"}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Who painted the George Floyd mural in Minneapolis?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Minneapolis, U.S.

The flower is detailed with the names of other victims of police brutality in the U.S. The mural is the creation of artists Cadex Herrera, Greta McLain, and Xena Goldman, who painted the piece on the side of the Cup Foods grocery store, a block away from where Floyd was arrested and killed."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Where did the riots happen in Minneapolis?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Looting and arson begin

A crowd of about 1,000 people converged outside the Minneapolis third police precinct station at the intersection of East Lake Street and Minnehaha Avenue on May 27."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"When did George Floyd's riots start?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"The George Floyd protests were a series of riots and demonstrations against police brutality that began in Minneapolis in the United States on May 26, 2020."}}]}}

Tom Prasada-Rao, musician who captured anguish over George Floyd, dies at 66 (2024)

Tom Prasada-Rao, a folk singer with a soulful voice and genre-blending style who crafted songs of social justice that included the mournful “$20 Bill” after the police-custody killing of George Floyd in 2020 and the protest wave that followed, died June 19 at his home in Silver Spring, Md. He was 66.

Mr. Prasada-Rao was diagnosed with cancer of the salivary gland in 2019. The cancer had spread to his lungs, said his sister Patty Prasada-Rao, who sometimes performed with him.

Since emerging from the Washington-area folk circuit in the 1980s, Mr. Prasada-Rao developed an eclectic musical brand over more than 10 solo albums and many collaborations. He found influences in American soul and rhythm and blues as well as musical traditions reflecting his Indian heritage, such as the sitar.

A tattoo on the inside of his left arm — placed so he could see it while he played guitar — was “Gitanjali,” or Song Offerings, a collection of Bengali-language spiritual poems by Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore.

Advertisem*nt

“As I grow older I care less about the music business than I probably should,” Mr. Prasada-Rao wrote in a biographical essay. “I care more about life as poetry, trying to play like there are no wrong notes anymore.”

Mr. Prasada-Rao’s first big break came in 1993 on a ranch in Texas’s Kerr County, at the Kerrville Folk Festival. He had released his debut album in 1991, “Incoming,” that had reviewers drawing comparisons to folk-rock stars such as Canada’s Bruce co*ckburn and Britain’s Richard Thompson. He was still little known outside a niche fan base.

“I played around a lot doing all these gigs from hell,” Mr. Prasada-Rao recalled.

Then at the Kerrville festival, Mr. Prasada-Rao found a powerful ally in Victor Heyman, a Washington-area concert promoter (and former Defense Department official) who was influential in launching careers in folk music.

Advertisem*nt

Before the Kerrville competition for emerging songwriters, one of the festival’s showcase events, Heyman and his wife printed T-shirts with Mr. Prasada-Rao’s image and then took seats in the front row during his set in a show of support. He won the top prize.

At the festival he also met guitarist Michael Lille and singer-songwriter Tom Kimmel, who had written songs for performers including Johnny Cash and Linda Ronstadt. Mr. Prasada-Rao, Lille and Kimmel formed the Sherpas, which toured for the next three decades and recorded two albums.

The tracks on “Honor Among Thieves” (2003) include a funk-inspired beat on “Jesus, Chicks and Politics” and Mr. Prasada-Rao’s homage to his muse on “Gitanjali,” in which he plays the sitar. (He often performed in a long South Asian tunic known as a kurta.)

“Save me from the shackles of doubt/ Help me find my way out,” the song begins.

Mr. Prasada-Rao increasingly explored themes of spirituality and righteous anger in his music. On a compilation from a Martha’s Vineyard songwriting retreat, “Follow That Road” (1994), his “Ashes of Love” was dedicated to the late D.C.-area homeless activist Mitch Snyder. As part of the 2003 album “Out of the Blue,” he added funk beats and harmonies to a cover of Phil Ochs’s antiwar ballad “Is There Anybody Here?”

Advertisem*nt

“Though clearly a romantic, when Prasada-Rao sings of love his balladry comes across as reassuringly human, rather than sentimental, and when he raises his voice in anger or despair … he makes his point forcefully, without resorting to melodrama,” Washington Post reviewer Mike Joyce wrote in 1994.

