Nina Simone
Eunice Kathleen Waymon (February 21, 1933 – April 21, 2003), known professionally as Nina Simone, was an American singer, songwriter, musician, arranger, and civil rights activist. Her music spanned a broad range of musical styles including classical, jazz, blues, folk, R&B, gospel, and pop.
Nina Simone | |
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Simone in 1965 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Eunice Kathleen Waymon |
Born | Tryon, North Carolina, U.S. | February 21, 1933
Died | April 21, 2003 70) Carry-le-Rouet, France | (aged
Genres | |
Occupation(s) |
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Years active | 1954–2002 |
Labels | |
Website | ninasimone.com |
The sixth of eight children born to a poor family in Tryon, North Carolina, Simone initially aspired to be a concert pianist.[1] With the help of a few supporters in her hometown, she enrolled in the Juilliard School of Music in New York City.[2] She then applied for a scholarship to study at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, where she was denied admission despite a well-received audition,[3] which she attributed to racial discrimination. In 2003, just days before her death, the Institute awarded her an honorary degree.[4]
To make a living, Simone started playing piano at a nightclub in Atlantic City. She changed her name to "Nina Simone" to disguise herself from family members, having chosen to play "the devil's music"[3] or so-called "cocktail piano". She was told in the nightclub that she would have to sing to her own accompaniment, which effectively launched her career as a jazz vocalist.[5] She went on to record more than 40 albums between 1958 and 1974, making her debut with Little Girl Blue. She had a hit single in the United States in 1958 with "I Loves You, Porgy".[1] Her musical style fused gospel and pop with classical music, in particular Johann Sebastian Bach,[6] and accompanied expressive, jazz-like singing in her contralto voice.[7][8]
Biography
1933–1954: Early life
Simone was born Eunice Kathleen Waymon on February 21, 1933, in Tryon, North Carolina. The sixth of eight children[9] in a poor family, she began playing piano at the age of three or four; the first song she learned was "God Be With You, Till We Meet Again".[10] Demonstrating a talent with the piano, she performed at her local church. Her concert debut, a classical recital, was given when she was 12. 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.[11] She said that she refused to play until her parents were moved back to the front,[12][13] and that the incident contributed to her later involvement in the civil rights movement.[14] Simone's mother, Mary Kate Waymon (née Irvin, November 20, 1901 – April 30, 2001),[15] was a Methodist minister and a housemaid. Her father, Rev. John Devan Waymon (June 24, 1898 – October 23, 1972),[16] was a handyman who at one time owned a dry-cleaning business, but also suffered bouts of ill health. Simone's music teacher helped establish a special fund to pay for her education.[17] Subsequently, a local fund was set up to assist her continued education. With the help of this scholarship money, she was able to attend Allen High School for Girls in Asheville, North Carolina.
After her graduation, Simone spent the summer of 1950 at the Juilliard School as a student of Carl Friedberg,[18] preparing for an audition at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. Her application, however, was denied. Only 3 of 72 applicants were accepted that year,[19] but as her family had relocated to Philadelphia in the expectation of her entry to Curtis, the blow to her aspirations was particularly heavy. For the rest of her life, she suspected that her application had been denied because of racial prejudice. Discouraged, she took private piano lessons with Vladimir Sokoloff, a professor at Curtis, but never could re-apply due to the fact that at the time the Curtis institute did not accept students over 21. She took a job as a photographer's assistant, but also found work as an accompanist at Arlene Smith's vocal studio and taught piano from her home in Philadelphia.[18]
1954–1959: Early success
In order to fund her private lessons, Simone performed at the Midtown Bar & Grill on Pacific Avenue in Atlantic City, New Jersey, whose owner insisted that she sing as well as play the piano, which increased her income to $90 a week. In 1954, she adopted the stage name "Nina Simone". "Nina", derived from niña, was a nickname given to her by a boyfriend named Chico,[18] and "Simone" was taken from the French actress Simone Signoret, whom she had seen in the 1952 movie Casque d'Or.[20] Knowing her mother would not approve of playing "the Devil's music", she used her new stage name to remain undetected. Simone's mixture of jazz, blues, and classical music in her performances at the bar earned her a small but loyal fan base.[21]
In 1958, she befriended and married Don Ross, a beatnik who worked as a fairground barker, but quickly regretted their marriage.[22] 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 followed in February 1959 on Bethlehem Records.[23][24][25] Because she had sold her rights outright for $3,000, Simone lost more than $1 million in royalties (notably for the 1980s re-release of her version of the jazz standard "My Baby Just Cares for Me") and never benefited financially from the album's sales.[26]
1959–1964: Burgeoning popularity
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. After the release of her live album Nina Simone at Town Hall, Simone became a favorite performer in Greenwich Village.[27] By this time, Simone performed pop music only 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.[28]
Simone married a New York police detective, Andrew Stroud, in December, 1961. In few years he became her manager and the father of her daughter Lisa, but later he abused Simone psychologically and physically.[3][29][30]
1964–1974: Civil Rights era
In 1964, Simone changed record distributors from Colpix, an American company, to the Dutch Philips Records, which meant a change in the content of her recordings. She had always included songs in her repertoire that drew on her African-American heritage, such as "Brown Baby" by Oscar Brown and "Zungo" by Michael Olatunji on her album Nina at the Village Gate in 1962. On her debut album for Philips, Nina Simone in Concert (1964), for the first time she addressed racial inequality in the United States in the song "Mississippi Goddam". This was her response to the June 12, 1963, murder of Medgar Evers and the September 15, 1963, bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, that killed four young black girls and partly blinded a fifth. She said that the song was "like throwing ten bullets back at them", becoming one of many other protest songs written by Simone. The song was released as a single, and it was boycotted in some southern states.[31][32] Promotional copies were smashed by a Carolina radio station and returned to Philips.[33] She later recalled how "Mississippi Goddam" was her "first civil rights song" and that the song came to her "in a rush of fury, hatred and determination". The song challenged the belief that race relations could change gradually and called for more immediate developments: "me and my people are just about due". It was a key moment in her path to Civil Rights activism.[34] "Old Jim Crow", on the same album, addressed the Jim Crow laws. After "Mississippi Goddam", a civil rights message was the norm in Simone's recordings and became part of her concerts. As her political activism rose, the rate of release of her music slowed.
