King’s assassination, Simone, still in extreme grief, headlined the Westbury Music Fair, about 18 miles east of Manhattan. She brings it all home with a reggae-infused “Balm in Gilead” and come-to-Jesus “If You Pray Right.” Arranger Dave Matthews, working with such top-drawer musicians as guitarist Eric Gale and bassist Gary King, serves her well throughout the bruised majesty of “Everything Must Change,” the funky grit of Randy Newman’s title track and the muscular sass of Hall & Oates’ “Rich Girl.” Her reflective take on Judy Collins’ “My Father” is stunningly heartrending. Though Simone loudly denigrated her sole album for producer Creed Taylor, Baltimore is a remarkable olio and one of her finest LPs. It’s all evident across this brief but seminal session that blends “Just in Time” and “He Was Too Good to Me” with Oscar Brown Jr.’s gently wishful “Brown Baby,” the intoxicating chain-gang chant “Zungo” and a glorious, rafter-rattling “Children Go Where I Send You.” Another highlight is a hushed take on the folk song “House of the Rising Sun,” three years before the Animals had a hit with it. She was incorporating fewer standards into her playlist, her penchant for folk music was rapidly widening, her love of gospel had been rekindled and her civil rights activism was beginning to bud. Simone’s cleverly bracing “Mood Indigo,” achingly tender “I Loves You, Porgy” (her one and only chart hit) and inspired melding of the delicate Rodgers-and-Hart title tune with “Good King Wenceslas” are particular standouts.Īt the time of this 1961 date, recorded at what she affectionately called her “home club,” Simone was an artist in transition. Most of the 10 other cuts from this impressive debut are better illustrations of the remarkable interpretive finesse she’d developed by age 24. It remains the best-known, if misrepresentative, track of her entire career. perfume ad, significantly boosting her then-lagging popularity. In 1987 Chanel used Simone’s breezy “My Baby Just Cares for Me” in a U.K. Her father’s death is poignantly recalled in her reworking of Gilbert O’Sullivan’s “Alone Again (Naturally).” And her unyielding campaign for civil rights is artfully explored in the yin-yang of the dark, vengeful “I Was Just a Stupid Dog to Them” and playful, joyous “Color Is a Beautiful Thing.” Though Simone never shied away from expressing her innermost thoughts and beliefs, this Parisian session serves up a singularly vibrant self-portrait, beginning in high style with the exuberant “I Sing Just to Know That I’m Alive.” She celebrates her satisfying years in Africa (“Liberian Calypso”) and reflects on her dismal time in Switzerland (“Le Peuple en Suisse”). Then came the thunderously climactic “Mississippi Goddam,” Simone driving home her fist-shaking condemnation with an emphatic “and I mean every word.” Recording across three nights at Carnegie Hall, she left SRO crowds suitably roused with her “Pirate Jenny,” the Weill-Brecht show tune brilliantly transformed into a chilling portrait of black oppression her cunning upending of “separate but equal” laws with “Old Jim Crow” and the nursery-rhyme lilt of “Go Limp,” her winking yarn of sexual hijinks amid protest marches. Awash in heartache and longing-offset by the sensuous “In the Dark,” flirtatious “Day and Night” and lusty “Buck”- Sings the Blues is exquisitely crafted, reaching its apex as Simone indulges the carnal cravings of “I Want a Little Sugar in My Bowl.” Though at the height of her civil rights fervor, she nods to the cause just once, teaming with Langston Hughes to shape the emboldened “Backlash Blues.”īy 1964 Simone’s activist zeal was fully ignited and she was ready to growl.
So powerful yet amorphous a body of work is difficult to dissect, but here, in rank order, are nine must-hear Simone albums plus a heterogeneous endnote.įocusing on lean, lithe blues, Simone savors every moment, in perfect sync with guitarists Rudy Stevenson and Eric Gale, channeling the sass and interpretive heft of Bessie Smith. Not one to be pigeonholed, Simone bounced freely between jazz, pop, blues, folk and gospel, often with classical undertones that harkened back to her earliest career ambitions. Despite her consistent lack of sales power she recorded steadily for 35 years, often for major labels, and she stands, alongside Sinatra, as one of few artists of her era whose catalog remains near-entirely in print. While Nina Simone’s discography spans more than 40 albums, the closest she ever came to a genuine bestseller in the U.S. Nina Simone meets the press at Carnegie Hall, 1965