Ike, Buddhism and leaving America for Switzerland". The Sunday
Times.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner weds longtime partner in quiet Swiss suburb". Reuters.
July 17, 2013. Retrieved July 18, 2013.
^ McKeen 2000, p. 257.
^ Spin 1985, pp. 40–41.
^ Spin 1985, p. 41.
^
TV Week

TV Week 1989, p. 16.
^ Orth 2004, p. 42.
^ Turner 1986, pp. 185–187.
^ Turner 1986, p. 172.
^ Turner 1986, p. 173.
^ Shambhala Sun, "From our current issue:
Tina

Tina Turner gets personal",
Lion's Roar, August 10, 2011.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner records album with Swiss friends", SWI, July 10, 2009.
^ Migros Magazine, issue # 38 — 19 September 2011
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner
Chant -Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo", YouTube.
^ "Dreams Come True". The
Oprah Winfrey

Oprah Winfrey Show. February 24, 2005.
^ "Biography". International
Tina

Tina Turner Fan Club. 2007.
^ "Ike and
Tina

Tina Turner Marriage Profile". About.com.
^ The
Oprah Winfrey

Oprah Winfrey Show. Youtube. 1996.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner Becoming Swiss Citizen, Giving Up U.S. Passport". Fox
News. January 25, 2013. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner 'to become Swiss, give up US passport'". France 24.
January 25, 2013. Archived from the original on January 28, 2013.
Retrieved January 28, 2013.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner Renounces U.S. Citizenship for Swiss". Atlanta Black
Star. January 26, 2013. Retrieved October 4, 2013.
^ a b Kamen, Al (November 12, 2013). "
Tina

Tina Turner's citizenship move,
part 2". The Washington Post. In The Loop Blog.
^ Fabian Zürcher (April 23, 2013). "Hier besorgt sich
Tina

Tina Turner den
Schweizer Pass". Blick. Retrieved April 24, 2013.
^ "
Tina

Tina Turner". Rockhall.com. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
^ "Ike and
Tina

Tina Turner". Rockhall.com. Retrieved November 1,
2008.
^ "
Grammy Hall of Fame Award: Past Recipients". The Recording Academy.
Archived from the original on July 27, 2008. Retrieved September 3,
2008.
^ "Bryan Adams". Rockhall.com. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
^ "President Welcomes Kennedy Center Honorees to the White House".
Whitehouse.gov. December 4, 2005. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
^ "Chevalier des Arts et Lettres". by aparchive. February 12, 1996.
Retrieved March 10, 2018.
Bibliography[edit]
Bego, Mark.
Tina

Tina Turner: Break Every Rule. Taylor Trade Publishing.
ISBN 1-58979-253-X.
Bronson, Fred (2003). The
Billboard
.jpg/800px-2013_01_15_Somali_Artists_Shoot_II_d_(8404019559).jpg)
Billboard
Book
.jpg/500px-Ping_Sien_Si_-_028_Pipa_Jing_(15513172384).jpg)
Book of Number 1 Hits: The Inside
Story Behind Every Number One Single on Billboard's Hot 100 from 1955
to the Present.
Billboard
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Billboard Books. ISBN 0-8230-7677-6.
Collis, Jon (2003). Ike Turner- King of Rhythm. London: The Do Not
Press. ISBN 978-1-904316-24-4.
Turner,
Tina

Tina (November 1986). "
Tina

Tina Turner: The Shocking Story of a
Battered Wife Who Escaped to Fame and Fortune". Ebony.
Fissinger, Laura (1985).
Tina

Tina Turner. Ballantine Books.
ISBN 0-345-32642-3.
Gates, Henry Louis. Africana: Arts and Letters: An A-to-Z Reference of
Writers, Musicians, and Artists of the African American Experience.
Running Press. ISBN 0-7624-2042-1.
Gulla, Bob. Icons of R&B and Soul, Vol. 1: An Encyclopedia of The
Artists Who Revolutionized Rhythm. ABC-CLIO.
ISBN 978-0-31334-044-4.
Hasday, Judy L. (June 1999).
Tina

Tina Turner: Black Americans of
Achievement. Chelsea House Publications.
ISBN 0-7910-4967-1.
"
Tina

Tina Says This Is Last Tour, Wants To Do Films". Jet.
Koenig, Teresa (1985).
Tina

Tina Turner. Crestwood House.
ISBN 0-89686-305-0. (http://randb.about.com/od/Top-Ten-Career-Hilights/tp/Tina-Turners-Ten-Greatest-Moments.htm)
Lyman, Darryl (2005). Great
African-American

