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Anguish and ecstasy of Simone's gift
Drudge | 04/22/03 | clive davis

Posted on 04/22/2003 7:44:46 AM PDT by dwilli

Anguish and ecstasy of Simone's gift By Clive Davis

TOWARDS the end of Nina Simone’s life, her concerts were not so much performances as a gathering of the faithful. If Frank Sinatra could be hard on the press pack, Nina Simone raised unpredictability to extravagant heights. The last time I heard her in London, four or five years ago, her entry on to the stage followed a spectacularly high-flown introduction by the president of her fan club. Potentates at the United Nations General Assembly receive less of a fanfare than Simone was given that night.

There was every bit as much drama once she began singing. Her voice, to be frank, was a shadow of what it had been in her prime. Yet there was no mistaking her ability to turn every tune into another chapter of an unfinished autobiography. No jazz singer since Billie Holiday had invested songs with as much personal anguish as Simone. And just as Holiday attracted a ghoulish following during her final years, so there was an almost voyeuristic air to some of Simone’s admirers. The more erratic her behaviour, the more they indulged her.

Tales of Simone’s eccentricities followed her everywhere. In the early Eighties she found a new home at Ronnie Scott’s in Soho, where she inevitably drew full houses. Regulars grew accustomed to her arriving at the bandstand in a fur coat and trainers, a plastic shopping bag in her hand. Scott and Pete King, his business partner, had dealt with many a difficult artist over the years but Simone found ways to stretch their patience.

One night in 1986, after some close calls earlier in the week, she failed to show up at the club at all. Pete King received a telephone call from a restaurant in Fulham. “Isn’t Nina Simone working for you this week?” he was asked.

King said: “She’s supposed to be. She hasn’t shown up.”

The caller replied: “I know. She’s at the next table.”

Most of us forgave her because we recalled how potent a talent she had been. And there was always the chance that it would be the night when the planets would be in alignment again. Sometimes they were. Sometimes we convinced ourselves that they were.

Like the albums she released in the last 20 years of her life, her concerts mixed tantalising flashes of brilliance with long stretches of self-indulgence. Yet even a dullish record such as Baltimore — released during a lacklustre spell in the late Seventies — was illuminated by a charismatic reworking of Randy Newman’s elegaic tune that gave the album its title.

The political upheavals of the civil rights era prompted a fiery response. To Be Young, Gifted and Black and the raucous sentiments of Mississippi Goddam were to remain favourites across the decades. If Simone — who chose exile, first in the Caribbean, then in Africa and Europe — sometimes gave the impresssion she was reliving the Sixties, it was a reflection of the turmoil the decade left in her soul. Radical politics, mixed with a volatile personality, made an unforgiving combination.

It could be argued that her gifts were always going to be too diverse and too overpowering to make her at ease with the demands of the music business. Embracing jazz, pop, rhythm and blues, show tunes, chansons and gospel, Simone mastered them all. Life, as ever, was a little harder.

Clive Davis is jazz critic of The Times


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: ninasimone

1 posted on 04/22/2003 7:45:14 AM PDT by dwilli
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To: dwilli
bttt
2 posted on 04/22/2003 7:54:29 AM PDT by firewalk
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To: dwilli
My Baby Just Cares for Me
 
(1928) Gus Kahn, Walter Donaldson
 
My baby don't care for shows
My baby don't care for clothes
My baby just cares for me
My baby don't care for cars and races
My baby don't care for high-tone places

Liz Taylor is not his style
And even Lana Turner's smile
Is somethin' he can't see
My baby don't care who knows
My baby just cares for me

Baby, my baby don't care for shows
And he don't even care for clothes
He cares for me
My baby don't care
For cars and races

My baby don't care for
He don't care for high-tone places
Liz Taylor is not his style
And even Liberace's smile
Is something he can't see

Is something he can't see
I wonder what's wrong with baby
My baby just cares for
My baby just cares for
My baby just cares for me
---
Rest in Peace Nina
3 posted on 04/22/2003 7:55:47 AM PDT by martin_fierro (Mr. Avuncular)
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To: dwilli
The folly of "hero" worship. In the final analysis, we all have "feet of clay".

FReegards
4 posted on 04/22/2003 7:59:12 AM PDT by poet
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To: martin_fierro
Greatness.
5 posted on 04/22/2003 7:59:29 AM PDT by TexasNative2000 (The joy of the Lord is my strength)
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To: TexasNative2000
There are many Simone recordings on the file-sharing
sites (I use Shareza). I noticed my files were steadily being transferred last night.

I feel sad that a lot of people probably heard Nina Simone
prior to yesterday.
6 posted on 04/22/2003 8:05:05 AM PDT by dwilli
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To: dwilli
She was a nasty hateful bitch and I am glad the world is shed of her (from personal experience).
7 posted on 04/22/2003 8:34:47 AM PDT by doodad
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To: doodad
Why do I have this feeling that people will be lining up to piss on your grave?
8 posted on 04/22/2003 8:40:58 AM PDT by dwilli
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To: dwilli
I least I don't spit at people and tell them that their "big black policemen will kick my skinny white ass" like she did to me at 15. All because she refused to either show an ID or a key at the place I was lifeguarding. She was too good for that. And hid behind two security guards.
9 posted on 04/22/2003 8:49:16 AM PDT by doodad
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To: doodad
She did a lot of dumb, diva-type stuff, probably was full of herself but that doesn't make her voice not one of the best of all time.

I never had any desire to be her friend or groupie, I just loved her way with a lyric.
10 posted on 04/22/2003 9:07:05 AM PDT by dwilli
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To: doodad
I have heard other similar stories about her. Great voice, crummy attitude and politics.
11 posted on 04/22/2003 9:13:38 AM PDT by MizSterious (Support whirled peas!)
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