US rock queen Tina Turner dies at 83
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Tina Turner, the trailblazing rocker whose powerful voice and imposing stage presence thrilled global audiences for decades, died Wednesday at the age of 83.
Tributes poured in from around the world, with some of music's biggest names lamenting the loss of a singular and instantly recognizable performer, whose popularity spanned generations.
Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger -- who, legend has it, learned his dance moves from the diva, said the world had lost "an enormously talented performer and singer."
"She was inspiring, warm, funny and generous. She helped me so much when I was young and I will never forget her."
Bandmate Ronnie Wood called Turner "the Queen Of Rock And Soul and a dear friend."
Fans lined up to pay tribute at the wrought iron gates of her huge compound in Kusnacht, on Switzerland's Lake Zurich, many bearing candles and flowers.
Chateau Algonquin had been the home Turner shared with her German husband Erwin Bach for almost three decades, including when she took Swiss citizenship in 2013, and relinquished her US passport.
"The world has lost an icon," Swiss President Alain Berset said.
US President Joe Biden paid a pointed tribute to a "once-in-a-generation talent that changed American music forever."
"Tina's personal strength was remarkable," Biden wrote. "Overcoming adversity, and even abuse, she built a career for the ages and a life and legacy that were entirely hers, " he added, calling Turner "simply the best."
Biden's former boss, Barack Obama called her "a star whose light will never fade."
"Tina Turner was raw. She was powerful. She was unstoppable. And she was unapologetically herself — speaking and singing her truth through joy and pain; triumph and tragedy," America's first Black president wrote of the star held up as a Black icon.
Turner's Britain-based publicist Bernard Doherty said her death came after a long illness, and had robbed the world of "a music legend and a role model."
He gave no details of the illness.
- 'The Best' -
A career that would go on to net eight Grammy Awards began in the 1960s in a partnership with husband Ike Turner.
The pair recorded a number of hits together throughout the 1960s and 1970s, and while he was credited as being the brains behind the operation, she was always clearly the more talented.
After their troubled and violent marriage collapsed -- she fled in 1976 mid-tour -- Tina Turner forged a wildly successful solo career.
The following decades gifted the world instantly recognizable hits like "What's Love Got to Do With It?", "Private Dancer" and the anthemic "The Best".
Her "We Don't Need Another Hero" featured on the soundtrack to "Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome," the 1985 post-apocalyptic thriller starring Mel Gibson.
A decade later she oozed her way through "Goldeneye," joining the select ranks of artists who have sung on the James Bond franchise.
Reaction to Turner's death came from across the worlds of music, entertainment and sport.
Fellow singer Gloria Gaynor took to Instagram to hail Turner's mold-breaking career, and how she "paved the way for so many women in rock music, black and white."
"She did with great dignity and success what very few would even have dared to do in her time and in that genre of music.
"She will be sorely missed."
Mariah Carey called Turner the embodiment of a legendary superstar. She was "an incredible performer, musician and trailblazer.
"To me, she will always be a survivor and an inspiration to women everywhere," she wrote.
Angela Bassett, who played the singer in the 1993 biopic "What's Love Got to Do With It" opposite Laurence Fishburne as Ike, paid emotional tribute to "a woman who owned her pain and trauma and used it as a means to help change the world."
"Tina Turner showed others who lived in fear what a beautiful future filled with love, compassion and freedom should look like," Bassett said.
Basketball legend Magic Johnson posted a picture with the songstress -- "one of my favorite artists of all time."
"I've seen her many many times and hands down, she gave one of the best live shows I've ever seen," he tweeted.
Actor Forest Whitaker praised Turner's "voice, her dancing, and her spirit."
But he also hailed her ability to bounce back, in a nod to the difficulty of escaping her troubled marriage to Ike.
"As we honor her, let's also reflect on her resilience, and think about all the greatness that can follow our darkest days."
English crooner Rick Astley tweeted "What a woman, what a life, what a voice! One of the GREATS!" while NASA declared that Turner's "legacy will forever live among the stars."
Five favourite songs
A pick of the most memorable hits from US pop icon Tina Turner:
- 'Proud Mary' (1971) -
With her husband Ike Turner, Tina found fame with their version of the gospel-influenced "Proud Mary", which had been released by Creedence Clearwater Revival two years earlier.
The duo's take on the song, with its famous chorus about a Mississippi steamboat "rolling, rolling on the river", was more rock and raunchy than the original, winning them a Grammy.
Tina continued to perform the piece when she went solo, and it would become one of her signature sounds.
- 'What's Love Got To Do With It' (1984) -
Another of Turner's defining songs, this was her sole US number one and brought her four Grammys, also providing the title for the 1993 Oscar-nominated biopic of her life.
Its release marked her establishment as a successful solo artist following her professional and marital split from Ike in 1976.
A track on her fifth solo album "Private Dancer", the song had been turned down by Cliff Richards and Donna Summer before Turner picked it up.
Lyrics such as "Who needs a heart when a heart can be broken" took on deeper significance following revelations in the 1990s of her abuse during her marriage.
- 'We Don't Need Another Hero' (1985) -
The song is the title track to Mel Gibson's post-apocalyptic "Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome" film in which Turner plays ruthless, blonde community leader Aunty Entity, dressed in chainmail.
She wears a similar Amazon-style get-up for the video of the choral-backed piece, which warns against false hope and oppression.
- 'The Best' (1989) -
Turner's cover of the Bonnie Tyler original released a year earlier was the major success of her album "Foreign Affair".
Renamed "Simply the Best", it was used to promote Australian rugby league in 1990, the video featuring players of the day with an unforgettably-styled Turner.
It went on to become a classic sports anthem, chanted at baseball matches and football games worldwide.
- 'GoldenEye' (1995) -
As a mark of her pop megastar status, Turner was picked to perform the coveted title track to the James Bond film "Golden Eye", written by U2's Bono and The Edge.
In the music video for the song, which became a Top Ten hit in many countries, Turner's signature white gown highlights her image as pop's all-glamour diva.