African-American Women. Jonathan David
Company, Inc. ISBN 0-8246-0459-8.
Mabery, D.L. (1986).
Tina

Tina Turner. Lerner Publishing Group.
ISBN 0-8225-1609-8.
McKeen, William (2000). Rock & Roll Is Here to Stay: An Anthology.
W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-39304-700-8.
"
Tina

Tina Turner: Sizzling at 45". Ebony. May 1985.
Norris, Sharon (September 1, 2000). Haywood County: Tennessee. Arcadia
Publishing. ISBN 978-0-73850-605-0.
Preston, Kate (1999).
Tina

Tina Turner. Hodder & Stoughton.
ISBN 0-340-72104-9.
Orth, Maureen (May 6, 2004). Proud Tina:
Tina

Tina Turner, The Importance
of Being Famous. ISBN 978-0-80507-545-8.
Kiersh, Ed (1985). "Ike's Story". Spin.
Turner,
Tina

Tina (1986). I, Tina: My Life Story. HarperCollins.
ISBN 0-380-70097-2.
"What's Love Got To Do With It? Plenty!". TV Week. 1989.
Warner, Jay (2006). On This Day in Black Music History. Hal Leonard
Corporation. ISBN 0-634-09926-4.
Whitburn, Joel (2004). The
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Billboard
Book
.jpg/500px-Ping_Sien_Si_-_028_Pipa_Jing_(15513172384).jpg)
Book of Top 40 Hits: Complete
Chart Information About America's Most Popular Songs and Artists,
1955–2003. ISBN 0-8230-7499-4.
Wynn, Ron (August 1, 1985). Tina: The
Tina

Tina Turner Story. Collier
Books. ISBN 0-02007-780-7.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Tina

Tina Turner.
Wikiquote has quotations related to:
Tina

Tina Turner
Tina

Tina Turner at Encyclopædia Britannica
Tina

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Tina Turner Online Blog
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Tina

Tina Turner's Entry on the
St. Louis

St. Louis Walk of Fame
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Tina Turner
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Tina Turns the Country On!
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Wildest Dreams
Twenty Four Seven
Live albums
Tina Live

Tina Live in Europe
VH1 Divas Live '99
Tina

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Soundtracks
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What's Love Got to Do with It
Compilations
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Tina Turner Live: Nice 'N' Rough
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Private Dancer

Private Dancer Tour
One Last Time Live in Concert
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Tours
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Private Dancer Tour
Break Every Rule

Break Every Rule World Tour
Foreign Affair: The Farewell Tour
What's Love? Tour
Wildest Dreams Tour
Twenty Four Seven

Twenty Four Seven Tour
Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour
Related articles
Discography
Awards
Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner
I, Tina
What's Love Got to Do with It
Book:
Tina

Tina Turner
v
t
e
Tina

Tina Turner singles
Acid Queen
"Baby Get It On"
"Whole Lotta Love"
"Acid Queen"
Rough
"Viva La Money"
"Root, Toot Undisputable Rock 'n Roller"
"Sometimes When We Touch"
"Night Time Is the Right Time"
Love Explosion
"Love Explosion"
"Back Stabbers"
"Music Keeps Me Dancin'"
Private Dancer
"Let's Stay Together"
"Help!"
"What's Love Got to Do With It"
"Better Be Good to Me"
"Private Dancer"
"I Can't Stand the Rain"
"Show Some Respect"
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
"We Don't Need Another Hero (Thunderdome)"
"One of the Living"
Break Every Rule
"Typical Male"
"Back Where You Started"
"Two People"
"Girls"
"What You Get Is What You See"
"Break Every Rule"
"Paradise Is Here"
"Afterglow"
Tina Live

Tina Live in Europe
"Nutbush City Limits"
"Addicted to Love"
"Tonight"
"A Change Is Gonna Come"
"634-5789"
Foreign Affair
"The Best"
"I Don't Wanna Lose You"
"Steamy Windows"
"Look Me in the Heart"
"Foreign Affair"
"Be Tender with Me Baby"
Simply the Best
"
Nutbush City Limits

Nutbush City Limits (The 90s Version)"
"Way of the World"
"Love Thing"
"I Want You Near Me"
"(Simply) The Best"
What's Love Got to Do with It
"I Don't Wanna Fight"
"
Disco

