SOUND PROJECTIONS
AN ONLINE QUARTERLY MUSIC MAGAZINE
EDITOR: KOFI NATAMBU
WINTER, 2014
VOLUME ONE NUMBER ONE
Featuring the Musics and Aesthetic Visions of:
ANTHONY BRAXTON
November 1-7
CECIL TAYLOR
November 8-14
STEVIE WONDER
November 15-21
JIMI HENDRIX
November 22-28
GERI ALLEN
November 29-December 5
HERBIE HANCOCK
December 6-12
SONNY ROLLINS
December 13-19
JANELLE MONÀE
December 20-26
GARY CLARK, JR.
December 27-January 2
NINA SIMONE
January 3-January 9
ORNETTE COLEMAN
January 10-January 16
WAYNE SHORTER
January 17-23
*[Special bonus feature: A celebration of the centennial year of musician, composer, orchestra leader, and philosopher SUN RA, 1914-1993]
January 24-30
http://www.ninasimone.com/
Bio
She was one of the most extraordinary artists of the twentieth
century, an icon of American music. She was the consummate musical
storyteller, a griot as she would come to learn, who used her
remarkable talent to create a legacy of liberation, empowerment,
passion, and love through a magnificent body of works.
She
earned the moniker ‘High Priestess of Soul’ for she could weave a spell
so seductive and hypnotic that the listener lost track of time and
space as they became absorbed in the moment. She was who the world would
come to know as Nina Simone.
When Nina Simone died on April 21, 2003, she left a timeless treasure
trove of musical magic spanning over four decades from her first hit,
the 1959 Top 10 classic “I Loves You Porgy,” to “A Single Woman,” the
title cut from her one and only 1993 Elektra album. While thirty-three
years separate those recordings, the element of honest emotion is the
glue that binds the two together – it is that approach to every piece of
work that became Nina’s uncompromising musical trademark.
By the end of her life, Nina was enjoying an unprecedented degree of
recognition. Her music was enjoyed by the masses due to the CD
revolution, discovery on the Internet, and exposure through movies and
television. Nina had sold over one million CDs in the last decade of her
life, making her a global catalog best-seller.
No
one website can fully explore the many nuances and flavors that made up
the more than 40 original albums in the Nina Simone library. This site
and accompanying radio station contain many of Nina’s finest works.
However, we might not have had the chance to witness the breathtaking
range of material Nina could cover if she hadn’t taken the path she did.
Born Eunice Kathleen Waymon in Tryon, North Carolina on February
21st, 1933, Nina’s prodigious talent as a musician was evident early on
when she started playing piano by ear at the age of three. Her mother, a
Methodist minister, and her father, a handyman and preacher himself,
couldn’t ignore young Eunice’s God-given gift of music. Raised in the
church on the straight and narrow, her parents taught her right from
wrong, to carry herself with dignity, and to work hard. She played piano
– but didn’t sing – in her mother’s church, displaying remarkable
talent early in her life. Able to play virtually anything by ear, she
was soon studying classical music with an Englishwoman named Muriel
Mazzanovich, who had moved to the small southern town. It was from these
humble roots that Eunice developed a lifelong love of Johann Sebastian
Bach, Chopin, Brahms, Beethoven and Schubert. This website captures milestones in a career that has had more than its share of peaks and valleys.After
graduating valedictorian of her high school class, the community raised
money for a scholarship for Eunice to study at Julliard in New York
City before applying to the prestigious Curtis Institute of Music in
Philadelphia. Her family had already moved to the City Of Brotherly
Love, but Eunice’s hopes for a career as a pioneering African American
classical pianist were dashed when the school denied her admission. To
the end, she herself would claim that racism was the reason she did not
attend. While her original dream was unfulfilled, Eunice ended up with
an incredible worldwide career as Nina Simone – almost by default.
To survive, she began teaching music to local students. One fateful
day in 1954, looking to supplement her income, Eunice auditioned to sing
at the Midtown Bar & Grill on Pacific Avenue in Atlantic City, New
Jersey. Word spread about this new singer and pianist who was dipping
into the songbooks of Gershwin, Cole Porter, Richard Rodgers, and the
like, transforming popular tunes of the day into a unique synthesis of
jazz, blues, and classical music. Her rich, deep velvet vocal tones,
combined with her mastery of the keyboard, soon attracted club goers up
and down the East Coast. In order to hide the fact that she was singing
in bars, Eunice’s mother would refer to the practice as “working in the
fires of hell”, overnight Eunice Waymon became Nina Simone by taking the
nickname “Nina” meaning “little one” in Spanish and “Simone” after the
actress Simone Signoret.
At the age of twenty-four, Nina came to the attention of the record
industry. After submitting a demo of songs she had recorded during a
performance in New Hope, Pennsylvania, she was signed by Syd Nathan,
owner of the Ohio-based King Records (home to James Brown), to his Jazz
imprint, Bethlehem Records. The boisterous Nathan had insisted on
choosing songs for her debut set, but eventually relented and allowed
Nina to delve in the repertoire she had been performing at clubs up and
down the eastern seaboard. One of Nina’s stated musical influences was
Billie Holiday and her inspired reading of “Porgy” (from “Porgy &
Bess”) heralded the arrival of a new talent on the national scene. At
the same mammoth 13 hour session in 1957, recorded in New York City,
Nina also cut “My Baby Just Cares For Me,” previously recorded by Nate
King Cole, Count Basie, and Woody Herman. The song was used by Chanel in
a perfume commercial in Europe in the 1980’s and it became a massive
hit for Nina, a British chart topper at #5, and thus a staple of her
repertoire for the rest of her career.
Nina
Simone’s stay with Bethlehem Records was short lived and in 1959, after
moving to New York City, she was signed by Joyce Selznik, the eastern
talent scout for Colpix Records, a division of Columbia Pictures. Months
after the release of her debut LP for the label (1959‘s The Amazing
Nina Simone), Nina was performing at her first major New York City
venue, the mid-Manhattan-located Town Hall. Sensing that her live
performances would capture the essential spontaneity of her artistry,
Colpix opted to record her September 12, 1959 show. “You Can Have Him,” a
glorious torch song previously cut by Peggy Lee and Ella Fitzgerald,
was one of the highlights of the evening. The song opened with a
dazzling keyboard arpeggio that would become her signature for decades.
So momentous was the Town Hall performance that it inspired some of the
same musicians, featuring the vocals of Nina’s only daughter, Lisa
Simone Kelly, to do a tribute to a sold out audience over forty five
years later.
As Nina’s reputation as an engaging live performer grew, it wasn’t
long before she was asked to perform at the prestigious Newport Jazz
Festival. Accompanied on the June 30th,1960 show by Al Schackman, a
guitarist who would go on to become Nina’s longest-running musical
colleague, bassist Chris White, and drummer Bobby Hamilton, the dynamic
show was recorded by the Colpix. The subsequent release in 1961 of the
old blues tune “Trouble In Mind” as a single gave Nina her third charted
record.
Her stay with Colpix resulted in some wonderful albums – nine in all –
included Nina’s version of Bessie Smith’s blues classic “Nobody Knows
You When You’re Down And Out.” Issued as a single in 1960, it became
Nina’s second charted Pop and R&B hit and one of two Colpix tracks
to achieve such a feat during her five year stint with the label. Other
stand out tracks from that era were the soulful song “Cotton Eyed Joe,”
the torch tune “The Other Women,” and the Norwegian folk rendition of
“Black Is The Colour Of My True Love’s Hair” – all beautiful examples of
Nina Simone at her storytelling best, painting a vivid picture with her
skill as a lyrical interpreter. During this time with the label, Nina
recorded one civil rights song, Oscar Brown Jr.’s “Brown Baby,” which
was included on her fifth album for the label, At The Village Gate.
“Critics started to talk about what sort of music I was playing,”
writes Nina in her 1991 autobiography I Put A Spell On You, “and tried
to find a neat slot to file it away in. It was difficult for them
because I was playing popular songs in a classical style with a
classical piano technique influenced by cocktail jazz. On top of that I
included spirituals and children’s song in my performances, and those
sorts of songs were automatically identified with the folk movement. So,
saying what sort of music I played gave the critics problems because
there was something from everything in there, but it also meant I was
appreciated across the board – by jazz, folk, pop and blues fans as well
as admirers of classical music.” Clearly Nina Simone was not an artist
who could be easily classified.
Nina’s Colpix recordings cemented her appeal to a nightclub based
U.S. audience. Once she moved to Phillips, a division of Dutch owned
Mercury Records, she was ready to expand her following globally. Her
first LP for the label, 1964’s In Concert, signaled Nina’s undaunting
stand for freedom and justice for all, stamping her irrevocably as a
pioneer and inspirational leader in the U.S. Civil Rights Movement. Her
own original “Mississippi Goddam” was banned throughout the South but
such a response made no difference in Nina’s unyielding commitment to
liberty; subsequent groundbreaking recordings for Philips like “Four
Women” (recorded September 1965) and “Strange Fruit” continued to keep
Nina in the forefront of the few performers willing to use music as a
vehicle for social commentary and change. Such risks were seldom taken
by artists during that time of such dramatic civil upheaval.
For years, Nina felt there was much about the way that she made her
living that was less then appealing. One gets a sense of that in the
following passage from I Put A Spell on You where she explains her
initial reluctance to perform material that was tied to the Civil Rights
Movement.
“Nightclubs were dirty, making records was dirty, popular music was
dirty and to mix all that with politics seemed senseless and demeaning.
And until songs like ‘Mississippi Goddam’ just burst out of me, I had
musical problems as well. How can you take the memory of a man like
[Civil Rights activist] Medgar Evers and reduce all that he was to three
and a half minutes and a simple tune? That was the musical side of it I
shied away from; I didn’t like ‘protest music’ because a lot of it was
so simple and unimaginative it stripped the dignity away from the people
it was trying to celebrate. But the Alabama church bombing and the
murder of Medgar Evers stopped that argument and with ‘Mississippi
Goddam,’ I realized there was no turning back.”
Nina was deeply affected by these two events. In 1962, she had
befriended noted playwright Lorraine Hansberry and spoke often with her
about the Civil Rights Movement. While she was moved by her
conversations with Hansberry, it took the killing of Medgar Evers and
the four girls in Birmingham to act as catalysts for a transformation of
Nina’s career.
There were many sides to Nina Simone. Among her most amazing
recordings were the original and so-soulful version “Don’t Let Me Be
Misunderstood” and “I Put A Spell On You” (which had reached to #23 in
the U.S. charts), eerily moody, unrestrained, drama to the max; “Ne Me
Quitte Pas” tender, poignant, filled with melancholy; and with
gospel-like fervor, the hypnotic voodoo of “See-Line Woman.” In her own
unrivaled way, Nina also loved to venture into the more earthy side of
life. After she signed with RCA Records in 1967 (a deal her then
husband/manager Andy Stroud had negotiated), her very first recordings
for the label included the saucy “Do I Move You?” and the undeniably
sexual “I Want A Little Sugar In My Bowl” which were from the concept
album entitled Nina Sings The Blues. Backed by a stellar cast of New
York CIty session musicians, the album was far and away Nina’s most
down-home recording session. By this time, Nina had become central to a
circle of African American playwrights, poets, and writers all centered
in Harlem along with the previously mentioned Lorraine Hansberry, James
Baldwin and Langston Hughes. The outcome from one of the relationships
became a highlight of the LP with the song “Backlash Blues,” a song
that’s lyrics originated from the last poem Langston Hughes submitted
for publication prior to his death in May, 1967 and gave to Nina.
