COMPLETE INTERVIEW with
Spanish caption. "There's no excuse for the young people not knowing who the heroes and heroines are or were." --Nina
Simone
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Honoring
Legendary Nina Simone
February 21, 1933 --
April 21, 2003
After 20 years of performing, she became involved in the civil rights movement and the direction of her life shifted once again. Simone's music was highly influential in the fight for equal rights in the US.
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
Black 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), 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 children of
African descent.
The song was released as a single, and was boycotted in certain southern states."Old
Jim Crow", on the same album, addressed the shameful
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.
Simone advocated violent revolution during the civil rights period, rather than
Martin Luther King's non-violent approach,and she hoped that
Black 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.
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
. 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).
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. 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.
Musicians who have cited Simone as important for their own musical upbringing include
Van Morrison,
Bono,
Cat Stevens,
Peter Gabriel,
Lauryn Hill and
Jeff Buckley to name a few. Musicians who have covered her work (or her specific renditions of songs) include
Aretha Franklin,
Janis Joplin,
David Bowie,
John Lennon and Jeff Buckley.
Simone received two honorary degrees in music and humanities, from the
University of Massachusetts Amherst and
Malcolm X College. She preferred to be called "
Dr. Nina Simone" after these honors were bestowed upon her. Only two days before her death, 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. Simone was inducted into the
North Carolina Music Hall of
Fame in 2009. In
2010,
Tryon, North Carolina erected a statue in her honor along
Trade Street.
"
Slavery has never been abolished from
America's way of thinking." --Nina Simone
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- published: 01 Aug 2013
- views: 105575