Simone performed and spoke at civil rights meetings, such as at the Selma to Montgomery marches.[35] Like Malcolm X, her neighbor in Mount Vernon, New York, she supported black nationalism and advocated violent revolution rather than Martin Luther King Jr.'s non-violent approach.[36] She hoped that African Americans could use armed combat to form a separate state, though she wrote in her autobiography that she and her family regarded all races as equal.
In 1967, Simone moved from Philips to RCA Victor. She sang "Backlash Blues" written by her friend, Harlem Renaissance leader 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) contained live recordings from the Westbury Music Fair of April 7, 1968, three days after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. She dedicated the performance to him and sang "Why? (The King of Love Is Dead)", a song written by her bass player, Gene Taylor.[37] In 1969, she performed at the Harlem Cultural Festival in Harlem's Mount Morris Park.
Simone and Weldon Irvine turned the unfinished play To Be Young, Gifted and Black by Lorraine Hansberry into a civil rights song of the same name. She credited her friend Hansberry 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 Donny Hathaway.[31] When reflecting on this period, she wrote in her autobiography, "I felt more alive then than I feel now because I was needed, and I could sing something to help my people".[38]
1974–1993: Later life
In an interview for Jet magazine, Simone stated that her controversial song "Mississippi Goddam" harmed her career. She claimed that the music industry punished her by boycotting her records.[39] Hurt and disappointed, Simone left the US in September 1970, flying to Barbados and expecting her husband and manager (Andrew 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 her 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 (unpaid as a protest against her country's involvement with the Vietnam War), and returned to Barbados to evade the authorities and prosecution.[40] Simone stayed in Barbados for quite some time, and had a lengthy affair with the Prime Minister, Errol Barrow.[41][42] A close friend, singer Miriam Makeba, then persuaded her to go to Liberia. When Simone relocated, she abandoned her daughter Lisa in Mount Vernon.[43] Lisa eventually reunited with Simone in Liberia, but, according to Lisa, her mother was physically and mentally abusive.[44] The abuse was so unbearable that Lisa became suicidal and she moved back to New York to live with her father Andrew Stroud.[43][44] Simone recorded her last album for RCA, It Is Finished, in 1974, and 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.[45] 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, Studio Davout.
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 with her audiences sometimes, by recounting humorous anecdotes related to her career and music and by soliciting requests. By this time she stayed everywhere and nowhere. She lived in Liberia, Barbados and Switzerland and eventually ended up in Paris. There she regularly performed in a small jazz club called Aux Trois Mailletz for relatively small financial reward. The performances were sometimes brilliant and at other times Nina Simone gave up after fifteen minutes. Often she was too drunk to sing or play the piano properly. Other times she scolded the audience. The end of Nina Simone seemed in sight.[46] Manager Raymond Gonzalez, guitarist Al Schackman and Gerrit de Bruin, a Dutch friend of her, decided to intervene.
