1. I Put A Spell On You
2. Feeling Good
3. Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out
4. Strange Fruit
5. Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood
6. Ain’t Got No...I Got Life
7. Mood Indigo
8. My Baby Just Cares For Me
9. Break Down and Let It All Out
10. Black Is The Color Of My True Love’s Hair
11. Don’t You Pay Them No Mind
12. See-Line Woman
13. Four Women
14. Work Song
15. Ne Me Quitte Pas
16. I Loves You Porgy
17. Sinnerman
18. Don’t Smoke In Bed
19. The Gal From Joe’s
20. Mr Bojangles
21. Don’t Explain
The
company that owns the digital radio station
"theJazz" has announced that the station is
closing down at the end of March, barely more
than a year since it opened. So it is hardly
a propitious time to release an album with
this title. Perhaps the CD should have been
called theJazz Doesn't Play Nina Simone.
Nevertheless,
this is a good representative selection from
the work of a singing pianist who always seemed
to be outside the jazz mainstream. She is
not even mentioned in some jazz reference
books, perhaps for the snobbish reason that
some of her singles got into the pop charts
and have even been used in TV commercials
(but so have those of Louis Armstrong - the
subject of theJazz's previous release). Certainly
Simone was the kind of artist who appeals
to people who don't normally regard themselves
as jazz fans. This album includes such popular
hits as I Put a Spell on You and My
Baby Just Cares For me but unaccountably
omits To Love Somebody, which got into
the UK Top Five in 1969.
However
popular she was, and despite her classical
training, she was undoubtedly a jazz performer
- and a unique one. Her voice was deep and
she often used a very wide vibrato, putting
songs across with a passion which also found
voice in her political activism. But this
passion gave a forcefulness to many of her
performances: whether an optimistic song like
Feeling Good or the sombre Strange
Fruit (here performed very histrionically).
Her piano style was often thumping - even
ponderous - a quality she shared with Dave
Brubeck (another classically-influenced pianist).
And she took material from whatever sources
she pleased - popular songs, show tunes, folk
and gospel songs, as well as jazz standards
and her own originals. Who else would take
the Ellington tune Mood Indigo as she
does on this CD - as a fast swing number?
She was not always the subtlest of performers,
although a track like Black is the Colour
of My True Love's Hair shows that she
could be tender and restrained.
Nina
left the USA in 1974 and eventually settled
in the south of France, where she died in
2003. However you categorize her, she certainly
left her mark on music.
Tony
Augarde