Disco Inferno"
"Why Must We Wait Until Tonight"
"Proud Mary"
Wildest Dreams
"GoldenEye"
"Whatever You Want"
"On Silent Wings"
"Missing You"
"Something Beautiful Remains"
"In Your Wildest Dreams"
Twenty Four Seven
"When the Heartache Is Over"
"Whatever You Need"
"Don't Leave Me This Way"
All the Best
"Open Arms"
"Complicated Disaster"
Guest singles
"Ball of Confusion"
"Tonight"
"It's Only Love"
"Tearing Us Apart"
"It Takes Two"
"
Cose della vita

Cose della vita - Can't Stop Thinking of You"
"Teach Me Again"
Book:
Tina

Tina Turner
v
t
e
Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner
Ike Turner
Tina

Tina Turner
Studio albums
The Soul of Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner
Dynamite!
Don't Play Me Cheap
It's Gonna Work Out Fine
Get It, Get It
River

River Deep - Mountain High
So Fine
Outta Season
Cussin’, Cryin’ And Carryin’ On
The Hunter
Ooh Poo Pah Doo
Come Together
Workin' Together
Nuff Said
Feel Good
Let Me Touch Your Mind
Nutbush City Limits
The Gospel According to Ike and Tina
Sweet Rhode Island Red
Delilah's Power
Airwaves
Compilations
Proud Mary: The Best of Ike &
Tina

Tina Turner
Funkier Than a Mosquito's Tweeter
Singles
"A Fool in Love"
"Whole Lotta Love"
"I Idolize You"
"It's Gonna Work Out Fine"
"
River

River Deep – Mountain High"
"A Love Like Yours"
"I've Been Loving You Too Long"
"The Hunter
"Come Together"
"I Want To Take You Higher"
"Proud Mary"
"Nutbush City Limits"
Related topics
Discography
The Ikettes
Albums
Songs
Book:
Tina

Tina Turner
Awards for
Tina

Tina Turner
v
t
e
Kennedy Center Honorees (2000s)
2000
Mikhail Baryshnikov
Chuck Berry
Plácido Domingo
Clint Eastwood
Angela Lansbury
2001
Julie Andrews
Van Cliburn
Quincy Jones
Jack Nicholson
Luciano Pavarotti
2002
James Earl Jones
James Levine
Chita Rivera
Paul Simon
Elizabeth Taylor
2003
James Brown
Carol Burnett
Loretta Lynn
Mike Nichols
Itzhak Perlman
2004
Warren Beatty
Ossie Davis

Ossie Davis & Ruby Dee
Elton John
Joan Sutherland
John Williams
2005
Tony Bennett
Suzanne Farrell
Julie Harris
Robert Redford
Tina

Tina Turner
2006
Zubin Mehta
Dolly Parton
Smokey Robinson
Steven Spielberg
Andrew Lloyd Webber
2007
Leon Fleisher
Steve Martin
Diana Ross
Martin Scorsese
Brian Wilson
2008
Morgan Freeman
George Jones
Barbra Streisand
Twyla Tharp
Pete Townshend
.jpg/440px-Pete_Townshend_(2012).jpg)
Pete Townshend & Roger Daltrey
2009
Mel Brooks
Dave Brubeck
Grace Bumbry
Robert De Niro
Bruce Springsteen
Complete list
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
v
t
e
Grammy Award

Grammy Award for Album of the Year
1959–1979
The Music from Peter Gunn

The Music from Peter Gunn –
Henry Mancini

Henry Mancini (1959)
Come Dance with Me! –
Frank Sinatra

Frank Sinatra (1960)
The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart

The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart –
Bob Newhart

Bob Newhart (1961)
Judy at
Carnegie Hall

Carnegie Hall –
Judy Garland

Judy Garland (1962)
The First Family –
Vaughn Meader

Vaughn Meader (1963)
The
Barbra Streisand

Barbra Streisand Album –
Barbra Streisand

Barbra Streisand (1964)
Getz/Gilberto

Getz/Gilberto – Stan Getz,
João Gilberto

João Gilberto (1965)
September of My Years –
Frank Sinatra

Frank Sinatra (1966)
A Man and His Music –
Frank Sinatra

Frank Sinatra (1967)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band –
The Beatles

The Beatles (1968)
By the Time I Get to Phoenix –
Glen Campbell

Glen Campbell (1969)
Blood, Sweat & Tears – Blood, Sweat & Tears (1970)
Bridge over Troubled Water
.png)
Bridge over Troubled Water – Simon & Garfunkel (1971)
Tapestry –
Carole King