Nina’s seven years with RCA produced some remarkable recordings,
ranging from two songs featured in the Broadway musical “Hair” (combined
into a medley, “Ain’t Got No – I Got Life,” a #2 British hit in 1968)
to a Simone-ified version of George Harrison’s “Here Comes The Sun,”
which remained in Nina’s repertoire all the way through to her final
performance in 2002. Along the way at RCA, songs penned by Bob Dylan
(“Just Like A Woman”), the brothers Gibb (“To Love Somebody”), and Tina
Turner (“Funkier Than A Mosquito’s Tweeter”) took pride of place
alongside Nina’s own anthem of empowerment, the classic “To Be Young,
Gifted, & Black,” a song written in memory of Nina’s good friend
Lorraine Hansberry. The title of the song coming from a play Hansberry
had been working on just prior to her death.
After
Nina left RCA, she spent a good deal of the 1970’s and early 1980’s
living in Liberia, Barbados, England, Belgium, France, Switzerland and
The Netherlands. In 1978, for the first time since she left RCA, Nina
was convinced by U.S. jazz veteran Creed Taylor to make an album for his
CTI label. This would be her first new studio album in six years and
she recorded it in Belgium with strings and background vocals cut in New
York City. With the kind of “clean” sound that was a hallmark of CTI
recordings, the Nina Simone album that emerged was simply brilliant.
Nina herself would later claimed that she ”hated” the record but many
fans strongly disagreed. With an eighteen piece string section conducted
by David Mathews (known for his arrangements on James Brown’s records),
the results were spectacular. The title track, Randy Newman’s evocative
“Baltimore,” was an inspired Nina Simone choice. It had a beautifully
constructed reggae-like beat and used some of the finest musicians
producer Creed Taylor could find including Nina’s guitarist and music
director, Al Schackman.
Aside from 1982’s Fodder On My Wings that Nina recorded for Carrere
Records, two albums she made of the independent VPI label in Hollywood
(Nina’s Back and Live And Kickin’) in 1985, and a 1987 Live At Vine
Street set recorded for Verve, Nina Simone did not make another full
length album until Elektra A&R executive Michael Alago persuaded her
to record again. After much wining and dining, Nina finally signed on
the dotted line. Elektra tapped producer Andre Fischer, noted conductor
Jeremy Lubbock, and a trio of respected musicians to provide the
suitable environment for this highly personal reading of “A Single
Woman,” which became the centerpiece and title track for Nina Simone’s
final full length album.
With two marriages behind her in 1993 she settled in Carry-le-Rout,
near Aix-en-Provence in Southern France. She would continue to tour
through the 1990’s and became very much ‘the single woman’ she sang
about on her last label recording. She rarely traveled without an
entourage, but if you were fortunate enough to get to know the woman
behind the music you could glimpse the solitary soul that understood the
pain of being misunderstood. It was one of Nina’s many abilities to
comprehend the bittersweet qualities of life and then parlay them into a
song that made her such an enduring and fascinating person.
In her autobiography, Nina Simone writes that her function as an
artist is “…to make people feel on a deep level. It’s difficult to
describe because it’s not something you can analyze; to get near what
it’s about you have to play it. And when you’ve caught it, when you’ve
got the audience hooked, you always know because it’s like electricity
hanging in the air.” It was that very electricity that made her such an
important artist to so many and it will be that electricity that
continues to turn on new people all over the world for years to come.
Nina Simone died in her sleep at her home in Carry-le-Rout,
Bouches-du-Rhone on April 21, 2003. Her funeral service was attended by
Miriam Makeba, Patti Labelle, poet Sonia Sanchez, actor Ossie Davis and
hundreds of others. Elton John sent a floral tribute with the message,
“You were the greatest and I love you”. And the legacy continues…
Contributions by: David Nathan (RCA’s
‘Nina Simone Anthology’, ‘Simone On Simone’), Ed Ward & Richard
Seidel (RCA/Legacy ‘To Be Free-The Nina Simone Story’), Rob Bowman (Jazz
Icons), Aaron Overfield (L’hommage: Nina Simone), additional editing by
Sarah Epler
Nina Simone: "That Blackness"
(From 1968 interview)
Released by the Estate of Nina Simone:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3ClwX7oyXk
"That Blackness"
Released by the Estate of Nina Simone: Recording session & Interview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3ClwX7oyXk&list=RDc3ClwX7oyXk#t=95
http://panopticonreview.blogspot.com/2014/02/nina-simone-1933-2003-celebrating.html
Friday, February 21, 2014
Nina Simone, 1933-2003: Celebrating The Magnificent Life, Work, and Legacy of An Artistic and Cultural Icon On The 81st Anniversary of Her Birth
NINA SIMONE
(b. February 21, 1933--d. April 21, 2003)
"MISSISSIPPI GODDAM!" (Composition and lyrics by Nina Simone, 1964):
Mississippi Goddam is a song written and performed by American singer and pianist Nina Simone. It was first released on her album Nina Simone in Concert which was based on recordings of three concerts she gave at Carnegie Hall in 1964. The album was her first release for the Dutch label Philips Records and is indicative of the more political turn her recorded music took during this period. The song was released as a single and became a civil rights activist anthem.[1] It was banned [1] in several Southern states, ostensibly because of the word 'goddam' in the title.
Together with "Four Women" and "To Be Young, Gifted and Black" it is one of her most famous protest songs and self-written compositions.
Interpretation
The song is her response to the murder of Medgar Evers in Mississippi; and the bombing of a church in Birmingham, Alabama, killing four black children. On the recording she cynically announces the song as "a show tune, but the show hasn't been written for it yet". The song begins jauntily, with a show tune feel, but demonstrates its political focus early on with its refrain "Alabama's got me so upset, Tennessee's made me lose my rest, and everybody knows about Mississippi goddam". In the song she says: "Keep on sayin' 'go slow'...to do things gradually would bring more tragedy. Why don't you see it? Why don't you feel it? I don't know, I don't know. You don't have to live next to me, just give me my equality!"
She performed the song in front of 40,000 people at the end of one of the Selma to Montgomery marches when she and other black activists, including Sammy Davis Jr., James Baldwin and Harry Belafonte crossed police lines.
References
Jump up ^ Nina Simone Reveals 'Mississippi Goddam' Song 'Hurt My Career'. Jet. March 24, 1986. p. 54.
External links[edit]
Full lyrics of this song at MetroLyrics
"There's no other purpose, so far as I'm concerned, for us except to reflect the times, the situations around us and the things we're able to say through our art, the things that millions of people can't say. I think that's the function of an artist and, of course, those of us who are lucky leave a legacy so that when we're dead, we also live on. That's people like Billie Holiday and I hope that I will be that lucky, but meanwhile, the function, so far as I'm concerned, is to reflect the times, whatever that might be.”—Nina Simone
FROM THE PANOPTICON REVIEW ARCHIVES
(Originally posted on February 23, 2011):
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
The Magnificent Nina Simone (1933-2003)
(Originally posted on February 23, 2011):
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
The Magnificent Nina Simone (1933-2003)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAtMEsIVLVo&feature=player_embedded#at=102
"There's no other purpose, so far as I'm concerned, for us except to reflect the times, the situations around us and the things we're able to say through our art, the things that millions of people can't say. I think that's the function of an artist and, of course, those of us who are lucky leave a legacy so that when we're dead, we also live on. That's people like Billie Holiday and I hope that I will be that lucky, but meanwhile, the function, so far as I'm concerned, is to reflect the times, whatever that might be."
"I had spent many years pursuing excellence, because that is what classical music is all about... Now it was dedicated to freedom, and that was far more important."
"Slavery has never been abolished from America's way of thinking."
--Nina Simone
All,
The late, GREAT Nina Simone (1933-2003) in a typically incendiary and riveting performance on German television in Berlin in 1967. This is posted in celebration of Nina's 78th birthday on Monday, February 21, 2011. Check out still many more video performances below from this bona fide GIANT and Genius of the last truly 'Golden Age' of African American artists and culture (1920-1980)...ENJOY...
Kofi
THE
MUSIC OF NINA SIMONE: AN EXTENSIVE VIDEO OVERVIEW, A CROSS SECTION OF
RECORDINGS, MUSICAL ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY, PLUS VARIOUS INTERVIEWS
WITH MS. SIMONE:
Nina Simone - "What You Gonna Do?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAtMEsIVLVo&feature=player_embedded#at=102Nina Simone - Backlash Blues - Live in England - 14.09.1968.
The Backlash Blues
Poem by Langston Hughes (1902-1967)
(Music composed by Nina Simone; also sung and recorded by Nina Simone, 1968)
Mister Backlash, Mister Backlash,
Just who do you think I am?
You raise my taxes, freeze my wages,
Send my son to Vietnam
You give me second class houses,
Second class schools.
Do you think that colored folks
Are just second class fools?
When I try to find a job
To earn a little cash,
All you got to offer
Is your mean ole white backlash.
But the world is big,
Big and bright and round--
And it's full of folks like me who are
Black, Yellow, Beige, and Brown.
Mister Backlash, Mister Backlash
What do you think I got to lose?
I'm gonna leave you, Mister Backlash,
Singing your mean old backlash blues.
You're the one
Will have the blues.
Not me--
Wait and see!
Nina Live in Concert At Harlem Cultural Festival 1969:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nf9Bj1CXPH8
Four Women
(by Nina Simone)
My skin is black
My arms are long
My hair is wooly
My back is strong
Strong enough to take the pain
That's been inflicted again and again
What do they call me?
My name is aunt sarah
My name is aunt sarah
My skin is yellow
My hair is long
Between two worlds
I do belong
My father was rich and white
He forced my mother late one night
What do they call me?
My name is siffronia
My name is siffronia
My skin is tan
My hairs alright, its fine
My hips invite you
And my lips are like wine
Whose little girl am i?
Well yours if you have some money to buy
What do they call me?
My name is sweet thing
My name is sweet thing
My skin is brown
And my manner is tough
I'll kill the first mother I see
Cause my life has been too rough
I'm awfully bitter these days
Because my parents were slaves
What do they call me?
My
Name
Is
Peaches
Nina Simone - "Revolution"
Live in concert at Harlem Cultural Festival in 1969:
Nina: The Essential Nina Simone [Full Album]
The Very Best Of Nina Simone (Full Album)
Nina Simone - Silk & Soul (Full album) 1967:
Nina Simone Live in concert in London, 1968:
Nina Simone - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood
Nina Simone - High Priestess Of Soul (Full Album) 1967
Nina Simone - "Go To Hell" - Live in England - 14.09.1968:
Nina Simone: Live at Teatro Sistina in Rome, 1968:
Nina Simone:
00:00 Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair
04:16 To Love Somebody
06:40 Suzanne
13:09 Save Me
17:26 Porgy, I Is Your Woman Now / Today Is A Killer / I Loves You Porgy
Nina Simone--"Sinnerman":
Nina Simone--"Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" + Mix of other songs and music:
Nina Simone - "Feeling Good" [HD]:
Nina Simone--"I Put A Spell On You":
Nina Simone - "The Ballad of Hollis Brown" (live):
Nina Simone - "Why? (The King of Love is Dead)" [Full Live Version]:
Recorded on April 7, 1968, live three days after the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. and performed at the Westbury Music Fair. Nina Simone dedicated her performance to King's memory. The song was written by her bass player, Gene Taylor. An edited version of this performance appears on Simone's album, Nuff Said (1968). I felt the unedited version captures the true emotional energy of the period surrounding Simone's performance.
