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24 August, 2019 at 12:15 am #1124286
It’s clear that tragedy often spurs art. Marking nearly 40 years of HIV/AIDS in the world has recently inspired filmmakers and artists to not only to commemorate the sombre occasion but to toast activism in the face of tragedy and to fondly recall loved ones. This year’s pop culture recalled the devastation and resilience of those who endured the epidemic with Pose, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, and Bohemian Rhapsody. But several years ago, a spate of documentaries chronicling the early days of the epidemic, including We Were Here, United in Anger: A History of Act Up, and How to Survive a Plague employed archival footage and talking head interviews with survivors to chronicle the era.
24 August, 2019 at 12:17 am #1124287One of the enduring, salient aspects of United in Anger, in particular, was its invocation of music about HIV/AIDS that captured a moment and defined an era, transporting the viewer to those nascent days of Act Up.
Pioneering openly gay artists and allies including Jimmy Sommerville, the Pet Shop Boys, and Cyndi Lauper addressed the epidemic in song even as the Reagan administration failed to acknowledge the death knell. Dionne Warwick and Friends banned together to raise money for AIDS research as early as 1985, while 1990 saw the release of the wildly popular, queer-positive Red, Hot + Blue benefit album.
Sometimes celebratory, often elegiac in tone, and always defiant against the disease and an apathetic government, here are 12 songs about HIV/AIDS that made a difference.
24 August, 2019 at 12:20 am #1124288Elton John “The Last Song”
The legendary John penned “The Last Song” for his young friend Ryan White, a hemophiliac who contracted HIV through a transfusion and was subsequently expelled from his middle school. Diagnosed in 1984, White became a de facto poster child for the disease, illustrating that people of every ilk were vulnerable. John and many other celebrities took up his cause. After White passed away in 1990, John included “The Last Song” on his 1992 album The One. The song played over the credits of the 1993 HBO film And the Band Played On.
24 August, 2019 at 12:23 am #1124289Cyndi Lauper “Boy Blue”
The fourth single off of Lauper’s 1986 True Colors album, she wrote “Boy Blue” for a dear friend who had died of AIDS. In true Lauper style she wears her heart on her sleeve when performing the soaring ode to her friend.
24 August, 2019 at 12:26 am #1124290Bruce Springsteen “Streets of Philadelphia”
By 1993, more than a decade after AIDS was initially diagnosed, Hollywood finally went mainstream about the AIDS epidemic with the release of Jonathan Demme’s Philadelphia, about a successful attorney (played by Tom Hanks), stricken with AIDs. Antonio Banderas played Hanks’s lover in the film and The Boss himself penned and performed the theme song “Streets of Philadelphia.”
24 August, 2019 at 12:26 am #1124291Psssst! Where are the songs?? You forgot to copy and paste them along with the rest of the article you got from advocate.com
24 August, 2019 at 12:27 am #1124292Oh there they are! Well done!
24 August, 2019 at 12:28 am #1124293Sinead O’Connor “You Do Something To Me”
One of 20 outstanding Cole Porter tribute tracks on 1990’s Red, Hot + Blue benefit album, O’Connor’s searing rendition of “You Do Something to Me” also boasts a cool, retro queer video. The Red Hot Organization released the wildly successful album
that sold more than one million copies and raised millions for organizations including AmFar and ACT UP. More than a dozen other compilation albums would follow but the first one was a stand-out boasting songs including Annie Lennox “Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye,” Erasure’s “Too Darn Hot,” k.d. Lang’s “So in Love,” and David Byrne’s “Don’t Fence Me In,” to name a few.
24 August, 2019 at 12:31 am #1124294Jimmy Sommerville “Something to Live For”
On the defiant and dancy late ‘90s track “Something to Live For,” former Bronski Beat front man Sommerville flipped his nose at AIDS, proclaiming, “Got a reason to want more / Ain’t going down / I intend to hang around.”
24 August, 2019 at 12:33 am #1124295Pet Shop Boys “Being Boring”
The British duo that delivered infectious hits in the ‘80s including “West End Girls,” “It’s a Sin,” and “What Have I Done to Deserve This,” released their ode to the HIV/AIDS generation with 1990’s “Being Boring.” Neil Tenant and Chris Lowe captured the sentiment of those who grew up and came out during the early years of the epidemic.
“Now I sit with different faces / In rented rooms and foreign places / All the people I was kissing / Some are here and some are missing / In the nineteen-nineties,” they opined in the their remarkably moving song.
- This reply was modified 5 years, 5 months ago by Ghost_Child.
- This reply was modified 5 years, 5 months ago by Ghost_Child.
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