In November 1986, between tour dates, Tina Turner and her pianist Kenny Moore quietly walked into the Jones Tabernacle Baptist Church in Baltimore, Maryland. No announcement. No press. No stage. Kenny sat down at the piano. Tina took a seat at the edge of the bench.
The congregation — mostly elderly women who had been coming to this church for decades — had no idea who was sitting beside the piano. Then Tina opened her mouth.
What happened next in that small, plain church on a Tuesday evening became one of the most private and most extraordinary moments of Tina Turner's entire career. This is that story.
Subscribe for more untold stories about the human beings behind music's greatest legends.
The congregation — mostly elderly women who had been coming to this church for decades — had no idea who was sitting beside the piano. Then Tina opened her mouth.
What happened next in that small, plain church on a Tuesday evening became one of the most private and most extraordinary moments of Tina Turner's entire career. This is that story.
Subscribe for more untold stories about the human beings behind music's greatest legends.
- Category
- TINA TURNER
- Tags
- #TinaTurner, #KennyMoore, #JonesTabernacle
Commenting disabled.