In 1968 RCA released "Nuff Said" a very heavily edited version of this performance. It was supposed to be a "live" album. Some songs were edited, some were remixed and some songs were studio recordings passed off as live.
Taken from Forever Young, Gifted and Black: Songs of Freedom & Spirit compilation LP (RCA / Victor) - 2006
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wh6R0BRzjW4&list=RDWh6R0BRzjW4&index=1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Uy8cyVWU2A&list=RDWh6R0BRzjW4&index=5
Nina Simone "Sunday In Savannah" (Live):
Nina Simone recorded live in concert on April 7, 1968 just three days after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. Nina's references to "Atlanta" (Georgia) in his spoken introduction to this song are to the site of Dr. King's hometown and funeral which happened two days later on April 9, 1968.
The first memorial service following the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. on April 4, 1968, took place the following day at the R.S. Lewis Funeral Home in Memphis, Tennessee. This was followed by two funeral services on April 9, 1968 in Atlanta, Georgia, the first held for family and close friends at Ebenezer Baptist Church, where King and his father had both served as senior pastors, followed by a three-mile procession to Morehouse College, King's alma mater, for a public service.President Lyndon B. Johnson declared a national day of mourning for the lost civil rights leader on April 7, 1968, the very date of Nina's live performance documented here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLWSw01NxKY&index=6&list=RDWh6R0BRzjW4
nina simone- "baltimore"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAP9qFHj6jE
http://lareviewofbooks.org/review/revolutionary-performances
Revolutionary Performances
July 3rd, 2014One of the many remarkable aspects of Ruth Feldstein’s How It Feels to Be Free: Black Women Entertainers and the Civil Rights Movement is that it manages simultaneously to trace histories of black thought, activism, and performance, while reconstructing histories of how journalists, writers, and others imagined blackness through the civil rights era; in other words, she traces both the idea of the Black Revolutionary and actual revolutionaries. Feldstein’s interest is in developing the stories of six black, female performers: Lena Horne, Miriam Makeba, Nina Simone, Abbey Lincoln, Diahann Carroll, and Cicely Tyson. Feldstein's book provides useful archival work on the civil rights movement and the women upon whom she focuses, finding new and interesting information about musical performance, black activism, and racial representation in film and television. Highlighting the public reception of these artists and intellectuals, Feldstein’s sources — drawn from collections at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem and the Margaret Herrick Library at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in California, as well as popular publications such as the Chicago Defender, Variety, The New York Times, Ebony, Sepia, High Fidelity, and Down Beat — demonstrate how these women engaged multiple publics, building connections, for instance, to black and white audiences with a spectrum of responses to political activism.
The overall significance of these prominent women is that, because of the range of ways they were able to connect to audiences, they helped to create a new national imagination of blackness in general and of black femininity in particular. And what’s valuable about Feldstein’s work is that she’s able to restore a fuller sense of these women. The media attention these women received, especially from liberal outlets interested in social justice, often flattened out their differences in order to foster a univocal imagination of the Black Revolutionary. But Feldstein convincingly shows that the politics these women espoused varied quite dramatically. Taken together, they offer an illustration of the complex ideas and tensions of the civil rights movement.
Part of Feldstein’s contribution, of course, comes simply from the provocation of her subject: her central argument that women entertainers should be considered as a significant part of the civil rights movement. The figure of the Black Revolutionary is typically imagined as masculine; in fact, the figure is so masculinized that that African American politics and activism are frequently associated exclusively with men. This has been particularly true in the imagination of leadership and intellectual thought during the civil rights era. Feldstein “brings women entertainers and their contributions center stage to histories of civil rights and the rise of feminism,” providing new contributions to the history of race in the United States, scholarship on the civil rights era, and feminist studies. She suggests that, “a fuller understanding of black activism and feminism requires expanding the realm of political activity.” She does so by taking seriously the politics forwarded by female performers, their activities and thoughts that, as Feldstein points out, are often overlooked for their contribution to civil rights discourses.
Making her case, Feldstein draws on the work of important scholars of the civil rights movement and of black expressive culture — for instance, Daphne Brooks, Farah Jasmine Griffin, Kevin Gaines, Peniel Joseph, Taylor Branch, and Robin D. G. Kelley — but her accessible tone should appeal to a wide audience of readers interested in these performers and the cultural issues of their lives. Feldstein’s conversation with these previous works of history and performance studies helps her place these women as contemporaries of one another. Although this move might seem obvious, it is surprisingly radical: doing so performs the important work of understanding the cultural and political contributions of black women as a sustained movement, rather than each woman being taken as an exception to the societal positioning of women, African Americans, or African American women.
Feldstein’s carefully selected examples bring to light an engaging range of black intellectual thought and experience. Her portrayals of Miriam Makeba and Nina Simone as talented women with radical politics take into account not only race in the United States, but racial histories and constructions at work over the surface of the globe. The South African singer and activist Makeba, for instance, “affected meanings of black power on two continents.” As Feldstein notes, at times in popular culture “she came to embody Africa for Americans, black and white, reproduced long-standing perspectives of Africa as a primitive space where racial and gendered ‘others’ might live.” In other instances — from the stage at the Village Vanguard to a turn in Come Back, Africa, a controversial film from 1960, which exposed the violence of race relations in South Africa — Makeba highlighted her transnational politics, purposefully creating connections between US-based civil rights and anti-apartheid activism in South Africa. In this way, she successfully linked US racial politics to global movements of internationalism and decolonization. Likewise, Julliard-trained Nina Simone espoused a radical politics that connected people of color in struggle around the world. While in England, Simone shocked her white audience by demonstrating her identification with fans from West India and Africa. As she told Melody Maker in 1968, “The Negro revolution is only one aspect of increasing violence and unrest in the world.” Lorraine Hansberry, author of A Raisin in the Sun and Simone’s confidant, remembers their “girls’ talk” as being about “Marx, Lenin, and revolution.” Feldstein clearly demonstrates a fondness for these kinds of radical geopolitics and how these women forwarded a vision of racial, gendered, and class politics not bound by national borders.
Other artists were less able to test the boundaries of politics in the United States. Feldstein clearly appreciates Cicely Tyson’s craft, for instance, but she also points out that the politics forwarded by Tyson have a different, more limited scope than that of Makeba and Simone because of how she was received. Tyson, famous for her superb acting in Sounder (1972), The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1974), and Roots (1977), often chose roles with historical heft. These parts, however, often placed Tyson outside of contemporary narratives of struggle and an urban habitus, creating a more easily accepted story of black struggle as having unfolded in a static, rural past. These films, Feldman suggests, were seized upon to substantiate a social view quite different than the pan-African politics espoused by Makeba and Simone: the fiction that Africans and African Americans did not face the same kinds of violence contemporarily, even as they both created space for strong black womanhood. Tyson, thus, came to stand as a soothing rather than confrontational figure of black radicalism: while audiences could acknowledge the strength and perseverance of African American women through Tyson's performances, they also managed to excuse themselves from thinking about institutional anti-black racisms in the present.
Ruth Feldstein’s book seems particularly prescient given current debates about black feminism. Black women performers are often held up as resistant icons, composed of strength, intelligence, and talent. But as we know, the image of “the strong black woman” can hold multiple meanings, and not all of them good — even for an audience inclined to admire them. As with the reception of Cicely Tyson, black women’s images can be used to cover over other forms of inequality. For example, bell hooks recently raised a controversy by pointing out what she feels to be Beyoncé’s collusion with “imperialist, white supremacist capitalist patriarchy.” Feldstein’s book helps us contextualize hooks’s polemic; hooks seems to yearn for the kind of politics that Makeba and Simone might have fought for in the era of decolonization. And Feldstein also helps us see why hooks may well be right: her book allows us to align Beyoncé’s carefully managed image within the Black Revolutionary model, where radical politics can be simultaneously praised and vacated by a progressive but complacent audience. So, while Beyoncé’s success is understandably admired, her circulation as a figure of strength, and thus implicitly of a better and more just world, ironically allows the idea of her to occlude other political terrains, such as the naturalization of neoliberal entrepreneurship that she also embodies as a singular “Queen.” In a time when performers, artists, and writers are held up as role models and arbiters of public opinion, their relationship with feminism should be closely monitored. Feldstein’s book is a timely reminder that performers have at times been deeply engaged in a range of global and national politics and that black women have been at the forefront of generating thoughtful feminist ideas.
¤
Fiona I.B. Ngô is the author of Imperial Blues: Geographies of Sex and Race in Jazz Age New York.http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/08/11/raised-voice
American Annals August 11, 2014 Issue
A Raised Voice
How Nina Simone turned the movement into music.
By Claudia Roth Pierpont
The New Yorker
“My
skin is black,” the first woman’s story begins, “my arms are long.”
And, to a slow and steady beat, “my hair is woolly, my back is strong.”
Singing in a club in Holland, in 1965, Nina Simone introduced a song she
had written about what she called “four Negro women” to a young,
homogeneously white, and transfixed crowd. “And one of the women’s
hair,” she instructed, brushing her hand lightly across her own woolly
Afro, “is like mine.” Every performance of “Four Women” caught on film
(as here) or disk is different. Sometimes Simone coolly chants the first
three women’s parts—the effect is of resigned weariness—and at other
times, as on this particular night, she gives each woman an individual,
sharply dramatized voice. All four have names. Aunt Sarah is old, and
her strong back has allowed her only “to take the pain inflicted again
and again.” Sephronia’s yellow skin and long hair are the result of her
rich white father having raped her mother—“Between two worlds I do
belong”—and Sweet Thing, a prostitute, has tan skin and a smiling
bravado that seduced at least some of the eager Dutch listeners into the
mistake of smiling, too. And then Simone hit them with the last and
most resolutely up to date of the women, improbably named Peaches. “My
skin is brown,” she growled ferociously, “my manner is tough. I’ll kill
the first mother I see. ’Cause my life has been rough.” (One has to
wonder what the Dutch made of killing that “mother.”) If Simone’s song
suggests a history of black women in America, it is also a history of
long-suppressed and finally uncontainable anger.
Ironically, “Four Women” was charged with being insulting to black women and was banned on a couple of radio stations in New York and Philadelphia soon after the recording was released, in 1966. The ban was lifted, however, when it produced more outrage than the song. Simone’s husband, Andrew Stroud, who was also her manager, worried about the dangers that the controversy might have for her career, although this was hardly a new problem. Simone had been singing out loud and clear about civil rights since 1963—well after the heroic stand of figures like Harry Belafonte and Sammy Davis, Jr., but still at a time when many black performers felt trapped between the rules of commercial success and the increasing pressure for racial confrontation. At Motown, in the early sixties, the wildly popular performers of a stream of crossover hits became models of black achievement but had virtually no contact with the movement at all.
