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  1. S1 E1 - (22 Songs) Soundtracks: Songs That Defined History. Season 1. Episode 1 - The Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. (22 Songs) Order By Name. Order By Artist. Add Song. Under Pressure. Queen - Queen Rock Montreal. Official Trailer, first song. Amazon. Under Pressure.

    • Nina Simone: Why
    • Marvin Gaye: Abraham, Martin and John
    • Neil Diamond: Dry Your Eyes
    • Stevie Wonder: Happy Birthday
    • U2: Pride
    • Queen: One Vision
    • Public Enemy: by The Time I Get to Arizona
    • James Taylor: Shed A Little Light
    • Patty Griffin: Up to The Mountain
    • Paul Simon: So Beautiful Or So What

    “We want to do a tune written for today, for this hour, for Dr. Martin Luther King. This tune is written about him and for him,” said Nina Simone as she introduced one of the best Martin Luther King songs in history, “Why (The King Of Love Is Dead),” to the audience at The Westbury Music Fair in Long Island, New York, just three days after King was...

    “It seems the good, they die young” is just one of the memorable lines of Dick Holler’s song about assassinations in America, prompted by the deaths of Presidents Lincoln and Kennedy, and Martin Luther King. This moving song was first recorded by Dion and subsequently covered by dozens of artists, including Smokey Robinson, Ray Charles, Emmylou Har...

    Neil Diamond and Robbie Robertson of The Band wrote “Dry Your Eyes” for the album Beautiful Noise. Robertson said the song was inspired by “how many people felt after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.” In 2017, Diamond began performing it again on his world tour – a song he had not performed live since showcasing it for Martin Scorsese’s ...

    Stevie Wonder met King when he was a teenage singing sensation. Wonder remembers crying at the news of the assassination, which he heard on a car radio as he was being driven home from Michigan School For The Blind. In 1980, Wonder joined with the members of the Congressional Black Caucus in the US Congress to speak out for the need to honor the da...

    Bono was inspired to write “Pride (In The Name of Love)” after reading Stephen B Oates’ biography of King, Let The Trumpet Sound. Not only one of the best Martin Luther King songs, U2’s hit is one of theiconic rock songs of the 80s, on which Chrissie Hynde of Pretenders sings backing vocals. The lyrics contain one factual error. Bono wrote, “Early ...

    First released as a single in November 1985, and then included on the bestselling album A Kind Of Magic, “One Vision” is a high-energy rock song that Roger Taylor later admitted was “sort of half nicked off Martin Luther King’s famous speech.” Freddie Mercurylater added some less serious lyrics about shrimps, prawns, and chicken.

    Public Enemy are one of hip-hop’s defining acts, and their polemic song “By the Time I Get to Arizona” – and its even more controversial video – was designed to criticize former Arizona governor Evan Mecham, one of only two governors in the US to refuse to recognize King’s birthday as a national holiday. Asked in 2011 why he chose that title, Chuck...

    James Taylor’s gentle and stirring tribute to King was inspired by his desire to honor a 20th-century titan. Taylor said: “To me, King is really one of the central heroes, you know, just in our time, a real exceptional, rare person who contributed the right things at the right time. You know, I think my parents, they led me into an awareness of wha...

    One of the finest country music tributes to King is Patty Griffin’s “Up To The Mountain,” from the album Children Running Through. Griffin takes the title from King’s 1968 “I’ve been to the mountaintop” speech, delivered the day before he was killed. It is a moving and soulful 21st-century tribute from the singer-songwriter, who was only four when ...

    Paul Simon is one of the master songwriters of the modern age, and in “So Beautiful Or So What” he tackles the subject of despair and the “sirens’ long melody” after the killing of King. The song was hailed as one of the best Martin Luther King songs by Elvis Costello, who said that Simon’s song “rejects the allure of fashionable darkness” and inst...

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  3. Apr 20, 2017 · Season 1 | E1 | The Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. The series premiere explores the music that kept the spirit of the civil rights movement alive following King's death–from James Brown's black power anthem, "Say It Loud (I'm Black and I'm Proud)" to Kendrick Lamar's searing protest song, "Alright," inspired by the Black Lives Matter ...

  4. Available to buy. More purchase. options. Episodes. Sort. S1 E1 - The Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. November 19, 2017. 42min. TV-PG. Exploring the music that kept the spirit of the civil rights movement alive following Martin Luther King Jr.'s death. Available to buy. S1 E2 - September 11th. April 27, 2017. 42min. TV-PG.

    • Corey Irwin
    • U2, “Pride (In the Name of Love)” “Pride (In the Name of Love)” began life during a soundcheck. U2 were preparing to play a November 1983 show in Hawaii when the Edge began strumming through some chord changes.
    • U2, “MLK” This poetic elegy for King is gorgeous in its simplicity. Bono originally wrote the lyrics to the hum of a vacuum cleaner and, despite the band’s best efforts, U2 were never able to create a full instrumental backing that appropriately fit the piece.
    • Queen, “One Vision” Following their triumphant performance at Live Aid, Queen returned to the studio in November 1985. Though the entire group collaborated in creating “One Vision,” its origins came from drummer Roger Taylor.
    • Paul Simon, “So Beautiful or So What” “Four men on the balcony / Overlooking the parking lot / Pointing at a figure in the distance / Dr. King has just been shot,” Paul Simon sings on the title track to his 2011 album.
  5. Apr 19, 2017 · S1 E1: Exploring the music that kept the spirit of the civil rights movement alive following Martin Luther King Jr.'s death. Documentary Apr 19, 2017 40 min iTunes TV-PG

  6. Jan 28, 2010 · Print Page. Baptist minister and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated by James Earl Ray in Memphis, Tennessee on April 4, 1968. His murder led to an outpouring of...

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