Carole King (1972)
The Concert for Bangladesh – Various (1973)
Innervisions

Innervisions –
Stevie Wonder

Stevie Wonder (1974)
Fulfillingness' First Finale

Fulfillingness' First Finale –
Stevie Wonder

Stevie Wonder (1975)
Still Crazy After All These Years

Still Crazy After All These Years –
Paul Simon
.jpg/440px-Paul_Simon_at_the_9-30_Club_(b).jpg)
Paul Simon (1976)
Songs in the Key of Life

Songs in the Key of Life –
Stevie Wonder

Stevie Wonder (1977)
Rumours –
Fleetwood Mac
.jpg/415px-Fleetwood_Mac_(1977).jpg)
Fleetwood Mac (1978)
Saturday Night Fever – Bee Gees/Various (1979)
1980–2000
52nd Street –
Billy Joel

Billy Joel (1980)
Christopher Cross
.jpg/440px-Christopher_Cross_in_beaumont_ca_(2637703689).jpg)
Christopher Cross –
Christopher Cross
.jpg/440px-Christopher_Cross_in_beaumont_ca_(2637703689).jpg)
Christopher Cross (1981)
Double Fantasy

Double Fantasy –
John Lennon

John Lennon and
Yoko Ono

Yoko Ono (1982)
Toto IV

Toto IV – Toto (1983)
Thriller –
Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson (1984)
Can't Slow Down –
Lionel Richie

Lionel Richie (1985)
No Jacket Required

No Jacket Required –
Phil Collins

Phil Collins (1986)
Graceland –
Paul Simon
.jpg/440px-Paul_Simon_at_the_9-30_Club_(b).jpg)
Paul Simon (1987)
The Joshua Tree

The Joshua Tree – U2 (1988)
Faith –
George Michael

George Michael (1989)
Nick of Time –
Bonnie Raitt

Bonnie Raitt (1990)
Back on the Block

Back on the Block –
Quincy Jones

Quincy Jones and various artists (1991)
Unforgettable... with Love –
Natalie Cole

Natalie Cole (1992)
Unplugged –
Eric Clapton

Eric Clapton (1993)
The Bodyguard –
Whitney Houston

Whitney Houston (1994)
MTV Unplugged –
Tony Bennett

Tony Bennett (1995)
Jagged Little Pill

Jagged Little Pill –
Alanis Morissette

Alanis Morissette (1996)
Falling into You

Falling into You –
Celine Dion

Celine Dion (1997)
Time Out of Mind –
Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan (1998)
The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill

The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill –
Lauryn Hill

Lauryn Hill (1999)
Supernatural – Santana (2000)
2001–present
Two Against Nature

Two Against Nature –
Steely Dan

Steely Dan (2001)
O Brother, Where Art Thou? Soundtrack (2002)
Come Away with Me

Come Away with Me –
Norah Jones

Norah Jones (2003)
Speakerboxxx/The Love Below

Speakerboxxx/The Love Below –
Outkast

Outkast (2004)
Genius Loves Company

Genius Loves Company –
Ray Charles

Ray Charles and various artists (2005)
How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb
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How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb – U2 (2006)
Taking the Long Way

Taking the Long Way –
Dixie Chicks

Dixie Chicks (2007)
River: The Joni Letters –
Herbie Hancock

Herbie Hancock (2008)
Raising Sand

Raising Sand –
Robert Plant

Robert Plant &
Alison Krauss

Alison Krauss (2009)
Fearless –
Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift (2010)
The Suburbs

The Suburbs –
Arcade Fire

Arcade Fire (2011)
21 –
Adele

Adele (2012)
Babel – Mumford & Sons (2013)
Random Access Memories

Random Access Memories –
Daft Punk

Daft Punk (2014)
Morning Phase

Morning Phase –
Beck
.jpg/440px-Beck_2018_(cropped).jpg)
Beck (2015)
1989 –
Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift (2016)
25 –
Adele

Adele (2017)
24K Magic –
Bruno Mars
.jpg/440px-BrunoMars24KMagicWorldTourLive_(cropped).jpg)
Bruno Mars (2018)
Authority control
WorldCat Identities
VIAF: 210542814
LCCN: n83046564
ISNI: 0000 0001 2028 6171
GND: 118763237
SELIBR: 393981
SUDOC: 028818806
BNF: cb139006103 (data)
MusicBrainz: 9072df14-b61e-42e2-b4f4-6bbb7fdb5586
NLA: 35595914
NDL: 00476391
NKC: xx0010294
BNE: XX4578911
SNAC: w6rx9jhq
Preceded by
Gladys Knight
James Bond

James Bond title song performer
1995
Succeeded by