Simone herself had been hesitant at first. Known for her sophisticated pianism, her imperious attitude, and her velvety rendition of “I Loves You, Porgy” (which, like Billie Holiday before her, she sang without the demeaningly ungrammatical “s” on “loves”), she had arrived in New York in late 1958, establishing her reputation not in Harlem but in the clubs of hip and relatively interracial Greenwich Village. Her repertoire of jazz and folk and show tunes, often played with a classical touch, made her impossible to classify. In these early years, she performed African songs but also Hebrew songs, and wove a Bach fugue through a rapid-fire version of “Love Me or Leave Me.” She tossed off the thirties bauble “My Baby Just Cares for Me” with airy insouciance, and wrung the heart out of the lullaby “Brown Baby”—newly written by Oscar Brown, Jr., about a family’s hopes for a child born into a better racial order—erupting in a hair-raising wail on the word “freedom,” as though registering all the pain over all the years during which it was denied. For a while, “Brown Baby” was as close to a protest song as Simone got. She believed it was enough.
And then her friend Lorraine Hansberry set her straight. It speaks to Simone’s intelligence and restless force that, in her twenties, she attracted some of African-American culture’s finest minds. Both Langston Hughes and James Baldwin elected themselves mentors: Simone, appearing on the scene just as Holiday died, seemed to evoke their most exuberant hopes and most protective instincts. But Hansberry offered her a special bond. A young woman also dealing with a startling early success—Hansberry was twenty-eight when “A Raisin in the Sun” won the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award, in 1959—she had a strongly cultivated black pride and a pedagogical bent. “We never talked about men or clothes,” Simone wrote in her memoir, decades later. “It was always Marx, Lenin and revolution—real girls’ talk.” A milestone in Simone’s career was a solo concert at Carnegie Hall—a happy chance to show off her pianism—on April 12, 1963, which happened also to be the day that Martin Luther King, Jr., was arrested with other protesters in Birmingham, Alabama, and locked up in the local jail. The discrepancy between the events was pointed out by Hansberry, who telephoned Simone after the concert, although not to offer praise.
Two months later, Simone played a benefit for the N.A.A.C.P. In early August, she sang “Brown Baby” before a crowd gathered in the football stadium of a black college outside Birmingham—the first integrated concert ever given in the area—while guards with guns and dogs prowled the field. But Hansberry only started a process that events in America quickly accelerated. Simone watched the March on Washington, later that August, on television, while she was preparing for a club date. She was still rehearsing when, on September 15th, news came of the bombing of Birmingham’s Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, killing four young African-American girls who had just got out of Bible class. Simone’s first impulsive act, she recalled, was to try to make a zip gun with tools from her garage. “I had it in my mind to go out and kill someone,” she wrote. “I didn’t yet know who, but someone I could identify as being in the way of my people.”
This urge to violence was not a wholly aberrant impulse but something that had been brewing on a national scale, however tamped down by cooler heads and political pragmatists. At the Washington march, John Lewis, then a leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, was forced to cut the word “revolution” from his speech and to omit the threat that, absent immediate progress, the marchers would go through the South “the way Sherman did” and “burn Jim Crow to the ground.” James Baldwin, in a televised discussion after the bombing, noted that, throughout American history, “the only time that nonviolence has been admired is when the Negroes practice it.” But the center held. Simone’s husband, a smart businessman, told her to forget the gun and put her rage into her music.
It took her an hour to write “Mississippi Goddam.” A freewheeling cri de coeur based on the place names of oppression, the song has a jaunty tune that makes an ironic contrast with words—“Alabama’s got me so upset, Tennessee made me lose my rest”—that arose from injustices so familiar they hardly needed to be stated: “And everybody knows about Mississippi, goddam!” Still, Simone spelled them out. She mocked stereotypical insults (“Too damn lazy!”), government promises (“Desegregation / Mass participation”), and, above all, the continuing admonition of public leaders to “Go slow,” a line that prompted her backup musicians to call out repeatedly, as punctuation, “Too slow!” It wasn’t “We Shall Overcome” or “Blowin’ in the Wind”: Simone had little feeling for the Biblically inflected uplift that defined the anthems of the era. It’s a song about a movement nearly out of patience by a woman who never had very much to begin with, and who had little hope for the American future: “Oh but this whole country is full of lies,” she sang. “You’re all gonna die and die like flies.”
She introduced the song in a set at the Village Gate a few days later. And she sang it at a very different concert at Carnegie Hall, in March, 1964—brazenly flinging “You’re all gonna die” at a mostly white audience—along with other protest songs she had taken a hand in writing, including the defiantly jazzy ditty “Old Jim Crow.” She also performed a quietly haunting song titled “Images,” about a black woman’s inability to see her own beauty (“She thinks her brown body has no glory”)—a wistful predecessor to “Four Women” that she had composed to words by the Harlem Renaissance poet Waring Cuney. At the time, Simone herself was still wearing her hair in a harshly straightened fifties-style bob—sometimes the small personal freedoms are harder to speak up for than the larger political ones—and, clearly, it wasn’t time yet for such specifically female injuries to take their place in the racial picture. “Mississippi Goddam” was the song of the moment: bold and urgent and easy to sing, it was adopted by embattled protesters in the cursed state itself just months after Simone’s concert, during what they called the Mississippi Summer Project, or Freedom Summer, and what President Johnson called “the summer of our discontent.”
There was no looking back by the time she performed the song outside Montgomery, Alabama, in March, 1965, when some three thousand marchers were making their way along the fifty-four-mile route from Selma; two weeks earlier, protesters making the same attempt had been driven back by state troopers with clubs, whips, and tear gas. The triumphant concert, on the fourth night of the march, was organized by the indefatigable Belafonte, at the request of King, and took place on a makeshift stage built atop stacks of empty coffins lent by local funeral homes, and in front of an audience that had swelled with twenty-five thousand additional people, drawn either by the cause or by a lineup of stars that ranged from Tony Bennett and Johnny Mathis to Joan Baez. Simone, accompanied only by her longtime guitarist, Al Schackman, drew cheers on the interpolated line “Selma made me lose my rest.” In the course of events that night, she was introduced to King, and Schackman remembered that she stuck her hand out and warned him, “I’m not nonviolent!” It was only when King replied, gently, “Not to worry, sister,” that she calmed down.
Simone’s explosiveness was well known. In concert, she was quick to call out anyone she noticed talking, to stop and glare or hurl a few insults or even leave the stage. Yet her performances, richly improvised, were also confidingly intimate—she needed the connection with her audience—and often riveting. Even in her best years, Simone never put many records on the charts, but people flocked to her shows. In 1966, the critic for the Philadelphia Tribune, an African-American newspaper, explained that to hear Simone sing “is to be brought into abrasive contact with the black heart and to feel the power and beauty which for centuries have beat there.” She was proclaimed the voice of the movement not by Martin Luther King but by Stokely Carmichael and H. Rap Brown, whose Black Power philosophy answered to her own experience and inclinations. As the sixties progressed, the feelings she displayed—pain, lacerating anger, the desire to burn down whole cities in revenge—made her seem at times emotionally disturbed and at other times simply the most honest black woman in America.
She recalled that racial anger first arose in her when she was eleven. Born Eunice Waymon, in 1933, she was the sixth of eight children of John and Kate Waymon, who were descendants of slaves and pillars of the small black community of Tryon, North Carolina. Her mother was a Methodist preacher, a severely religious woman who made extra money by cleaning house for a white Tryon family; her father, who had started off as an entertainer, worked at whatever the circumstances required. Even during the Depression, the Waymons made a good home. Simone’s earliest memories were of her mother singing hymns, and both the house and the church were so filled with music that no one noticed little Eunice climbing up to the organ bench until, at the age of two and a half, she played “God Be with You Till We Meet Again,” straight through.
Her skin was very black, and she was made fully aware of that, along with the fact that her nose was too large. The aesthetics of race—and the loathing and self-loathing inflicted on those who vary from accepted standards of beauty—is one of the most pervasive aspects of racism, yet it is not often discussed. The standards have been enforced by blacks as well as by whites. Even Harry Belafonte wrote, in his memoir, about his mother’s well-intentioned counsel to “marry a woman with good hair,” and he added, in unnecessary clarification, “Good hair meant straight hair.” (Reader, he married her.) But Nina Simone, strong and fierce and proud Nina Simone? “I can’t be white and I’m the kind of colored girl who looks like everything white people despise or have been taught to despise,” she wrote in a note to herself, not during her adolescence but in the years when she was already a successful performer. “If I were a boy, it wouldn’t matter so much, but I’m a girl and in front of the public all the time wide open for them to jeer and approve of or disapprove of.”
Countering the charge of physical inferiority, in her youth, was the talent that her mother assured her was God-given. Music was her salvation, her identity. Thanks to a fund established by a pair of generous white patrons in Tryon, she was sent to board at a private high school—she practiced piano five hours a day, and graduated valedictorian—and then to a summer program at Juilliard, all with the unwavering aim of getting into the Curtis Institute of Music, in Philadelphia, where admission was terrifically competitive but tuition was free. Her destiny seemed so assured that her parents moved to Philadelphia before she took the Curtis exam. The fact that she was rejected, and believed that this was because of her race, was a source of unending bitterness. It was also a turning point. In the summer of 1954, in need of money, Eunice Waymon took a job playing cocktail piano in an Atlantic City dive—the owner demanded that she also sing—and, hoping to keep the news of this unholy employment from her mother, turned herself into Nina Simone, feeling every right to the anger that Nina Simone displayed forever after.
At times, it seemed that she could outdistance her feelings. In 1961, after a brief marriage to a white hanger-on at the Atlantic City club, she married Stroud, a tough police detective on the Harlem beat whom she initially sized up as “a light-skinned man,” “well built,” and “very sure of himself.” The following year, she gave birth to a daughter, Lisa Celeste, and Stroud left his job to manage Simone’s career; they lived in a large house in the leafy Westchester suburb of Mount Vernon, complete with a gardener and a maid. Although she complained of working too hard and touring too much—of being desperately exhausted—her life was not the stuff of the blues. And then, before a concert in early 1967, Stroud found her in her dressing room putting makeup in her hair. She didn’t know who he was; she didn’t quite know who she was. She later remembered that she had been trying to get her hair to match her skin: “I had visions of laser beams and heaven, with skin—always skin—involved in there somewhere.”
The full medical facts of Simone’s mental illness became public only after her death, in 2003, thanks to two British fan-club founders and friends of Simone’s, Sylvia Hampton and David Nathan, whose account of the singer’s career was aptly titled, after one of Simone’s songs, “Nina Simone: Break Down & Let It All Out” (2004). Subsequent biographies—the warmly overdramatizing “Nina Simone,” by David Brun-Lambert (2009), and the coolly meticulous “Princess Noire,” by Nadine Cohodas (2010)—have filled in terrible details of depression and violence and long-sought but uncertain diagnoses: “bipolar disorder” appears to be the best contemporary explanation. Excerpts from Simone’s diaries and letters of the nineteen-sixties, published by Joe Hagan (who got them from Andrew Stroud) in The Believer, in 2010, added the news that Simone’s personal hell was compounded by regular beatings from Stroud. The marriage dissolved in 1970, but it was many more years before she received any helpful medication.