Nina Simone moved to Nijmegen in the Netherlands in the spring of 1988. She had just scored a huge European hit with the song My Baby Just Cares for Me. A song that she recorded for the first time in 1958 was used in a commercial for Chanel No. 5 perfume in Europe. This led to a re-release of the recording, which stormed to number 4 on UK's NME singles chart, giving her a brief surge in popularity in the UK and elsewhere.[47]
In 1988 she bought an apartment next to the Belvoir Hotel with view on the Waalbrug and Ooijpolder, with the help of her friend Gerrit de Bruin, who lived with his family a few corners away, and kept an eye on her. The idea was to bring Nina Simone to Nijmegen to relax and get back on track. A daily caretaker, Jackie Hammond from London was hired for her. She was known for her temper and outbursts of aggression. Unfortunately, the tantrums also followed her to Nijmegen. Simone was diagnosed with bipolar disorder by a friend of De Bruin, who prescribed the Trilafon for her. Despite the miserable illness, it was generally a happy time for Simone in Nijmegen, where she could lead a fairly anonymous life. Only a few recognized her, but most Nijmegen people did not know who she was. Slowly but surely it went uphill with Nina Simone, and she was even able to make money from the Chanel commercial after a legal battle. In 1991 Nina Simone exchanged Nijmegen for the more lively Amsterdam, where she lived for two years with friends and Hammond too.[48][49]
1993–2003: Final years, illness and death
In 1993, she settled near Aix-en-Provence in Southern France (Bouches-du-Rhône).[50] In the same year, her final album, A Single Woman, was released. She variously contended that she married or had a love affair with a Tunisian around this time, but that their relationship ended because, "His family didn't want him to move to France, and France didn't want him because he's a North African."[51] During a 1998 performance in Newark, she announced, "If you're going to come see me again, you've got to come to France, because I am not coming back."[52] She 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. Her funeral service was attended by singers Miriam Makeba and Patti LaBelle, poet Sonia Sanchez, actors Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, and hundreds of others. Simone's ashes were scattered in several African countries. She is survived by her daughter, Lisa Celeste Stroud, an actress and singer, who took the stage name Simone, and who has appeared on Broadway in Aida.[53]
Activism
Influence
Simone's consciousness on the racial and social discourse was prompted by her friendship with black playwright Lorraine Hansberry.[54] The influence of Hansberry planted the seed for the provocative social commentary that became an expectation in Simone's repertoire. One of Nina's more hopeful activism anthems, "To Be Young, Gifted and Black", was written with collaborator Weldon Irvine in the years following the playwright's passing, acquiring the title of one of Hansberry's unpublished plays.
Beyond the civil rights movement
Simone's social commentary was not limited to the civil rights movement; the song "Four Women" exposed the eurocentric appearance standards imposed on black women in America,[55] as it explored the internalized dilemma of beauty that is experienced between four black women with skin tones ranging from light to dark. She explains in her autobiography I Put a Spell on You that the purpose of the song was to inspire black women to define beauty and identity for themselves without the influence of societal impositions.[56]
Artistry
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, and others 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 on the Billboard magazine Hot 100 chart.[57]
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.[58] A music video was also created by Aardman Studios.[59] 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).[60]
"Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" and her takes on "Feeling Good" and "Sinnerman" (Pastel Blues, 1965) have remained popular in cover versions (most notably a version of the former song by The Animals), sample usage, and their use on soundtracks for various movies, television series, and video games. "Sinnerman" has been featured in the films The Crimson Pirate (1952), The Thomas Crown Affair (1999), High Crimes (2002), Cellular (2004), Déjà Vu (2006), Miami Vice (2006), Golden Door (2006), Inland Empire (2006), and Harriet (2019), as well as in TV series such as Homicide: Life on the Street (1998, "Sins of the Father"), Nash Bridges (2000, "Jackpot"), Scrubs (2001, "My Own Personal Jesus"), Boomtown (2003, "The Big Picture"), Person of Interest (2011, "Witness"), Shameless (2011, "Kidnap and Ransom"), Love/Hate (2011, "Episode 1"), Sherlock (2012, "The Reichenbach Fall"), The Blacklist (2013, "The Freelancer"), Vinyl (2016, "The Racket"), Lucifer (2017, "Favorite Son"), and The Umbrella Academy (2019, "Extra Ordinary"), and sampled by artists such as Talib Kweli (2003, "Get By"), Timbaland (2007, "Oh Timbaland"), and Flying Lotus (2012, "Until the Quiet Comes"). 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 recorded by Billie Holiday, was sampled by Kanye West for "Blood on the Leaves" on his album Yeezus.
Simone's years at RCA-Victor spawned many 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.[61] In 2006, it returned to the UK Top 30 in a remixed version by Groovefinder.
The following single, a rendition of the Bee Gees' "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).[62][63]
Performance style
Simone's bearing and stage presence earned her the title "the High Priestess of Soul".[64] She was a pianist, singer and performer, "separately, and simultaneously."[29] As a composer and arranger, Simone moved from gospel to blues, jazz, and folk, and to numbers with European classical styling. Besides using Bach-style counterpoint, she called upon the particular virtuosity of the 19th-century Romantic piano repertoire—Chopin, Liszt, Rachmaninoff, and others. Jazz trumpeter Miles Davis spoke highly of Simone, deeply impressed by her ability to play three-part counterpoint (her two hands on the piano and her voice each providing a separate but complementary melody line).[65] Onstage, she incorporated monologues and dialogues with the audience into the program, and often used silence as a musical element.[66] Throughout most of her life and recording career she was accompanied by percussionist Leopoldo Fleming and guitarist and musical director Al Schackman.[67] She was known to pay close attention to the design and acoustics of each venue, tailoring her performances to individual venues.[65]
Simone was perceived as a sometimes difficult or unpredictable performer, occasionally hectoring the audience if she felt they were disrespectful. Schackman would try to calm Simone during these episodes, performing solo until she calmed offstage and returned to finish the engagement. Her early experiences as a classical pianist had conditioned Simone to expect quiet attentive audiences, and her anger tended to flare up at nightclubs, lounges, or other locations where patrons were less attentive.[65] Schackman described her live appearances as hit or miss, either reaching heights of hypnotic brilliance or on the other hand mechanically playing a few songs and then abruptly ending concerts early.
