The Fiery Song That Freed Tina Turner
Before a concert one night in 1968, shortly prior to recording the song that would launch her into superstardom, Tina Turner swallowed sleeping pills and lay down to die. People backstage noticed something was very wrong with me and rushed me to the hospital, which saved my life, she writes in her book Happiness Becomes You, published in the fall. At first I was disappointed when I woke up and realized I was still alive. I thought death was my only chance at escape. But it was not in my nature to stay down for long.
The song that helped revive Turner was Proud Mary. A cover of the Creedence Clearwater Revival hit from 1969, Turners sizzling version was released when she was half of the married duo Ike and Tina Turnerand it was the single that brought this dynamic group to national attention, Cash Box magazine subsequently said. Before that, Turner and her infamously abusive husband were an established act in the world of R&B. (Ike later said that the allegations of abuse were exaggerated, though he admitted multiple times to hitting Turner.) The couple had yet to make a big impression on America at largeuntil Proud Mary busted down that door. After the singles release in January 1971, it rose to No. 4 on Billboards pop chart, sold more than 1 million copies, and earned Turner the first of her 12 Grammy Awards. But the songs success didnt just help bring her back to life after her suicide attempt; it also planted the seeds of her liberation as both an artist and a woman.
https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2021/01/tina-turner-proud-mary/617843/