英语访谈节目:著名女歌手南茜·威尔森去世
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Finally tonight, we close with a remembrance of the great singer Nancy Wilson, who died yesterday. Wilson was a legend who crossed so many different styles and won over a generation of fans. Wilson released more than 60 albums in a career spanning five decades. She won three Grammys, and had many hits. She was a civil rights activist who marched in Selma. She hosted her own TV variety show in the 1970s. But it was her ability to dazzle audiences across so many musical genres, jazz, pop, Broadway standards and ballads, that really set her apart. In fact, she called herself a song stylist. In 2004, when Jeffrey Brown interviewed her, he asked what she meant by that.
NANCY WILSON, Musician: Give me the freedom to be a pop singer, R&B singer, jazz singer. It's really about the lyric, as opposed to the melody. And that's my approach to the music, is lyrically. I love the song. I love what it says. And I think song stylist gives me the freedom to sing any, all kinds of things and not be put in a box, necessarily.
JEFFREY BROWN: What makes a great song?
NANCY WILSON: I want to tell you a story. I want the song to have legs. I want it to mean something to you 10 years from now. It's kind of like acting. You know, you go there. You do little vignettes. Each song is a play. That's always been my approach to it, you know? I can close my eyes and go where that song goes.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Nancy Wilson was 81 years old.