Critical reputation
Simone is regarded as one of the most influential recording artists of the 20th century.[68] According to Rickey Vincent, she was a pioneering musician whose career was characterized by "fits of outrage and improvisational genius". Pointing to her composition of "Mississippi Goddam", Vincent said Simone broke the mold, having the courage as "an established black musical entertainer to break from the norms of the industry and produce direct social commentary in her music during the early 1960s".[69]
In naming Simone the 29th-greatest singer of all time, Rolling Stone wrote that "her honey-coated, slightly adenoidal cry was one of the most affecting voices of the civil rights movement", while making note of her ability to "belt barroom blues, croon cabaret and explore jazz — sometimes all on a single record."[70] In the opinion of AllMusic's Mark Deming, she was "one of the most gifted vocalists of her generation, and also one of the most eclectic".[71] Creed Taylor, who annotated the liner notes for Simone's 1978 Baltimore album, said the singer possessed a "magnificent intensity" that "turns everything—even the most simple, mundane phrase or lyric—into a radiant, poetic message".[72] Jim Fusilli, music critic for The Wall Street Journal, writes that Simone's music is still relevant today: "it didn't adhere to ephemeral trends, it isn't a relic of a bygone era; her vocal delivery and technical skills as a pianist still dazzle; and her emotional performances have a visceral impact."[73]
"She is loved or feared, adored or disliked", Maya Angelou wrote in 1970, "but few who have met her music or glimpsed her soul react with moderation".[74] Robert Christgau, who disliked Simone, wrote that her "penchant for the mundane renders her intensity as bogus as her mannered melismas and pronunciation (move over, Inspector Clouseau) and the rote flatting of her vocal improvisations."[72] Regarding her piano playing, he dismissed Simone as a "middlebrow keyboard tickler ... whose histrionic rolls insert unconvincing emotion into a song".[75] He later attributed his generally negative appraisal to Simone's consistent seriousness of manner, depressive tendencies, and classical background.[76]
Mental health
Simone was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in the late 1980s.[77] She was known for her temper and outbursts of aggression. [78] In 1985, Simone fired a gun at a record company executive, whom she accused of stealing royalties. Simone said she "tried to kill him" but "missed".[79] In 1995 while living in France, she shot and wounded her neighbor's son with an air gun after the boy's laughter disturbed her concentration and she perceived his response to her complaints as racial insults;[80][81] she was sentenced to eight months in jail, which was suspended pending a psychiatric evaluation and treatment.[65]
According to a biographer, Simone took medication from the mid-1960s onward, although this was supposedly only known to a small group of intimates.[82] After her death the medication was confirmed as the anti-psychotic Trilafon, which Simone's friends and caretakers sometimes surreptitiously mixed into her food when she refused to follow her treatment plan.[65] This fact was kept out of public view until 2004 when a biography, Break Down and Let It All Out, written by Sylvia Hampton and David Nathan, was published posthumously. Singer-songwriter Janis Ian, a one-time friend of Simone's, related in her own autobiography, Society's Child: My Autobiography, two instances to illustrate Simone's volatility: one incident in which she forced a shoe store cashier at gunpoint to take back a pair of sandals she'd already worn; and another in which Simone demanded a royalty payment from Ian herself as an exchange for having recorded one of Ian's songs, and then ripped a pay telephone out of its wall when she was refused.[83]
Awards and recognition
Simone was the recipient of a Grammy Hall of Fame Award in 2000 for her interpretation of "I Loves You, Porgy." On Human Kindness Day 1974 in Washington, D.C., more than 10,000 people paid tribute to Simone.[84][85] Simone received two honorary degrees in music and humanities, from Amherst College and Malcolm X College.[86][87] She preferred to be called "Dr. Nina Simone" after these honors were bestowed upon her.[88] She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018.[89]
Two days before her death, Simone learned she would be awarded an honorary degree by the Curtis Institute of Music, the music school that had refused to admit her as a student at the beginning of her career.[4]
Simone has received four career Grammy Award nominations,[90] two during her lifetime and two posthumously. In 1968, she received her first nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for the track "(You'll) Go to Hell" from her thirteenth album Silk & Soul (1967). The award went to "Respect" by Aretha Franklin.