All the more remarkable, then, the strength that Simone projected through the sixties. As the decade wore on, she began to favor bright African gowns and toweringly braided African hair styles; she became the High Priestess of Soul, and though the title was no more than a record company’s P.R. gambit—Aretha Franklin was soon crowned the Queen of Soul—she bore it with conviction. It would be wrong, however, to give the impression that her songs were mostly about civil rights. Stroud, with his eye on the bottom line, was always there to keep her from going too far in that direction. In concert, she even pulled back on “Mississippi Goddam,” singing “We’re all gonna die, and die like flies” in place of the gleefully threatening “You’re all gonna die . . .” Although she did record the classic anti-lynching ballad “Strange Fruit,” in 1965, and she could give the most unexpected songs an edge of racial protest (listen to her harrowing version of the Brecht-Weill “Pirate Jenny”), she had a vast and often surprising musical appetite. By the late sixties, she was so afraid of falling behind the times that she expanded her repertory to include Bob Dylan, Leonard Bernstein, and, covering all bases, the Bee Gees. One of her biggest hits of the era was the joyously innocuous “Ain’t Got No—I Got Life,” from the musical “Hair”—which, in her hands, became a classic freedom song.
But womanly strength was in everything she sang: in the cavernous depths of her voice—some people think Simone sounds like a man—in her intensity, her drama, her determination. It’s there in the crazy love song “I Put a Spell on You,” in which she recasts the crippling needs of love (“Because you’re mine! ”) into an undeniable command. It’s there in the ten-minute gospel tour de force “Sinnerman,” when she cries out “Power!” like a Southern preacher and her musicians shout back “Power to the Lord!,” and especially when she takes the disapproving voice of the Lord upon herself: “Where were you, when you oughta been praying?” If you’d never before thought of the Lord as a black woman, you did now.
The civil-rights songs were nevertheless what she called “the important ones.” And the movement is where she gained her strength. It’s also where her private anger took on public dimensions, in the years when patience gave way entirely and the anger in many black communities could no longer be tamped down. Onstage in Detroit, on August 13, 1967—two weeks after a five-day riot had left forty-three people dead, hundreds injured, and the city in ruins—Simone, singing “Just in Time,” added a message to the crowd: “Detroit, you did it. . . . I love you, Detroit—you did it!” She was met with roars of approval, which one Detroit critic said he presumed had come from “the arsonists, looters and snipers in the audience.” Another critic, however, wrote that her show let white people know what they had to learn, and learn fast. Was she the voice of national tragedy or of the next American revolution?
And then King was shot, on April 4, 1968. Sections of Washington, Chicago, Baltimore, and more than a hundred smaller cities went berserk. Despite her rhetoric, Simone was profoundly shaken, and her views of what might be accomplished in this country only grew more bleak. At an outdoor concert in Harlem, the following summer—it’s available on YouTube—she went for broke.
Majestically bedecked à l’africaine, she opened with “Four Women,” singing now before a crowd where an Afro was the norm. After several other stirring, politically focussed songs—“Revolution,” “Backlash Blues”—she closed with something so new that she had not had time to learn it, a poem by David Nelson, who was then part of a group called the Last Poets and is now among the revered begetters of rap. She read the words from a sheet of paper, moving across the stage and repeatedly exhorting the crowd to answer the question “Are you ready, black people? . . . Are you ready to do what is necessary?” The crowd responded to this rather vague injunction with a mild cheer, prompted by the bongos behind her and the demand in her voice. And then: “Are you ready to kill, if necessary?” Now a bigger, if somewhat incongruous, cheer rose from the smiling crowd filled with little kids dancing to the rhythm on a sunny afternoon. It had been five years since the Harlem riot of 1964, the granddaddy of sixties riots; New York had largely escaped the ruinations of both 1967 and 1968. “Are you ready to smash white things, to burn buildings, are you ready?” she cried. “Are you ready to build black things?”
Despite her best efforts, Simone failed to incite a riot in Harlem that day in 1969. The crowd received the poem as it had received her songs: with noisy affirmation, but merely as part of a performance. People applauded and went on their way. There are many possible reasons: no brutal incident of the kind that frequently set off riots, massive weariness, the knowledge of people elsewhere trapped in riot-devastated cities, maybe even hope. Simone had her unlikeliest hit that year with a simple hymn of promise, “To Be Young, Gifted and Black,” based on the title of a play that had been put together from Lorraine Hansberry’s uncollected writings. Hansberry, who died in 1965, had used the phrase in a speech to a group of prize-winning black students, and Simone asked a fellow-musician, Weldon Irvine, to come up with lyrics that “will make black children all over the world feel good about themselves forever.” Indeed, it is a children’s song (or it was, until Aretha took it over). Simone’s most moving performance may have been on “Sesame Street,” where she sat on the set’s tenement steps wearing an African gown and lip-synched her recording to four enchanting if slightly mystified black children, who raised their arms in victory toward the end.
It
was not a victory she could believe in or a mood she could sustain. By
the end of the sixties, both Simone’s career and her marriage were in
serious trouble. Pop-rock did not really suit her, and the jazz and folk
markets had radically shrunk; the concert stage still assured her
income and her stature. And if the collapse of her marriage was in some
ways a liberation she was also now without the person who had managed
her finances and her schedule, and who had kept her calm before she went
onstage (by forbidding her alcohol, among other means), and got her
offstage quickly when the calm failed. She was left to govern herself in
a world that suddenly had no rules and, just as frightening, was
emptied of its larger, steadying purpose. “Andy was gone and the
movement had walked out on me too,” she wrote, “leaving me like a
seduced schoolgirl, lost.”
She left the country in 1974. Travelling to Liberia with her twelve-year-old daughter, she stayed for two years, during which she performed hardly at all. She left Liberia for Switzerland in order to put her daughter in school there. Eventually, she moved to France, alone. It seems to have been only the recurrent need for money that spurred her to perform again in the United States, although she took great pride in an honorary doctorate that she received from Amherst, in 1977, and insisted ever after on being called “Doctor Nina Simone.” Meanwhile, her concerts tended increasingly toward disaster. As she now sang in “Mississippi Goddam,” “the whole damn world’s made me lose my rest.”
The remainder of her life, some twenty-five years, is a tale of escalating misery. At the worst, she was found wandering naked in a hotel corridor brandishing a knife; she set her house in France on fire, and once, also in France, she shot a teen-age boy (in the leg, but that may have been poor aim) in a neighbor’s back yard for making too much noise—and for answering her complaints with what she understood as racial insults. Yet the ups of her life could be almost as vertiginous as the downs. In 1987, just a year after she was sent to a hospital in a straitjacket, her charmingly upbeat 1959 recording of “My Baby Just Cares for Me” was chosen by Chanel for its international television ad campaign. Rereleased, the record went gold in France and platinum in England. In 1991, she sold out the Olympia, in Paris, for almost a week.
She toured widely during her final years. In Seattle, in the summer of 2001, she worked a tirade against George W. Bush into “Mississippi Goddam,” and encouraged the audience to “go and do something about that man.” She was already suffering from breast cancer, but it wasn’t the worst illness she had known. She was seen as a relic of the civil-rights era, and on occasion she even led the audience in a wistful sing-along of “We Shall Overcome,” although she did not believe her country had overcome nearly enough. Once she became too sick to perform, she did not return to what she called “the United Snakes of America.” She died in France, in April, 2003; her ashes were scattered in several African countries. The most indelible image of her near the end is as a stooped old lady reacting to the enthusiastic cheers that greeted her with a raised, closed-fisted Black Power salute.
Thirty-four
years after Simone released “Young, Gifted and Black,” Jay Z reused the
title for a song that describes the fate of many of those gifted
children—“Hear all the screams from the ghetto all the teens ducking
metal”—in twenty-first-century America. The rap connection with Simone
is hardly surprising, since rap is where black anger now openly resides.
Simone disliked the rap she knew, however, in part for displacing so
much anger onto women—or, as she put it, for “letting people believe
that women are second class, and calling them bitches and stuff like
that.” Back in 1996, Lauryn Hill rapped an anything-you-can-do retort to
a male counterpart, “So while you imitatin’ Al Capone / I be Nina
Simone / And defecatin’ on your microphone,” but no one has really taken
up the challenge of Simone’s example. There was a minor uproar last
year over Kanye West’s sampling of phrases from Simone’s recording of
“Strange Fruit” (with her voice speeded up to an unrecognizable
tinniness) in “Blood on the Leaves,” in which Simone’s evocation of
lynched black bodies is juxtaposed with West’s personal concerns about
“second string bitches,” cocaine, and the cost of paying off a baby mama
versus a new Mercedes. Some people have seen a social statement here,
but one can’t help recalling Simone’s broader reaction to rap: “Hell,
Martin and Malcolm would turn in their graves if they heard some of this
crazy shit.”
Last year, two Broadway shows depicted Simone as an inspiration for a couple of unexpected figures: in “A Night with Janis Joplin,” she helped to provide her white soul sister with the gift of fire, and, even stranger, in the crude but enthusiastic “Soul Doctor”—which reopens Off Broadway this winter—she was the force behind the “rock-and-roll rabbi” Shlomo Carlebach. Nutty as it seemed onstage, Simone’s acquaintance with the rabbi appears to have some basis in fact, and helps to explain the Hebrew songs she performed at the Village Gate (where he also performed) in the early sixties. While it may be a show-biz exaggeration to suggest that the rabbi and the jazz singer had an affair—the show featured an Act I curtain clinch that, on the night I saw it, had its largely Orthodox audience literally gasping—the point was the universality of Simone’s message about persecution, the search for justice, and the power of music.
Back in 1979, at a concert in Philadelphia, Simone followed a performance of “Four Women” by scolding the black women in the audience about their changes in style: “You used to be talking about being natural and wearing natural hair styles. Now you’re straightening your hair, rouging your cheeks and dressing out of Vogue.” In 2009, the comedian Chris Rock made a documentary titled “Good Hair” because, he explained, his young daughter had come to him with the question “Daddy, how come I don’t have good hair?” For an African-American child, nothing had changed since Harry Belafonte’s mother’s advice, more than half a century earlier. (According to one contented businessman in Rock’s film, African-Americans—twelve per cent of the population—buy eighty per cent of the hair products in this country.) As for skin tone, the cosmetic companies have been expanding their range ever since Iman established a line of darker foundations, in 1994, although in March, 2014, a former beauty director of Essence, Aretha Busby, complained to the Times,“The companies tend to stop at Kerry Washington. I’d love to see brands go two or three shades darker.”
