Rosa Lee Hill

Rosa Lee Hill (September 25, 1910 October 22, 1968) was an American blues musician.[1] She was born Rosa Lee Beeland in Como, Mississippi, United States.[1]

Marriage

She married Napoleon Hill, the self-help writer, in 1937, after he divorced his wife Florence in 1935.[2] She assisted him in writing one of his better known books, Think and Grow Rich, published in 1937. Their marriage ended in divorce in 1940, and the profits of Think and Grow Rich went with her, per their pre-nuptial agreement, written when he had no money.[2][3] She even wrote a book titled How To Attract Men and Money.

Music career

Her album, Rosa Lee Hill and Friends, was part of Fat Possum's campaign to reissue the recordings made by George Mitchell. It included Hill's niece, Jessie Mae Hemphill, as well as Jim Bunkley, Catherine Porter, Will Shade, Essie Mae Brooks, Precious Bryant, and Lottie Kate.

Hill played music that was in the tradition of north Mississippi, singing acoustic blues that made use of subtly varied repetition. The daughter of Sid Hemphill, her song "Bullyin' Well", which was recorded by Alan Lomax, has been included on a number of releases over the years.[4]

Death

Hill died in October 1968, aged 58, in Senatobia, Mississippi.[1]

gollark: Wow, that's somehow half the speed of my home connection run over some ancient phone line.
gollark: This is mostly two-way, i.e. two threads per core, however some enterprisey ones go to 4 or 8; this has diminishing returns because more and more of the execution resources are already used.
gollark: So when the core is waiting on memory access required for one thread, say, it can run the other one in the meantime.
gollark: Most modern CPUs support "simultaneous multithreading", where one core can run multiple threads by switching between them *very* fast (without OS intervention/context switches, I think). You might expect this to make them slower, and sometimes it does, but each core has a bunch of resources which just one running thread may underutilize.
gollark: Basically, "cores" is the number of physical... concurrent... processing... things on the CPU, and "threads" is how many tasks they can run "at once".

References

  1. "Rosa Lee Hill". Allmusic. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  2. Lingeman, Richard (13 August 1995). "How to Lose Friends and Alienate People". New York Times. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  3. Emmert, J. M. (January 5, 2009). "The Story of Napoleon Hill". Success. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  4. 50milesofelbowroom.com
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