“See Myself in You,” written by Kimmel and Mr. Prasada-Rao about an encounter with an enigmatic street character in Houston, was recorded by country star Randy Travis for an album in 2000. (The song was also performed by Mr. Prasada-Rao and his wife, Cary Cooper, in a duo called the Dreamsicles.)

“Even though I don’t know a thing about country music, I’m really grateful for [the song],” Mr. Prasada-Rao once told an audience, “because every now and then I get checks in the mail.”

In May 2020, Mr. Prasada-Rao was watching CNN coverage of the outrage after Floyd died from brutal restraint by Minneapolis police, including having a knee pressed on his neck for more than eight minutes. Mr. Prasada-Rao said he was in a “chemo fog” after the latest round of cancer treatment and felt too exhausted to even get up from the couch.

Advertisem*nt

Yet one part of the Floyd tragedy wouldn’t leave his mind: how the incident began over a store clerk’s claim that Floyd tried to use a possibly counterfeit $20 bill to buy cigarettes. Mr. Prasada-Rao felt a song begin to form.

“The lines kept tumbling out of my head, it felt like an avalanche,” he told Music and Musicians magazine. “It’s all I could do to write them down and try to remember the other lines rushing behind them. … It was like I stuck my hand in the water and pulled out a fish.”

Mr. Prasada-Rao — still weak from chemotherapy — posted the guitar chords and lyrics on the internet and asked musicians to take it from there. Hundreds of people played their interpretations of “$20 Bill (for George Floyd),” some giving it a bitter edge and others turning it into a sorrowful ode. Mr. Prasada-Rao later released a version with the band Fox Run Five.

Advertisem*nt

The song, which is still widely performed, became one of the defining cultural artifacts from the months of demonstrations and anguish after Floyd’s death. (A former Minneapolis police officer, Derek Chauvin, was convicted of second-degree murder and other counts, and other former officers were convicted of violating Floyd’s civil rights.)

The song begins:

Some people die for honor

Some people die for love

Some people die while singing

To the heavens above

Some people die believing

In the cross on Calvary’s hill

And some people die in the blink of an eye

For a $20 bill.

“I was just trying to express my incredulity of this man’s life being taken away for a supposed counterfeit $20 bill,” Mr. Prasada-Rao said. “This is so wrapped up in racial issues and policing issues — and those are really big issues.”

Advertisem*nt

He noted, however, that he purposely avoided the specifics of the killing, seeking to give the song a more timeless quality.

“It doesn’t even say he was a Black man killed by White police,” he added. “It just keeps it simple. How stupid and ridiculous is this — that this man’s life is taken for a $20 bill.”

Raised in Maryland

Thomas William Prasada-Rao Jr. was born on April 11, 1958, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and was raised in Takoma Park, Md., after his Indian-born parents brought the family to the United States. His father was an accountant, and his mother worked on projects at the World Bank.

Tom sang in church choirs and studied the piano and violin as a child. At home, his father played the tabla, a percussion instrument with roots in South Asia. “We used to sing little songs in the evening before we’d go to bed,” Mr. Prasada-Rao recalled.

Advertisem*nt

He attended Newbold College of Higher Education in England and later spent a year at Spicer Memorial College (now Spicer Adventist University) in Pune, India.

Mr. Prasada-Rao stopped touring in 2007 to concentrate on studio recordings and producing albums for folk performers including David LaMotte and Rachel Bissex. He also held classes in songwriting and music at the University of Virginia and other places. He returned to the stage after the release of his 2012 album, “Adagio,” featuring renowned pianist Julie Bonk.

His marriage to Cooper ended in divorce. Survivors include his mother; two sisters; a brother; and two stepdaughters.

Mr. Prasada-Rao often found performing in smaller venues — and smaller towns — more enjoyable. He said urban audiences can be “closed-minded” and less receptive to his music.

“They have the attitude of, ‘Okay, blow me away. Prove something to me,’” he once said while on tour in Kansas. “In small towns, people are more open to enjoyment. They find joy in the smaller things.”

Tom Prasada-Rao, musician who captured anguish over George Floyd, dies at 66 (2024)

FAQs

Tom Prasada-Rao, musician who captured anguish over George Floyd, dies at 66? ›

Prasada-Rao — folk music's “quiet giant,” as Mr. Blount called him — died on June 19 at his home in Silver Spring, Md. He was 66. He was diagnosed with cancer of the salivary gland in 2019, and it had metastasized to his lungs, said his sister Patty Prasada-Rao, who confirmed the death.