The question of skin tone and hair and their meaning for African-American women exploded on the Internet with the announcement of the casting of Saldana in the Hollywood bio-pic about Simone. When the idea for such a film was initially floated, in the early nineties, Simone herself gave the nod to being played by Whoopi Goldberg. When, in 2010, the present film was announced in the Hollywood Reporter, Mary J. Blige—the reigning Queen of Hip-Hop Soul—was announced for the lead. Once Blige was replaced with Saldana, however, a woman whose skin tone is more than two or three shades lighter than Simone’s, the cries for boycotting the film on the basis of misrepresentation—on the basis of insult—were instantaneous. Why not cast Viola Davis? Or Jennifer Hudson? Production photographs showing Saldana on the set with an artificially broadened nose, an Afro wig, and—inevitably, but most unfortunately—dark makeup that is all too easily confoundable with blackface rendered any hope of calm discussion futile. It’s been suggested that the filmmakers might as well have cast Tyler Perry in full “Madea” drag.
Simone’s daughter has come out against the film because its story focusses on an invented love affair as much as for the casting of Saldana, although she is quick to point out how much her mother’s appearance shaped her life. (Lisa once told an interviewer that her mother would sometimes “traumatize” her because she is light-skinned—“and I’d remind her that she had chosen my father, I didn’t.”) The fight over the film ultimately extended to a lawsuit filed by the director, Cynthia Mort, against the British production company, Ealing Studios Enterprises, on the very eve of the screening at Cannes. Since then, though, the suit has been dismissed, so “Nina” may yet show up in a theatre near you. And Saldana may give a compelling performance—may well prove that she can play not only women who are sci-fi blue (as in “Avatar”) or green (as in “Guardians of the Galaxy”) but real-life black. Still, there is no escaping the fact that her casting represents exactly the sort of prejudice that Simone was always up against. “I was never on the cover of Ebony or Jet,” Simone told an interviewer, in 1980. “They want white-looking women like Diana Ross—light and bright.” Or, as Marc Lamont Hill writes in Ebony today, “There is no greater evidence of how tragic things are for dark-skinned women in Hollywood than the fact that they can’t even get hired to play dark-skinned women.” Well beyond Hollywood, these outworn habits of taste reverberate down the generations, infecting all of us.
Simone’s favorite performer in her later years was Michael Jackson. She brought cassettes of his albums with her everywhere, and recalled having met him on a plane when he was a little boy, and telling him, “Don’t let them change you. You’re black and you’re beautiful.” She anguished over his evident failure to believe what she’d said: the facial surgeries, the mysterious lightening of his skin, the fatality of believing, instead, what the culture had told him, and wanting to be white. Simone appeared onstage with him just once, amid a huge cast of performers gathered for Nelson Mandela’s eightieth birthday, in Johannesburg, in the summer of 1998. She was sixty-five years old, and photographs of the event show her standing between Mandela and Jackson, overweight yet glamorously done up, her hair piled in braids and her strapless white blouse a contrast to the African costumes of the chorus all around. But she was also very frail. In one photograph, Jackson—in his glittering trademark military-style jacket, hat, and shades—holds her left hand in both his hands, in a gesture of affection. But in another shot he has put one steadying arm around her, and she is grasping his hand for support. Few people seem aware of what is happening. The stage remains a swirl of laughter and song, a joyous African celebration. And at its center the two Americans stand with hands clasped tight—one hand notably dark, the other notably fair—as though trying to help each other along a hard and endless road. ♦
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nina_Simone
Nina Simone
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nina Simone | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Simone in 1965
|
||||||
Background information | ||||||
Birth name | Eunice Kathleen Waymon | |||||
Born | February 21, 1933 Tryon, North Carolina, U.S. | |||||
Died | April 21, 2003 (aged 70) Carry-le-Rouet, Bouches-du-Rhône, France | |||||
Genres | Jazz, blues, R&B, folk, gospel | |||||
Occupation(s) | Singer, songwriter, pianist, arranger, activist | |||||
Years active | 1954–2003 | |||||
Labels | Bethlehem, Colpix, Philips, RCA Victor, CTI, Legacy Recordings | |||||
Website | www |
Nina Simone /ˈniːnə sɨˈmoʊn/ (born Eunice Kathleen Waymon; February 21, 1933 – April 21, 2003) was an American singer, songwriter, pianist, arranger, and civil rights activist widely associated with jazz music. She worked in a broad range of styles including classical, jazz, blues, folk, R&B, gospel, and pop.
The sixth child of a preacher's family in North Carolina, Simone aspired to be a concert pianist.[1] Her musical path changed direction after she was denied a scholarship to the prestigious Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia,
despite a well-received audition. Simone said she later found out from
an insider at Curtis that she was denied entry because she was black.[2]
So as to fund her continuing musical education and become a classical
pianist, she began playing in a small club in Philadelphia where she was
also required to sing. She was approached for a recording by Bethlehem
Records, and her rendering of "I Loves You, Porgy" was a hit in the United States in 1958.[1] Over the length of her career Simone recorded more than 40 albums, mostly between 1958, when she made her debut with Little Girl Blue, and 1974.
Her musical style arose from a fusion of gospel and pop songs with classical music, in particular with influences from her first inspiration, Johann Sebastian Bach,[3] and accompanied with her expressive jazz-like singing in her characteristic contralto
voice. She injected as much of her classical background into her music
as possible to give it more depth and quality, as she felt that pop
music was inferior to classical.[4]
Her intuitive grasp on the audience–performer relationship was gained
from a unique background of playing piano accompaniment for church
revivals and sermons regularly from the early age of six years old.[5]
In the early 1960s, she became involved in the civil rights movement and the direction of her life shifted once again.[4] Simone's music was highly influential in the fight for equal rights in the United States.[6]
In later years, she lived abroad, finally settling in France in 1992.
She received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award in 2000 and was a fifteen-time
Grammy Award nominee over the course of her career.
Contents
Biography
Youth (1933–1954)
Simone was born Eunice Kathleen Waymon in Tryon, North Carolina.
The sixth of eight children in a poor family, she began playing piano
at age three; the first song she learned was "God Be With You, Till We
Meet Again". Demonstrating a talent with the instrument, she performed
at her local church,
but her concert debut, a classical recital, was given when she was
twelve. Simone later said that during this performance her parents, who
had taken seats in the front row, were forced to move to the back of the
hall to make way for white people. Simone said she refused to play
until her parents were moved back to the front,[7][8] and that the incident contributed to her later involvement in the civil rights movement.
Simone's mother, Mary Kate Waymon, was a Methodist
minister and a housemaid. Simone's father, John Divine Waymon, was a
handyman who at one time owned a dry cleaning business, but also
suffered bouts of ill health. Mary Kate's employer, hearing of her
daughter's talent, provided funds for piano lessons.[9]
Subsequently, a local fund was set up to assist in Simone's continued
education. With the help of this scholarship money she was able to
attend Allen High School for Girls in Asheville, North Carolina.
After finishing high school, she studied for an interview with the help of a private tutor to study piano further at the Curtis Institute,
but was rejected. Simone believed that this rejection was related
directly to her race, although Curtis began accepting black applicants
in the 1940s and the first black graduate was George Walker in 1945 who went on to win a Pulitzer.[10] Simone moved to New York City, where she studied at the Juilliard School of Music.
Early success (1954–1959)
To fund her private lessons, she performed at the Midtown Bar & Grill on Pacific Avenue in Atlantic City,
whose owner insisted that she sing as well as play the piano. In 1954
she adopted the stage name Nina Simone. "Nina" (from niña, meaning
'little girl' in Spanish) was a nickname a boyfriend had given to her, and "Simone" was taken from the French actress Simone Signoret, whom she had seen in the movie Casque d'or.[11] Simone's mixture of jazz, blues, and classical music in her performances at the bar earned her a small, but loyal, fan base.[12]
In 1958 she befriended and married Don Ross, a beatnik who worked as a fairground barker, but quickly regretted their marriage.[13] Playing in small clubs in the same year she recorded George Gershwin's "I Loves You, Porgy" (from Porgy and Bess), which she learned from a Billie Holiday album and performed as a favor to a friend. It became her only Billboard top 20 success in the United States, and her debut album Little Girl Blue soon followed on Bethlehem Records. Simone lost more than $1 million in royalties (notably for the 1980s re-release of My Baby Just Cares for Me) and never benefited financially from the album's sales because she had sold her rights outright for $3,000.[14]
Becoming popular (1959–1964)
After the success of Little Girl Blue, Simone signed a contract with Colpix Records,
and recorded a multitude of studio and live albums. Colpix relinquished
all creative control to her, including the choice of material that
would be recorded, in exchange for her signing the contract with them.
By this point, Simone only performed pop music
to make money to continue her classical music studies, and was
indifferent about having a recording contract. She kept this attitude
toward the record industry for most of her career.[15]
Simone married a New York police detective, Andrew Stroud, in 1961; Stroud later became her manager.[16]
Civil rights era (1964–1974)
In 1964, she changed record distributors, from the American Colpix to the Dutch Philips,
which also meant a change in the contents of her recordings. Simone had
always included songs in her repertoire that drew upon her
African-American origins (such as "Brown Baby" and "Zungo" on Nina at the Village Gate in 1962). On her debut album for Philips, Nina Simone in Concert
(live recording, 1964), however, Simone for the first time openly
addressed the racial inequality that was prevalent in the United States
with the song "Mississippi Goddam", her response to the murder of Medgar Evers and the bombing of a church in Birmingham, Alabama that killed four black children. The song was released as a single, and it was boycotted in certain southern states.[17][18] "Old Jim Crow", on the same album, addressed the Jim Crow laws.
From then on, a civil rights
message was standard in Simone's recording repertoire, becoming a part
of her live performances. Simone performed and spoke at many civil rights meetings, such as at the Selma to Montgomery marches.[19] Simone advocated violent revolution during the civil rights period, rather than Martin Luther King's non-violent approach,[20] and she hoped that African Americans could, by armed combat, form a separate state. Nevertheless, she wrote in her autobiography that she and her family regarded all races as equal.[21]
She covered Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit", a song about the lynching of black men in the South, on Pastel Blues (1965). She also sang the William Waring Cuney poem "Images" on Let It All Out (1966), about the absence of pride she saw among African-American women. Simone wrote "Four Women", a song about four different stereotypes of African-American women,[17] and included the recording on her 1966 album Wild Is the Wind.[citation needed]
Simone moved from Philips to RCA Victor during 1967. She sang "Backlash Blues", written by her friend Langston Hughes on her first RCA album, Nina Simone Sings the Blues (1967). On Silk & Soul (1967), she recorded Billy Taylor's "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free" and "Turning Point". The album 'Nuff Said! (1968) contains live recordings from the Westbury Music Fair, April 7, 1968, three days after the murder of Martin Luther King, Jr.. She dedicated the whole performance to him and sang "Why? (The King Of Love Is Dead)", a song written by her bass player, Gene Taylor, directly after the news of King's death had reached them.[22] In the summer of 1969 she performed at the Harlem Cultural Festival in Harlem's Mount Morris Park.
Together with Weldon Irvine, Simone turned the late Lorraine Hansberry's unfinished play To Be Young, Gifted and Black
into a civil rights song. Hansberry had been a personal friend whom
Simone credited with cultivating her social and political consciousness.
She performed the song live on the album Black Gold (1970). A studio recording was released as a single, and renditions of the song have been recorded by Aretha Franklin (on her 1972 album Young, Gifted and Black) and by Donny Hathaway.[17][21]
Later life (1974–2003)
Simone left the United States in September 1970, flying to Barbados
and expecting Stroud to communicate with her when she had to perform
again. However, Stroud interpreted Simone's sudden disappearance, and
the fact that she had left behind her wedding ring, as an indication of a
desire for a divorce. As her manager, Stroud was in charge of Simone's income.