Simone garnered a second nomination in the category in 1971, for her Black Gold album, when she again lost to Franklin for "Don't Play That Song (You Lied)". Franklin would again win for her cover of Simone's Young, Gifted and Black two years later in the same category which Simone's Black Gold album was nominated and features Simone's original version of "Young, Gifted and Black". In 2016, Simone posthumously received a nomination for Best Music Film for the Netflix documentary What Happened, Miss Simone? and in 2018 she received a nomination for Best Rap Song as a songwriter for Jay Z's "The Story of O.J." from his 4:44 album which contained a sample of "Four Women" by Simone.
In 2018, Simone was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame[91] by fellow R&B artist Mary J. Blige.[92]
In 2019, "Mississippi Goddam" was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Recording Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[93]
Legacy and influence
Music
Musicians who have cited Simone as important for their own musical upbringing include Elton John (who named one of his pianos after her), Madonna, Aretha Franklin, Adele, David Bowie, Boy George, Emeli Sandé, Antony and the Johnsons, Dianne Reeves, Sade, Janis Joplin, 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, Cat Power, Lykke Li, Peter Gabriel, Justin Hayward, Maynard James Keenan, Cedric Bixler-Zavala, Mary J. Blige, Fantasia Barrino, Michael Gira, Angela McCluskey, Lauryn Hill, Patrice Babatunde, Alicia Keys, Alex Turner, Lana Del Rey, Hozier, Matt Bellamy, Ian MacKaye, Kerry Brothers, Jr., Krucial, Amanda Palmer, Steve Adey and Jeff Buckley.[31][94][95][96][97][98] John Lennon cited Simone's version of "I Put a Spell on You" as a source of inspiration for the Beatles' song "Michelle".[98] American singer Meshell Ndegeocello released her own tribute album Pour une Âme Souveraine: A Dedication to Nina Simone in 2012. In late 2019, American rapper Wale released an album titled Wow... That's Crazy, containing a track called "Love Me Nina/Semiautomatic" which contains audio clips from Simone.
Simone's music has been featured in soundtracks of various motion pictures and video games, including La Femme Nikita (1990), Point of No Return (1993), Shallow Grave (1994), The Big Lebowski (1998), Any Given Sunday (1999), The Thomas Crown Affair (1999), Disappearing Acts (2000), 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), Home (2008), Watchmen (2009), The Saboteur (2009), Repo Men (2010), and Beyond the Lights (2014). Frequently her music is used in remixes, commercials, and TV series including "Feeling Good", which featured prominently in the Season Four Promo of Six Feet Under (2004). Simone's "Take Care of Business" is the closing theme of The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (2015), Simone's cover of Janis Ian's "Stars" is played during the final moments of the season 3 finale of BoJack Horseman (2016), and "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free" and "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" were included in the film Acrimony (2018).
Film
The documentary Nina Simone: La légende (The Legend) was made in the 1990s by French filmmakers and based on her autobiography I Put a Spell on You. It features live footage from different periods of her career, interviews with 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.[99]
Footage of Simone singing "Mississippi Goddam" for 40,000 marchers at the end of the Selma to Montgomery marches can be seen in the 1970 documentary King: A Filmed Record... Montgomery to Memphis and the 2015 Liz Garbus documentary What Happened, Miss Simone?[3]
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, Lisa Simone Kelly, has since refuted the existence of a romantic relationship between Simone and Henderson on account of his homosexuality.[100] Cynthia Mort (screenwriter of Will & Grace and Roseanne), wrote the screenplay and directed the 2016 film Nina, starring Zoe Saldana who has since openly apologized for taking the controversial title role. [101][102][103][104]
In 2015, two documentary features about Simone's life and music were released. The first, directed by Liz Garbus, What Happened, Miss Simone? was produced in cooperation with Simone's estate and her daughter, who also served as the film's executive producer. The film was produced as a counterpoint to the unauthorized Cynthia Mort film (Nina, 2016), and featured previously unreleased archival footage. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2015 and was distributed by Netflix on June 26, 2015.[105] It was nominated on January 14, 2016, for a 2016 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.[106]
The second documentary in 2015, The Amazing Nina Simone is an independent film written and directed by Jeff L. Lieberman, who initially consulted with Simone's daughter, Lisa before going the independent route and then worked closely with Simone's siblings, predominantly Sam Waymon.[107][108] The film debuted in cinemas in October 2015, and has since played more than 100 theatres in 10 countries.[109]
Drama
She is the subject of Nina: A Story About Me and Nina Simone, a one-woman show first performed in 2016 at the Unity Theatre, Liverpool — a "deeply personal and often searing show inspired by the singer and activist Nina Simone"[110] — and which in July 2017 ran at the Young Vic, before being scheduled to move to Edinburgh's Traverse Theatre.[111]
Books
As well as her 1992 autobiography I Put a Spell on You (1992), written with Stephen Cleary, Simone has been the subject of several books. They include Nina Simone: Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood (2002) by Richard Williams; Nina Simone: Break Down and Let It All Out (2004) by Sylvia Hampton and David Nathan; Princess Noire (2010) by Nadine Cohodas; Nina Simone (2004) by Kerry Acker; Nina Simone, Black is the Color (2005) by Andrew Stroud; and What Happened, Miss Simone? (2016) by Alan Light.
