Always Tina The Number 1 Tribute to Tina Turner
See the Number ONE Tribute to the Queen of Rock, Tina Turner!! Always Tina is a hard hitting, pulse pounding, energy filled, foot stomping good time for everyone!
Tina Turner (born Anna Mae Bullock; November 26, 1939 – May 24, 2023) was a singer, songwriter, actress, and author. As a rock icon, her vocal prowess, raspy vocal delivery, electrifying stage presence, live performance record and breaking the color barrier as an artist in rock helped her to be dubbed the “Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll“. Turner rose to prominence as the lead singer of the husband-wife duo Ike & Tina Turner. Their tumultuous marriage led to a divorce and disbanding in 1976,[6] and she embarked on a successful solo career, becoming one of the best-selling recording artists of all time, with estimated sales of 100 to 150 million records worldwide.[7][8][9]
In 1984, Tina launched “one of the greatest comebacks in music history”,[10] with her multi-platinum album Private Dancer. Its single “What’s Love Got to Do with It” won the Grammy Award for Record of the Year and became her only number-one song on the Billboard Hot 100. Turner’s chart worldwide success continued with “Let’s Stay Together“, “Better Be Good to Me“, “Private Dancer“, “We Don’t Need Another Hero (Thunderdome)“, “It’s Only Love“, “Typical Male“, “The Best“, “I Don’t Wanna Lose You“, “I Don’t Wanna Fight“, and “GoldenEye“. Her Break Every Rule World Tour (1987–1988) became the highest-grossing female tour of the 1980s and set a Guinness World Record for the then-largest paying audience in a concert (180,000).[11]
Turner continued her success as a live performer with Wildest Dreams Tour (1996–1997), the second highest-grossing female tour of the 1990s, and Twenty Four Seven Tour (2000), the highest-grossing tour of the year in North America.[12] In 2009, she retired after completing her Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour Turner’s seven career tours from 1985 to 2009 attracted a combined audience of 18 million people worldwide. Outside of music, Turner acted in the films Tommy (1975), Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985) and Last Action Hero (1993). Her life and career were dramatized in the film What’s Love Got to Do with It (1993), based on her autobiography I, Tina: My Life Story (1986). Turner was also the subject of a jukebox musical, Tina (2018), and a documentary film of the same name (2021).
Turner received 12 Grammy Awards, which include eight competitive awards, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and three Grammy Hall of Fame inductions. Rolling Stone ranked her among the greatest artists and greatest singers of all time. She was the first black artist and first woman to be on the cover of Rolling Stone,[13] the first female black artist to win an MTV Award,[14] the first woman to accumulate US$100 million in concert revenue and first woman to have cumulative concert sales from 1985–2000 tours exceeding US$450 million (equivalent to $1,231 billion in 2024), the first solo artist with UK top 40 singles across seven decades. Turner has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and on the St. Louis Walk of Fame. She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice: with Ike Turner in 1991 and as a solo artist in 2021. She was also a 2005 recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors and the Women of the Year award.[15]
Early life
Turner was born Anna Mae Bullock[b][1][2] on November 26, 1939, in Brownsville, Tennessee.[16][17][18][19] She was the youngest daughter of Floyd Richard Bullock and his wife Zelma Priscilla (née Currie).[16][20] The family lived in the rural unincorporated community of Nutbush, Tennessee, where Bullock’s father worked as an overseer of the sharecroppers at Poindexter Farm on Highway 180; she later recalled picking cotton with her family at an early age.[21][22]
Bullock was African American, but she believed she had a significant amount of Native American ancestry until she participated in the PBS series African American Lives 2 with Henry Louis Gates Jr.[23][24] Gates shared her genealogical DNA test estimates and traced her family timeline.[25]
Bullock had two older sisters, Evelyn Juanita Currie and Ruby Alline Bullock, a songwriter.[26] She was the first cousin once removed of bluesman Eugene Bridges.[27] As young children, the three sisters were separated when their parents relocated to Knoxville, Tennessee, to work at a defense facility during World War II.[22] Bullock went to stay with her strict, religious paternal grandparents, Alex and Roxanna Bullock, who were deacon and deaconess at the Woodlawn Missionary Baptist Church.[22][28] After the war, the sisters reunited with their parents and moved with them to Knoxville.[22] Two years later, the family returned to Nutbush to live in the Flagg Grove community, where Bullock attended Flagg Grove Elementary School from first through eighth grade.[29][30]
As a young girl, Bullock sang in the church choir at Nutbush’s Spring Hill Baptist Church.[31][32] In 1950, when she was 11, her mother Zelma left without warning, seeking freedom from her abusive relationship with Floyd by relocating to St. Louis.[33] Two years after her mother left the family, her father married another woman and moved to Detroit. Bullock and her sisters were sent to live with their maternal grandmother, Georgeanna Currie, in Brownsville, Tennessee.[33] She stated in her autobiography I, Tina that she felt her parents did not love her and that she was not wanted.[34] Zelma had planned to leave Floyd but stayed once she became pregnant.[35] Bullock recalled: “She was a very young woman who didn’t want another kid.”[35]
As a teenager, Bullock worked as a domestic worker for the Henderson family in Ripley, Tennessee.[36] She was at the Henderson house when she was notified that her half-sister Evelyn had died in a car crash alongside her cousins Margaret Currie and Vela Evans, while Vela survived the car crash.[37][38] A self-professed tomboy, Bullock joined both the cheerleading squad and the female basketball team at Carver High School in Brownsville, and “socialized every chance she got”.[21][33] When Bullock was 16, her grandmother died, so she went to live with her mother in St. Louis. She graduated from Sumner High School in 1958.[39] After high school, Bullock worked as a nurse’s aide at Barnes-Jewish Hospital.[40]
