thank you for making this!!! i feel like amy's legacy is under-explored in our modern era! in my opinion, there would be no adele, lana, jorja smith, or billie eilish -- among countless others -- without the influence of amy winehouse! ❤
I love this, I wish more similiar videos about her were done. There is one that spans close to a hour and tells a lot of her story. th-cam.com/video/X2JICLxNRSQ/w-d-xo.html Yours and Sloan's stick out from the others because you're fans speaking passionately about her and not just spewing facts, because many of her fans feel this way about her and shines a light how she could impact the next generation of her fanbase. "Hm, maybe I was too harsh on her and should have actually learned and tried to understand her story." If only more could say this, because I used to be that way. I didn't know who Amy was until she died, still dismissed her as an addict and never bothered with her music at all because I was just an ignorant 13 year old at the time living in a box I refused to leave. Amy was a very sensitive person, yes she wanted to be famous but you can never be prepared for it, you have to go through it yourself to comprehend the intense life it comes with. And dickheads acting like they know everything and claiming '"she's a waste", or "she's just another stupid dead junkie" (I've tried to convince them it's been long confirmed she died of alcohol poisoning and had been clean from street drugs for three years at that point except a little weed) are reminders of how judgemental people can be about the sufferings of others especially those who have never had their tarot cards shuffled. Drugs and alcohol are so common in the high life especially the entertainment world, because their lives are SO hard to deal with when that level of fame is reached. Michael Jackson was just one of those many addicts in the music industry who's significance is infallible. Highly recommended reading: My Amy: The Life We Shared by her best friend Tyler James and "Loving Amy" by her mother, Janis Winehouse. Janis's book covers things from Amy's early life that no others do. She was ill with multiple sclerosis and that was what was holding her back from helping her daughter the best she could. Those are the only books I'd suggest because her father's is something else. Mitch did not care about her in a way a loving father would, I thought he talked about himself too much and it's clear in a lot of passages that he's blowing smoke up his own ass. The 2015 documentary "AMY" pretty much shows all you need to know about him. And the fact he was talking about her tit job in a way a father should never talk about his daughter was disturbing in itself and I cannot help that my head starts diving into conspiracy theories about their relationship that people in her life don't know about or are trying to cover up. Maybe, it goes much deeper than some greedy, opportunistic father. Amy's stylist, Naomi Parry did a book called "Beyond Black" which is interesting if you want to know more about Amy's style and such, but she always struck me as iffy after Amy's death, selling personal items of hers and things like that.
thank you for making this!!! i feel like amy's legacy is under-explored in our modern era! in my opinion, there would be no adele, lana, jorja smith, or billie eilish -- among countless others -- without the influence of amy winehouse! ❤
@@tomicyberbaby absolute facts!! people forget she really paved the way for these modern artists now
Adele wasn't even really into music until she heard the album 'Frank'
AMY LOVERS RISE UP!!!!
🙋♀️🙋♀️🙋♀️
Thank you for so much for this marvelous tribute! Amy will forever be my favorite artist ❤️
@@NikolaiHedevig-m2h same here ❤️ there will never be another
❤❤❤❤😢
I love this, I wish more similiar videos about her were done. There is one that spans close to a hour and tells a lot of her story. th-cam.com/video/X2JICLxNRSQ/w-d-xo.html
Yours and Sloan's stick out from the others because you're fans speaking passionately about her and not just spewing facts, because many of her fans feel this way about her and shines a light how she could impact the next generation of her fanbase. "Hm, maybe I was too harsh on her and should have actually learned and tried to understand her story." If only more could say this, because I used to be that way. I didn't know who Amy was until she died, still dismissed her as an addict and never bothered with her music at all because I was just an ignorant 13 year old at the time living in a box I refused to leave.
Amy was a very sensitive person, yes she wanted to be famous but you can never be prepared for it, you have to go through it yourself to comprehend the intense life it comes with. And dickheads acting like they know everything and claiming '"she's a waste", or "she's just another stupid dead junkie" (I've tried to convince them it's been long confirmed she died of alcohol poisoning and had been clean from street drugs for three years at that point except a little weed) are reminders of how judgemental people can be about the sufferings of others especially those who have never had their tarot cards shuffled. Drugs and alcohol are so common in the high life especially the entertainment world, because their lives are SO hard to deal with when that level of fame is reached. Michael Jackson was just one of those many addicts in the music industry who's significance is infallible.
Highly recommended reading: My Amy: The Life We Shared by her best friend Tyler James and "Loving Amy" by her mother, Janis Winehouse. Janis's book covers things from Amy's early life that no others do. She was ill with multiple sclerosis and that was what was holding her back from helping her daughter the best she could.
Those are the only books I'd suggest because her father's is something else. Mitch did not care about her in a way a loving father would, I thought he talked about himself too much and it's clear in a lot of passages that he's blowing smoke up his own ass. The 2015 documentary "AMY" pretty much shows all you need to know about him. And the fact he was talking about her tit job in a way a father should never talk about his daughter was disturbing in itself and I cannot help that my head starts diving into conspiracy theories about their relationship that people in her life don't know about or are trying to cover up. Maybe, it goes much deeper than some greedy, opportunistic father.
Amy's stylist, Naomi Parry did a book called "Beyond Black" which is interesting if you want to know more about Amy's style and such, but she always struck me as iffy after Amy's death, selling personal items of hers and things like that.
thank you sooo much!!