Simone also inspired a book of poetry, me and Nina, by Monica Hand.[112]
Honors
In 2002, the city of Nijmegen, Netherlands, named a street after her, as "Nina Simone Street": she had lived in Nijmegen between 1988 and 1990. On August 29, 2005, the city of Nijmegen, the De Vereeniging concert hall, and more than 50 artists (among whom were Frank Boeijen, Rood Adeo, and Fay Claassen)[113] honored Simone with the tribute concert Greetings from Nijmegen.
Simone was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2009.[114]
In 2010, a statue in her honor was erected on Trade Street in her native Tryon, North Carolina.[115]
The promotion from the French Institute of Political Studies of Lille (Sciences Po Lille), due to obtain their master's degree in 2021, named themselves in her honor. The decision was made that this promotion was henceforth to be known as 'la promotion Nina Simone' after a vote in 2017.[116]
Simone was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018.[117]
The Proms paid a homage to Nina Simone in 2019, a prom titled Mississippi Goddamn is performed by The Metropole Orkest at Royal Albert Hall led by Jules Buckley. Ledisi, Lisa Fischer and Jazz Trio, LaSharVu provided vocals for the prom.[118][119]
Discography
References
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 1–62
- "Encyclopedia of Jazz Musicians – Nina Simone (Eunice Kathleen Waymon)". Jazz.com. Archived from the original on March 22, 2016. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
- Liz Garbus, 2015 documentary film, What Happened, Miss Simone?
- "The Nina Simone Foundation". Archived from the original on June 19, 2008. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- Pierpont, Claudia Roth (August 6, 2014). "A Raised Voice: How Nina Simone turned the movement into music". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on August 6, 2014. Retrieved August 6, 2014.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 23.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 91.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 17–19
- Cohodas 2010, p. 5
- Cohodas 2010, p. 16
- Cohodas 2010, p. 37
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 26.
- Hampton 2004, p. 15.
- Shatz, Adam (March 10, 2016). "The Fierce Courage of Nina Simone". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- "Mary Kate Irvin Waymon". Find a Grave. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- "Rev John Devan Waymon (1898-1972) - Find A Grave..." Find a Grave. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 21.
- Light, Alan. "Episode 3, What Happened, Miss Simone?, Book of the Week - BBC Radio 4". BBC. Retrieved March 9, 2017.
- Peter Dobrin (August 16, 2015). "Curtis Institute and the case of Nina Simone". The Inquirer. Philadelphia, PA. Archived from the original on August 13, 2017.
- BarónALio-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 February 23, 2009.
- "February Album Releases" (PDF). The Cash Box. The Cash Box Publishing Co. Inc., NY. February 14, 1959. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
- Callahan, Mike; Edwards, David. "The Bethlehem Records Story". Both Sides Now Publications. Archived from the original on July 27, 2018. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
- Popoff, Martin (2009). Goldmine Record Album Price Guide (6th ed.). London: Penguin. p. 2123. ISBN 9781440229169.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 60.
- Dorian, Lynskey (2010). 33Revolutions Per Minute: A History of Protest Songs. London: Faber and Faber. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-571-24134-7.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 65
- "L'hommage: Nina Simone Biography". Archived from the original on July 23, 2007. Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- "Andrew Stroud was lieutenant and manager to Nina Simone (obituary)". The Riverdale Press. July 25, 2012. Retrieved October 25, 2020.
- Neal, Mark Anthony (June 4, 2003). "Nina Simone: She Cast a Spell — and Made a Choice". Archived from the original on July 15, 2007. Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 90–91
- Tanisha C. Ford, Liberated Threads: Black Women, Style, and the Global Politics of Soul, p.86
- Feldstein, Ruth (2005). ""I Don't Trust You Anymore": Nina Simone, Culture, and Black Activism in the 1960s". The Journal of American History. 91 (4): 1349–1379. doi:10.2307/3660176. JSTOR 3660176.
- "The Nina Simone Database: Timeline". 2010. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
- Simone & Cleary 2003.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 114–115
- Cohodas 2010, p. 345
- Company, Johnson Publishing (March 24, 1986). Jet. Johnson Publishing Company.
mississippi goddam.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 120–122
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 129–134
- Brun-Lambert 2006, p. 231.
- Lee, Christina (June 29, 2015). "10 Things We Learned From New Nina Simone Doc". Rolling Stone.
- Daniels, Karu F. (June 24, 2015). "Nina Simone's daughter details pain and abuse in a Netflix documentary". New York Daily News.
- Sunderland, Celeste (July 1, 2005). "All about Jazz: review "Fodder on My Wings" & "Baltimore"". Retrieved August 5, 2007.