Where was George Floyd assassinated? ›

On May 25, 2020, George Floyd, a 46-year-old black American man, was murdered in Minneapolis by Derek Chauvin, a 44-year-old white police officer. Floyd had been arrested after a store clerk reported that he made a purchase using a counterfeit $20 bill.

When was Tom Prasada Rao born? ›

Thomas William Prasada-Rao Jr. was born on April 11, 1958, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the eldest of four children.

Is George Floyd buried now? ›

Floyd is buried next to his mother at Houston Memorial Gardens Cemetery in Pearland, Texas.

Is there a movie about George Floyd? ›

Who painted the George Floyd mural in Minneapolis? ›

Minneapolis, U.S.

The flower is detailed with the names of other victims of police brutality in the U.S. The mural is the creation of artists Cadex Herrera, Greta McLain, and Xena Goldman, who painted the piece on the side of the Cup Foods grocery store, a block away from where Floyd was arrested and killed.

Where did the riots happen in Minneapolis? ›

Looting and arson begin

A crowd of about 1,000 people converged outside the Minneapolis third police precinct station at the intersection of East Lake Street and Minnehaha Avenue on May 27.

When did George Floyd's riots start? ›

The George Floyd protests were a series of riots and demonstrations against police brutality that began in Minneapolis in the United States on May 26, 2020.

Top Articles
Tánaiste Announces United Nations Youth Delegates 2024/25
Police watchdog releases additional details on deadly police shooting of Samson Cree Nation youth
Worcester Weather Underground
Time in Baltimore, Maryland, United States now
Toyota Campers For Sale Craigslist
Jennette Mccurdy And Joe Tmz Photos
Farmers Branch Isd Calendar
Optum Medicare Support
Boat Jumping Female Otezla Commercial Actress
Obituary | Shawn Alexander | Russell Funeral Home, Inc.
Driving Directions To Atlanta
Washington Poe en Tilly Bradshaw 1 - Brandoffer, M.W. Craven | 9789024594917 | Boeken | bol
Hartland Liquidation Oconomowoc
Shreveport Active 911
Nene25 Sports
Vanessa West Tripod Jeffrey Dahmer
Tvtv.us Duluth Mn
Der Megatrend Urbanisierung
Roll Out Gutter Extensions Lowe's
Illinois VIN Check and Lookup
Vrachtwagens in Nederland kopen - gebruikt en nieuw - TrucksNL
Bella Bodhi [Model] - Bio, Height, Body Stats, Family, Career and Net Worth 
Marilyn Seipt Obituary
CVS Health’s MinuteClinic Introduces New Virtual Care Offering
Maine Racer Swap And Sell
Mjc Financial Aid Phone Number
Vivification Harry Potter
Club Keno Drawings
What does wym mean?
Kaiser Infozone
Http://N14.Ultipro.com
Grandstand 13 Fenway
Martin Village Stm 16 & Imax
Mg Char Grill
Kelsey Mcewen Photos
Jefferson Parish Dump Wall Blvd
World History Kazwire
Kelly Ripa Necklace 2022
Wayne State Academica Login
062203010
Wal-Mart 140 Supercenter Products
SF bay area cars & trucks "chevrolet 50" - craigslist
Craigslist Farm And Garden Reading Pa
Brauche Hilfe bei AzBilliards - Billard-Aktuell.de
Walmart 24 Hrs Pharmacy
844 386 9815
Hawkview Retreat Pa Cost
Erespassrider Ual
Bbwcumdreams
Assignation en paiement ou injonction de payer ?
Skyward Login Wylie Isd
Costco Gas Price Fort Lauderdale
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Aracelis Kilback

Last Updated:

Views: 5724

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Aracelis Kilback

Birthday: 1994-11-22

Address: Apt. 895 30151 Green Plain, Lake Mariela, RI 98141

Phone: +5992291857476

Job: Legal Officer

Hobby: LARPing, role-playing games, Slacklining, Reading, Inline skating, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Dance

Introduction: My name is Aracelis Kilback, I am a nice, gentle, agreeable, joyous, attractive, combative, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.