When Simone returned to the United States she learned that a warrant had been issued for her arrest for unpaid taxes (as a protest against her country's involvement with the Vietnam War), causing her to return to Barbados again to evade the authorities and prosecution.[23] Simone stayed in Barbados for quite some time and she had a lengthy affair with the Prime Minister, Errol Barrow.[24][25] A close friend, singer Miriam Makeba, then persuaded her to go to Liberia. Later, she lived in Switzerland and the Netherlands, before settling in France in 1992.
She recorded her last album for RCA, It Is Finished, during 1974. Simone did not make another record until 1978, when she was persuaded to go into the recording studio by CTI Records owner Creed Taylor. The result was the album Baltimore,
which, while not a commercial success, was fairly well received
critically and marked a quiet artistic renaissance in Simone's recording
output.[26] Her choice of material retained its eclecticism, ranging from spiritual songs to Hall & Oates' "Rich Girl". Four years later Simone recorded Fodder on My Wings on a French label. During the 1980s Simone performed regularly at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in London, where she recorded the album Live at Ronnie Scott's
in 1984. Although her early on-stage style could be somewhat haughty
and aloof, in later years, Simone particularly seemed to enjoy engaging
her audiences sometimes by recounting humorous anecdotes related to her
career and music and by soliciting requests. In 1987, the original 1958
recording of "My Baby Just Cares for Me" was used in a commercial for Chanel No. 5 perfume in the United Kingdom. This led to a re-release of the recording, which stormed to number 4 on the UK's NME singles chart, giving her a brief surge in popularity in the UK. Her autobiography, I Put a Spell on You, was published in 1992. She recorded her last album, A Single Woman, in 1993.
Illness and death
In 1993, Simone settled near Aix-en-Provence in Southern France. She had suffered from breast cancer for several years before she died in her sleep at her home in Carry-le-Rouet, Bouches-du-Rhône, on April 21, 2003. (In addition, Simone received a diagnosis of bipolar disorder in the late 1980s).[27] Her funeral service was attended by singers Miriam Makeba and Patti LaBelle, poet Sonia Sanchez, actor Ossie Davis, and hundreds of others. Simone's ashes were scattered in several African countries. She left behind a daughter, Lisa Celeste Stroud, an actress and singer, who took the stage name Simone, and has appeared on Broadway in Aida.[28]
Reputation
Simone had a reputation for volatility. In 1985, she fired a gun at a
record company executive whom she accused of stealing royalties. Simone
said she "tried to kill him" but "missed".[29] In 1995, she shot and wounded her neighbor's son with an air gun after the boy's laughter disturbed her concentration.[30] According to a biographer, Simone took medication for a condition from the mid-1960s on.[31] All this was only known to a small group of intimates, and kept out of public view for many years, until the biography Break Down and Let It All Out written by Sylvia Hampton and David Nathan revealed this in 2004 after her death.
Musical style
Simone standards
Throughout her career, Simone assembled a collection of songs that
would later become standards in her repertoire. Some were songs that she
wrote herself, while others were new arrangements of other standards,
some had been written especially for the singer. Her first hit song in
America was her rendition of George Gershwin's "I Loves You, Porgy" (1958). It peaked at number 18 in the pop singles chart and number 2 on the black singles chart.[32] During that same period Simone recorded "My Baby Just Cares for Me", which would become her biggest success years later, in 1987, after it was featured in a 1986 Chanel No. 5 perfume commercial.[33] A music video was also created by Aardman Studios.[34] Well known songs from her Philips albums include "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" on Broadway-Blues-Ballads (1964), "I Put a Spell on You", "Ne me quitte pas" (a rendition of a Jacques Brel song) and "Feeling Good" on I Put a Spell On You (1965), "Lilac Wine" and "Wild Is the Wind" on Wild is the Wind (1966).[35]
"Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood", "Feeling Good", and "Sinner Man" (Pastel Blues, 1965) have remained popular in terms of cover versions (most notably a version of the former song by The Animals), sample usage, and its use on soundtracks for various movies, TV-series, and video games. "Sinner Man" has been featured in the TV series Scrubs, Person of Interest, The Blacklist, and Sherlock, and on movies such as The Thomas Crown Affair, Miami Vice, and Inland Empire, and sampled by artists such as Talib Kweli and Timbaland. The song "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" was sampled by Devo Springsteen on "Misunderstood" from Common's 2007 album Finding Forever, and by little-known producers Rodnae and Mousa for the song "Don't Get It" on Lil Wayne's 2008 album Tha Carter III. "See-Line Woman" was sampled by Kanye West for "Bad News" on his album 808s & Heartbreak. The 1965 rendition of "Strange Fruit" originally by Billie Holiday was sampled by Kanye West for "Blood on the Leaves" on his album Yeezus.
Simone's years at RCA-Victor spawned a number of singles and album
tracks that were popular, particularly in Europe. In 1968, it was "Ain't Got No, I Got Life", a medley from the musical Hair from the album 'Nuff Said! (1968) that became a surprise hit for Simone, reaching number 4 on the UK Singles Chart and introducing her to a younger audience.[36]
In 2006, it returned to the UK Top 30 in a remixed version by Groovefinder. The following single, the Bee Gees' rendition of "To Love Somebody" also reached the UK Top 10 in 1969. "The House of the Rising Sun" was featured on Nina Simone Sings the Blues in 1967, but Simone had recorded the song in 1961 and it was featured on Nina at the Village Gate (1962), predating the versions by Dave Van Ronk and Bob Dylan.[37][38] It was later covered by The Animals, for whom it became a signature hit.
Performing style
Simone's bearing and stage presence earned her the title "High Priestess of Soul".[39] She was a piano player, singer and performer, "separately and simultaneously".[16] Onstage, Simone moved from gospel to blues, jazz, and folk, to numbers with European classical styling, and Bach-style fugal counterpoint. She incorporated monologues and dialogues with the audience into the program, and often used silence as a musical element.[40] She compared it to "mass hypnosis. I use it all the time".[21] Throughout most of her life and recording career she was accompanied by percussionist Leopoldo Fleming and guitarist and musical director Al Schackman.[41]
Legacy and influence
Music
Musicians who have cited Simone as important for their own musical upbringing include Emeli Sandé, Antony and the Johnsons, Nick Cave, Van Morrison, Christina Aguilera, Elkie Brooks, Talib Kweli, Mos Def, Kanye West, Lena Horne, Bono, John Legend, Elizabeth Fraser, Cat Stevens, Anna Calvi, Peter Gabriel, Maynard James Keenan, Cedric Bixler-Zavala, Mary J. Blige, Fantasia Barrino, Michael Gira, Angela McCluskey, Lauryn Hill, Patrice Babatunde, Alicia Keys, Lana Del Rey, Matt Bellamy, Ian MacKaye, Kerry Brothers, Jr. "Krucial", Amanda Palmer, Steve Adey and Jeff Buckley.[17][42][43][44][45][46] John Lennon cited Simone's version of "I Put a Spell on You" as a source of inspiration for the Beatles song "Michelle".[46]
Simone's music has been featured in soundtracks of various motion pictures and video games, including but not limited to, La Femme Nikita (1990), Point of No Return (1993), The Big Lebowski (1998), Notting Hill (1999), Any Given Sunday (1999), The Thomas Crown Affair (1999), Six Feet Under (2001), The Dancer Upstairs (2002), Before Sunset (2004), Cellular (2004), Inland Empire (2006), Miami Vice (2006), Sex and the City (2008), The World Unseen (2008), Revolutionary Road (2008), Watchmen (2009), The Saboteur (2009), Repo Men (2010). Frequently her music is used in remixes, commercials, and TV series including "Feeling Good" featured prominently in the Season Four Promo of Six Feet Under (2004).
Film
The documentary Nina Simone: La légende (The Legend) was made in the 1990s by French filmmakers,[21] based on her autobiography I Put a Spell on You.
It features live footage from different periods of her career,
interviews with friends and family, various interviews with Simone then
living in the Netherlands, and while on a trip to her birthplace. A portion of footage from The Legend was taken from an earlier 26-minute biographical documentary by Peter Rodis, released in 1969 and entitled simply, Nina. Her filmed 1976 performance at the Montreux Jazz Festival
is available on video courtesy of Eagle Rock Entertainment and is
screened annually in New York City at an event called "The Rise and Fall
of Nina Simone: Montreux, 1976" which is curated by Tom Blunt.[47]
Plans for a Simone biographical film were released at the end of 2005, to be based on Simone's autobiography I Put a Spell on You
(1992) and to focus on her relationship in later life with her
assistant, Clifton Henderson, who died in 2006; Simone's daughter,
Simone Kelly, has since refuted the existence of a romantic relationship
between Simone and Henderson on account of his sexuality.[48] Cynthia Mort, screenwriter of Will & Grace and Roseanne, has written the screenplay and directed the film, Nina, which stars Zoe Saldana in the title role.[49][50][51] In May 2014, the film was shown to potential distributors at the Cannes film festival, but has, as of August 2014, not been seen by reviewers.[52][53]
A new documentary film about Simone, entitled The Amazing Nina Simone
is scheduled for release in 2015. It tells her story from those who
knew her best, including close friends, family, band members, fellow
activists and musicians, and her close circle of friends in her adopted
Europe. The film follows Somine's journey through music and civil rights,
attempting to gain a deeper understanding of her intentions and
artistry, and the meaning behind many of her iconic songs. The film is
written and directed by independent filmmaker Jeff L. Lieberman and
features Sam Waymon, Al Schackman, Leopoldo Fleming, Nikki Giovanni, Eric Burdon, Tim Hauser, Roscoe Dellums, and Marie Christine Dunham Pratt.[54][citation needed]
Honors
Simone was the recipient of a Grammy Hall of Fame Award in 2000 for her interpretation of "I Loves You, Porgy." She has also received fifteen Grammy Award nominations. On Human Kindness Day 1974 in Washington, D.C., more than 10,000 people paid tribute to Simone.[55][56] Simone received two honorary degrees in music and humanities, from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Malcolm X College.[57] She preferred to be called "Dr. Nina Simone" after these honors were bestowed upon her.[58]
Two days before her death, Nina Simone was awarded an honorary degree by the Curtis Institute, the music school that had refused to admit her as a student at the beginning of her career.[59]
In 2002, the city of Nijmegen, Netherlands, named a street after her, the Nina Simone straat; she had lived in Nijmegen between 1988 and 1990. On August 29, 2005, the city of Nijmegen, concert hall De Vereeniging, and more than fifty artists (amongst whom Frank Boeijen, Rood Adeo, and Fay Claassen)[60][61] honoured Simone with the tribute concert Greetings From Nijmegen.