- https://sonjaalferink.nl/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/JAZZ02_SabrinaStarke-P.pdf
- https://sonjaalferink.nl/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/JAZZ02_SabrinaStarke-P.pdf
- Schong, Peter (December 11, 2015). "Nina Simone in Nijmegen: toevluchtsoord aan de Waal". petesboogie.blogspot.com (in Dutch).
- "Het Nijmeegse geluk van Nina Simone" (in Dutch). De Gelderlander. August 13, 2010.
- Fortuin, Fiona (November 27, 2015). "De Nederlandse jaren van Nina Simone ("The Dutch Years of Nina Simone")". Noisey (in Dutch). Retrieved December 15, 2018.
- Sources:
- Bardin, Brantley (1997). "Legend-with-an-attitude Nina Simone breaks her silence. And you'd better listen". Details (Interview). Retrieved March 4, 2020.
- Relevant remarks:
- Bardin: "You've been married and divorced and had many romances. Do you still get around?"
- Simone: "I had an intense love affair with a Tunisian boy last year, but I don't think I want to get involved for a long time again because he opened me up like a volcano, and it almost put me under."
- Relevant remarks:
- Hotel Carlton, Tunis (June 2, 2018). "#hotelcarltontunis". Instagram. Retrieved March 4, 2020.
Nina Simone at the Carlton. It was in 1994, Nina Simone had fallen in love with a Tunisian boy and spent a lot of time in Tunis, including the Carlton! The story ended badly and Nina told the press, 'I will never fall in love again.'
- Hunter, Kim D. (2003). "Nina Simone: And She Meant Every Word of It!". Solidarity. Retrieved March 4, 2020.
In her late sixties, she claimed to have a 'volcanic' love affair with a young Tunisian.
- Sebastian, Tim (1999). Nina Simone on BBC HARDtalk. Event occurs at 4:45. Retrieved March 4, 2020.
- Relevant remarks:
- Sebastian: "You've been married before."
- Simone: "I've been married twice."
- Sebastian: "Have you been unlucky at love?"
- Simone: "Yeah—unlucky at marriages. Not so unlucky at love."
- Sebastian: "Lots of love, few marriages?"
- Simone: "Yes, two marriages."
- Sebastian: "Why didn't they work out?"
- Simone: "The music got in the way in the one where I married the cop from the United States [Andrew Stroud]. The music got in the way, and he treated me like a horse. You know, a nonstop workaholic horse. And the one in Tunisia—well, that was very hot, like a volcano. And his family didn't want him to move to France, and France didn't want him because he's a North African."
- Sebastian: "And the volcano didn't last?"
- Simone: "No, but it lasted long enough for me to never forget it, I'll tell you that."
- Relevant remarks:
- Bardin, Brantley (1997). "Legend-with-an-attitude Nina Simone breaks her silence. And you'd better listen". Details (Interview). Retrieved March 4, 2020.
- Cohodas 2010, pp. 358
- Frank, Jonathan. "Talking Broadway Seattle: Aida". Retrieved August 14, 2007.
- Johnson, David Brent (June 24, 2015). "The High Priestess Of Soul: Nina Simone In 5 Songs". National Public Radio Jazz.
- Tsuruta, Dorothy Randall (1999). "I Ain't about to be Non-Violent, Honey". The Black Scholar. 29 (2–3): 57. doi:10.1080/00064246.1999.11430963.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, p. 117
- "Nina Simone I Loves You, Porgy Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- 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.
- Alan Light (2016). What Happened, Miss Simone? A Biography. Crown Archetype, ISBN 978-1-101-90487-9
- Nupie, Roger. "Dr. Nina Simone: Biography". Archived from the original on June 24, 2013. Retrieved February 21, 2013.
- Simone & Cleary 2003, pp. 58–59
- Harrington, Katy (June 30, 2015). "'Gorgeous and complicated': the real Nina Simone". The Irish Times. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
- Vincent, Rickey (2013). Party Music: The Inside Story of the Black Panthers' Band and How Black Power Transformed Soul Music. Chicago Review Press. ISBN 978-1613744956.
- Anon. (December 2, 2010). "100 Greatest Singers of All Time: Nina Simone". Rolling Stone. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
- Deming, Mark (n.d.). "Nina Simone". AllMusic. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
- Christgau, Robert (September 25, 1978). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". The Village Voice. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
- Fusilli, Jim (June 23, 2015). "A Tribute to the Enduring Voice of Nina Simone". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
- Lynskey, Dorian (June 22, 2015). "Nina Simone: 'Are you ready to burn buildings?'". The Guardian. Retrieved September 3, 2018.
- Christgau, Robert (April 1971). "Joy". The Village Voice. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
- Christgau, Robert (September 18, 2018). "Xgau Sez". robertchristgau.com. Archived from the original on September 18, 2018. Retrieved September 18, 2018.
- Higgins, Ria (June 24, 2007). "Best of Times Worst of Times Simone". The Times. London, UK. Retrieved May 8, 2010.(subscription required)
- Brooks, D. A. (2011). "Nina Simone's Triple Play". Callaloo. 34 (1): 176–197. doi:10.1353/cal.2011.0036. S2CID 162697093.
