Join Books.org — it's free

Entertainers & Musicians - Women's Biography, African American Arts & Entertainment Biography, African American Music, Singers - Biography, African Americans - Performing Arts, African American Women's Biography
Chaka! : Though the Fire by Chaka Khan, Tonya Bolden β€” book cover

Chaka! : Though the Fire

by Chaka Khan, Tonya Bolden
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Rolling Stone compared it to melted caramel, and Miles Davis compared it to his horn.

Chaka Khan's scorchingly soulful voice first dazzled most of us back in 1974 with Rufus and "Tell Me Something Good," and most recently in her Grammy Award-winning performance in Standing in the Shadows of Motown, singing "What's Going On?" with the Funk Brothers. Over the years, she's had twelve number-one hits and nine number-one albums. Over one hundred appearances on the Billboard charts. Nineteen Grammy nominations and eight Grammy wins. Her achievements in the music industry are legendary, and like her twenty albums, they're well-known to the public.

But the private side of Chaka, the story of what fame and fortune have cost herβ€” and taught herβ€” hasn't been told before. In Chaka! Through the Fire, Chaka Khan gives us the whole story of the woman behind the diva and reveals her high and low points. A happy early childhood in a loving, creative home was shattered by escalating fights between her parents. When they finally split, Chaka's father disappeared without even a goodbye, leaving Chaka bewildered, bereft, and blaming her mother. She reconnected with her dad in her teens, finding that he was as liberal and permissive a parent as her mother was strict. Chaka started experimenting with drugs and joined the Black Panthers. Soon after, she fronted for a band called Rufus.

They hit it big with "Tell Me Something Good," and Chaka's stardom was launched. But life on the road was grueling, and as the years went by, the pressures grew. Chaka turned to alcohol and drugs to numb the pain of failed relationships, the guilt of leaving her kids to be raised by Grandma, the resentment she felt about the exhausting demands of her career. It wasn't until things got very bad that she started to see the patterns. All the things she had suffered through in her childhood and swore never to do to her kidsβ€” well, she was doing them.

That's when she began the work of turning it all around. These days, she's still a musical powerhouse, but she's making sure there's time for family, too. She's drug-free. She's started her own record label and has also started a foundation to help women and children in need. Remarkably, Chaka has remained a true wild child despite all the changes: a fiercely independent woman who never compromised her spirit.

About the Author, Chaka Khan, Tonya Bolden

Chaka Khan is one of the foremost vocalists of our time and has won recognition in many music genres. She has received countless awards and has worked with some of music's biggest talents, including Miles Davis, Prince, and Dizzy Gillespie. She currently resides in London and Los Angeles.

Tonya Bolden is a magna cum laude baccalaureate of Princeton University. In addition to the many books she has authored, she has also collaborated on Eartha Kitt's Rejuvenate! and contributed text to Diana Ross's Diana Ross: Going Back.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Young enough to be Aretha Franklin's daughter and old enough to be Lil' Kim's mom, Chaka Khan-with her dynamic 1970s funk, her powerful vocals and her outrageous stage performances-is a link between Franklin's soul music and Kim's hip-hop. To celebrate her 50th birthday, Khan has written a breezy and entertaining autobiography whose structure seems to be modeled on Tina Turner's I, Tina: a young singer's almost chance selection to front an all-male band, years of bad romantic relationships and a final declaration of creative and personal independence. The trajectory of Khan's highly successful career, as she describes it, is as out of control as her feathers and sequins and the wacky funk that marked her early hits with the band Rufus, such as "Tell Me Something Good." To her credit she lets it all hang out, admitting, "About the only thing I'm certain of is that my life has been a series of `happenings' that have made me who I am." She candidly details her drinking, drugging, overspending and many marriages and affairs ("Chaka `United Nations' Khan. That's what some friends called me when it came to me and men"). These details may be of interest only to Khan and Rufus fans, but serious music readers will welcome Khan's first few chapters, which give a remarkably insightful view of the connections between political and music scenes in Khan's hometown, Chicago during the late 1960s and early 1970s. (Oct.) Forecast: Khan's autobiography will get lots of publicity since it is tied to a new album, tour and television special, but the hype may not result in sales beyond Khan's many loyal fans. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

This year, soul/R&B/jazz/disco superstar Khan celebrates her 50th birthday and 30th year in the music business. In her hard-hitting memoir, her music takes a backseat to the story of her life: how she overcame drugs, failed marriages, drugs, failed relationships, a pap-driven music industry, and, yes, more drugs. Truly a survivor, Khan is currently involved in community projects through the foundation that bears her name, and her voice is as strong as ever. Through her narrative, she proves herself to be much more than the singer of "I Feel for You," her biggest hit back in 1984, or her earlier hits with the interracial, intergendered band Rufus. Readers looking for details of her recording career may be somewhat disappointed, but as a memoir of survival, this quick and satisfying read not only puts Khan's life in perspective but also inspires. Sure to be a hit with her many fans, this book will be released to coincide with her new album, a television special titled Chaka and Friends, and a Lifetime special. For public libraries with American pop music collections.-James E. Perone, Mount Union Coll., Alliance, OH Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
April 30, 2004
Publisher
Rodale Press
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781579548261

Similar books