Simone was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2009.[62]
In 2010 a statue in her honor was erected in Trade Street in her native Tryon, North Carolina.[63]
Discography
Albums
Year | Album | Type | Label | Billboard |
---|---|---|---|---|
1958 | Little Girl Blue | Studio | Bethlehem Records | |
1959 | Nina Simone and Her Friends | Studio, compilation with four tracks by Simone | ||
The Amazing Nina Simone | Studio | Colpix Records | ||
Nina Simone at Town Hall | Live and studio | |||
1960 | Nina Simone at Newport | Live | 23 (pop) | |
Forbidden Fruit | Studio | |||
1962 | Nina at the Village Gate | Live | ||
Nina Simone Sings Ellington | Live | |||
1963 | Nina's Choice | Compilation | ||
Nina Simone at Carnegie Hall | Live | |||
1964 | Folksy Nina | Live | ||
Nina Simone in Concert | Live | Philips Records | 102 (pop) | |
Broadway-Blues-Ballads | Studio | |||
1965 | I Put a Spell on You | Studio | 99 (pop) | |
Sincerely Nina | Live and studio | |||
Pastel Blues | Studio | 8 (black) | ||
1966 | Nina Simone with Strings | Studio (strings added) | Colpix | |
Let It All Out | Live and studio | Philips | 19 (black) | |
Wild Is the Wind | Studio | 12 (black) | ||
1967 | High Priestess of Soul | Studio | 29 (black) | |
Nina Simone Sings the Blues | Studio | RCA Records | 29 (black) | |
Silk & Soul | Studio | 24 (black) | ||
1968 | 'Nuff Said! | Live and studio | 44 (black) | |
1969 | Nina Simone and Piano | Studio | ||
To Love Somebody | Studio | |||
A Very Rare Evening | Live | PM Records | ||
1970 | Gifted & Black | Studio | Canyon Records (Hollywood) | |
Black Gold | Live | RCA Records | 29 (black) | |
1971 | Here Comes the Sun | Studio | 190 (pop) | |
1972 | Emergency Ward | Live and studio | ||
Sings Billie Holiday – Lady Sings the Blues | Live | Stroud | ||
1973 | Live at Berkeley | Live | ||
Gospel According to Nina Simone | Live | |||
1974 | It Is Finished | Live | RCA Records | |
1978 | Baltimore | Studio | CTI Records | 12 (jazz) |
1980 | The Rising Sun Collection | Live | Enja | |
1982 | Fodder on My Wings | Studio | Carrere | |
1984 | Backlash | Live | StarJazz | |
1985 | Nina's Back | Studio | VPI | |
1985 | Live & Kickin | Live | ||
1987 | Let It Be Me | Live | Verve | |
Live at Ronnie Scott's | Live | Hendring-Wadham | ||
The Nina Simone Collection | Compilation | Deja Vu | ||
1989 | Compact jazz | Compilation | Mercury | |
1993 | A Single Woman | Studio | Elektra Records | 3 (top jazz) |
Additional releases | ||||
1972 | Live in Europe | Live | Trip | |
1997 | Released | Compilation | RCA Victor Europe | |
2003 | Four Women: The Nina Simone Philips Recordings | Compilation | Verve | |
Gold | Studio remastered | Universal / UCJ | ||
Anthology | Compilation (from many labels) | RCA / BMG Heritage | ||
2004 | Nina Simone's Finest Hour | Compilation | Verve / Universal | |
2005 | The Soul of Nina Simone | Compilation + DVD | RCA DualDisc | |
Nina Simone Live at Montreux 1976 | DVD only | Eagle Eye Media | ||
Nina Simone Live | DVD only: Studio 1961 & 1962 | Kultur / Creative Arts Television | ||
2006 | The Very Best of Nina Simone | Compilation | Sony / BMG | |
Remixed and Reimagined | Remix | Legacy / BMG | 5 (contemp.jazz) | |
Songs to Sing: the Best of Nina Simone | Compilation/Live Compilation | Deluxe | ||
Forever Young, Gifted, & Black: Songs of Freedom and Spirit | Remix | RCA | ||
2008 | To Be Free: The Nina Simone Story | Compilation | Sony / Legacy / BMG | |
2009 | The Definitive Rarities Collection – 50 Classic Cuts | Compilation | Artwork Media |
Chart singles
Year | Single | Chart Positions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
US Pop[64] | US R&B[65] |
UK[66] | ||
1959 | "I Loves You, Porgy" | 18 | 2 | - |
1960 | "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out" | 93 | 23 | - |
1961 | "Trouble In Mind" | 92 | 11 | - |
1965 | "I Put a Spell on You" | - | 23 | 49 |
1968 | "Ain't Got No - I Got Life" | 94 (1969) | - | 2 |
"Do What You Gotta Do" | 83 | 43 | 2 | |
1969 | "To Love Somebody" | - | - | 5 |
"I Put A Spell On You" (reissue) | - | - | 28 | |
"Revolution (Part 1)" | - | 41 | - | |
"To Be Young, Gifted and Black" | 76 | 8 | - | |
1987 | "My Baby Just Cares for Me" (1959 recording) | - | - | 5 |
1994 | "Feeling Good" (1965 recording) | - | - | 40 |
See also
References
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 1–62
- Encyclopedia of Jazz Musicians. Jazz.com; retrieved October 28, 2013.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 23
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 91
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 17–19
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 95
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 26
- Hampton 2004, p. 15
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 21
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 41–43
- Brun-Lambert 2006, p. 56
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 48–52
- "Nina Simone obituary". The Independent (London, UK). April 23, 2003. Archived from the original on 2009-02-23.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 60
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 65
- "L'hommage: Nina Simone Biography". Archived from the original on July 23, 2007. Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Neal, Mark Anthony (June 4, 2003). "Nina Simone: She Cast a Spell — and Made a Choice". Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 90–91
- "The Nina Simone Database: Timeline". 2010. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
- Simone & Cleary 2003
- Lords, Frank (1992). Nina Simone, La Legende (documentary) (DVD). France, United Kingdom: Quantum Leap.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 114–115
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 120–122
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 129–134
- Brun-Lambert 2006, p. 231
- Sunderland, Celeste (July 1, 2005). "All about Jazz: review "Fodder on My Wings" & "Baltimore"". Retrieved August 5, 2007.
- Higgins, Ria (June 24, 2007). "Best of Times Worst of Times Simone". The Times (London, UK). Retrieved May 8, 2010.(subscription required)
- Frank, Jonathan. "Talking Broadway Seattle: Aida". Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Sebastian, Tim (March 25, 1999). "BBC Hard Talk: Putting Music First". BBC News. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- "BBC Obituary: Nina Simone". BBC News. April 21, 2003. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- Hampton 2004, pp. 9–13
- "Allmusic Guide: "I Love You Porgy" Billboard chart position". Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- advertising. Inside Chanel. Retrieved on October 28, 2013.
- Boscarol, Mauro. "Nina Simone Web: My Baby Just Cares for Me". Archived from the original on November 16, 2006. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- Hampton 2004, pp. 196–202
- Hampton 2004, p. 47
- Boscarol, Mauro. "Nina Simone Web: House of the Rising Sun". Archived from the original on November 13, 2006. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- Hampton 2004, pp. 202–214
- Henley, Jon; Campbell, Duncan (April 22, 2003). "Nina Simone, high priestess of soul, dies aged 70". The Guardian (London).
- Nupie, Roger. "Dr. Nina Simone: Biography". Retrieved February 21, 2013.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 58–59
- Nicholson, Rebecca (February 12, 2011). "Anna Calvi: 'Without performing I'd be a nervous wreck'". The Guardian (London, UK).
- Vineyard, Jennifer (2005). "Mary J. Wants To Bring Nina Simone Back To Life". Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Fiore, Raymond. "Entertainment Weekly: Seven who influenced Alicia Keys' Life". Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Tranter, Kirsten (May 10, 2014). "Lolita in the 'hood". Retrieved June 2, 2014.
- "The Nina Simone Web: Influenced by Nina". Archived from the original on May 3, 2007. Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Stein, Joshua David (March 24, 2010). "Pressed for Time: The Rise and Fall of Nina Simone". New York Press.
- Obenson, Tambay A. (August 16, 2012). "Nina Simone's Daughter Finally Speaks: 'Project Is Unauthorized; Simone Estate Not Consulted'". Indiewire Blogs: Shadow and Act: On Cinema of the African Diaspora. Retrieved January 18, 2012.
- Vega, Tanzina (September 2, 2012). "Stir Builds Over Actress to Portray Nina Simone". New York Times. Retrieved January 18, 2012.
- "Casting the Role of Nina Simone". New York Times. September 2, 2012. Retrieved January 18, 2012.
- Garcia, Marion (September 17, 2012). "Zoe Saldana, jugée trop claire pour interpréter Nina Simone". L'Express (French). Retrieved January 18, 2012.
- Pierpoint, Claudia Roth (August 6, 2014). "A Raised Voice: How Nina Simone turned the movement into music". newyorker.com. Retrieved August 6, 2014.
- "Nina". IMDb.com. Retrieved August 6, 2014.
- www.amazingnina.com
- Hampton 2004, p. 85
- Kelly, John (April 25, 2005). "Answer Man: Kindness Turned Brutality". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 5, 2007.
- Kolodzey, Jody. "Remembering Nina Simone". Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- Hanson, Eric (2004). "A Diva's Spell" (PDF). Williams Alumni Review. Archived from the original on September 10, 2006. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- "The Nina Simone Foundation". Archived from the original on June 19, 2008. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- Grafe, Klaas-Jan (30 November 2005). "Impressive Hommage to Nina Simone". 3voor12
.vpro .nl October 2014. - "Greetings From Nijmegen – Tribute to Nina Simone". rateyourmusic
.com October 2014. 28 September 2008. - "2009 Inductees". North Carolina Music Hall of Fame. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
- "Commemorative Landscapes". DocSouth. University of North Carolina.
- Whitburn, Joel (2003). Top Pop Singles 1955-2002 (1st ed.). Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc. p. 643. ISBN 0-89820-155-1.
- Whitburn, Joel (1996). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-1995. Record Research. p. 402.
- Betts, Graham (2004). Complete UK Hit Singles 1952-2004 (1st ed.). London: Collins. p. 703. ISBN 0-00-717931-6.
Bibliography
- Brun-Lambert, David (October 2006) [2006]. Nina Simone, het tragische lot van een uitzonderlijke zangeres (in Dutch, translated from French original). Introduction by Lisa Celeste Stroud, afterword by Gerrit de Bruin. Zwolle: Sirene. ISBN 90-5831-425-1.
- Feldstein, Ruth (March 2005). "'I Don't Trust You Anymore': Nina Simone, Culture, and Black Activism in the 1960s". Journal of American History 91 (4): 1349–1379. doi:10.2307/3660176.
- Hampton, Sylvia (2004) [2004]. Break Down and Let It All Out. David Nathan, introduction by Lisa Celeste Stroud. London: Sanctuary. ISBN 1-86074-552-0.
- Simone, Nina; Stephen Cleary (2003) [1992]. I Put a Spell on You. Introduction by Dave Marsh (2nd ed.). New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80525-1.
External links
Find more about
Nina Simone
at Wikipedia's sister projects |
|
Definitions from Wiktionary | |
Media from Commons | |
Database entry Q174957 on Wikidata |
- Official website
- The Amazing Nina Simone: A Documentary Film
- Nina Simone at the Internet Movie Database
- Nina Simone at DMOZ
- Nina Simone in the Encyclopedia of Jazz Musicians
- Nina Simone at Legacy Recordings