- 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.
- Roth Pierpont, Claudia (August 4, 2014). "A Raised Voice". The New Yorker. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
- Hampton 2004, pp. 9–13.
- Ian, Janis (2008). Society's Child: My Autobiography. Penguin. pp. 246–247.
- 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.
- "Amherst College Honorary Degree Recipients by Name". Retrieved December 13, 2017.
- Hanson, Eric (2004). "A Diva's Spell" (PDF). Williams Alumni Review. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 15, 2007. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
- "Nina Simone". Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- "Nina Simone". GRAMMY.com. May 14, 2017. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- "2018 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees Revealed". Billboard.com. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
- Ivie, Devon. "Howard Stern, Mary J. Blige Among Rock Hall Induction Presenters This Year". Vulture.com. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
- Andrews, Travis M. (March 20, 2019). "Jay-Z, a speech by Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and 'Schoolhouse Rock!' among recordings deemed classics by Library of Congress". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
- 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.
- Alter, Rebecca (August 5, 2020). "Zoe Saldana Apologizes, for Real This Time, for Playing Nina Simone". Vulture. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
- Tinubu, Aramide A. (June 23, 2015). "Review: 'What Happened, Miss Simone' Leaves Us Wondering What Happens When What You Love Most, Haunts You". Shadow & Act. Retrieved June 27, 2015.
- "Oscars 2016 Nominations: Complete List of Nominees". Eonline. January 14, 2016. Retrieved January 14, 2016.
- "The Amazing Nina Simone - A Documentary Film By Jeff L. Lieberman". Amazingnina.com. Retrieved December 11, 2016.
- Martinez, Vanessa (January 20, 2014). "Exclusive: 'The Amazing Nina Simone' Doc (Ft Siblings, Friends, Band Members) in Post-Production". Shadow & Act. Retrieved June 27, 2015.
- DeFore, John (October 15, 2015). "'The Amazing Nina Simone': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter.
- Gardner, Lyn (October 19, 2016). "Nina review – searing tribute restarts Simone's revolution". The Guardian. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- Trueman, Matt (July 25, 2017). "Review: Nina (Young Vic)". WhatsOnStage.com. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- Hand, Monica (February 14, 2012). me and Nina. Alice James Books. ISBN 978-1882295906.
- Grafe, Klaas-Jan (November 30, 2005). "Impressive Hommage to Nina Simone". 3voor12.vpro.nl. NPO. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
- "2009 Inductees". North Carolina Music Hall of Fame. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
- "Commemorative Landscapes". DocSouth. University of North Carolina.
- "Nina Simone, icône de la promotion 2021". manufacture.paliens.org (in French). Retrieved January 18, 2018.
- Harwood, Erika (December 13, 2017). "The Irony of Nina Simone Joining the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame". Vanity Fair. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
- "Homage to Nina Simone". BBC Radio 3. Retrieved November 5, 2019.
- Coombes, Coombes (August 23, 2019). "Mississippi Goddam: The 2019 Nina Simone Prom at the Royal Albert Hall". London Jazz News. Retrieved November 5, 2019.
Sources
- Acker, Kerry (2004). Nina Simone. Introduction by Betty McCollum. Philadelphia: Chelsea House. ISBN 978-0-791-07456-5.
- Brun-Lambert, David (October 2006) [2006]. Nina Simone, het tragische lot van een uitzonderlijke zangeres (in Dutch). Introduction by Lisa Celeste Stroud, afterword by Gerrit de Bruin. Zwolle: Sirene. ISBN 90-5831-425-1.
- Cohodas, Nadine (2010). Princess Noire: The Tumultuous Reign of Nina Simone. New York: Pantheon Books. ISBN 978-0-375-42401-4.
- Elliott, Richard (2013). Nina Simone. Icons of Pop Music. Sheffield, UK: Equinox. ISBN 978-1-845-53988-7.
- Hampton, Sylvia; Nathan, David (2004) [2004]. Nina Simone: Break Down and Let It All Out. Introduction by Lisa Celeste Stroud. London: Sanctuary. ISBN 1-86074-552-0.
- Light, Alan (2016). What Happened, Miss Simone?: A Biography. New York: Crown Archetype. ISBN 978-1-101-90487-9.
- 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.
- Stroud, Andy (2005). Nina Simone, 'Black is the Color...': A book of rare photographs of adolescence, family and early career with quotes in her own words. Introduction by Lisa Simone Kelly. Philadelphia: Xlibris. ISBN 978-1-599-26670-1.
- Williams, Richard (2002). Nina Simone: Don't let me be understood. Edinburgh: Canongate. ISBN 978-1-841-95368-7.
External links
- Official website
- The Amazing Nina Simone: A Documentary Film
- Nina Simone at IMDb
- Nina Simone on Instagram
- Nina Simone at Curlie
- Shatz, Adam (March 10, 2016). "The Fierce Courage of Nina Simone". The New York Review of Books.