Simone, Nina / Anthology |
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Album: | Anthology | Collection: | Jazz | |
Artist: | Simone, Nina | Added: | Aug 2003 | |
Label: | Rca Victor/Bmg |
A-File Activity |
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Add Date: | 2003-10-27 | Pull Date: | 2003-12-29 | Charts: | Jazz |
Week Ending: | Dec 28 | Dec 21 | Nov 30 | Nov 23 | Nov 16 | Nov 9 |
Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 5 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Mar 15, 2023: | Some Songs Without Words Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood | 4. | May 28, 2022: | Everything Who Knows Where the Time ... | |
2. | Jan 15, 2023: | The Zydeco Workout Why? (The King of Love ... | 5. | Dec 13, 2021: | Waste FM (rebroadcast from Jun 12, 2018) Mississippi Goddam | |
3. | Oct 07, 2022: | soul street To Be Young, Gifted and Blac | 6. | Jun 02, 2021: | Some Songs Without Words I Put a Spell on You |
Album Review |
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Gabe Reviewed 2003-11-12 | ||
Nina Simone – Anthology One of the most famous jazz singers of the 1960s (plus a few years on either side), Simone was known equally for the emotive qualities of her voice and interpretations and for her then-eyebrow-raising outspokenness and activism on topics of the day, most notably civil rights. Simone’s own songs expand on the racial injustice and hard-life themes. These tracks are in chronological order and you can sense a quick rise in ability at the beginning, a high-level plateau for most of the 60s, and then a tailing-off as Simone takes up some weaker, less-heartfelt contemporary material. CD1 1. Gershwin standard done in late night smoky club fashion; Simone emotes both surrender and love 2. Sassy jazzy shuffle 3. Cheated-on lament 4. Soulful meditation on love’s little details 5. Bluesy belting take on tale of parasitic friends 6. Lovely piano blues (Simone often played piano too, besides singing) 7. An angry (but humorously delivered – in musical style and tone of voice it’s very vaudeville) pox on Mississippi for its retrograde racial policies of the 60s; just listen to all the details of the life in the lyrics; amazing tune, great delivery 8. Popping percussion, sly flute, and ritual-like chant-singing 9. The original version of this famous song (notably sung by The Animals, to half the effect here), more soulfully done here than elsewhere 10. Not as nutty as Screaming Jay’s own version, not as exotic as Natacha Atlas’, this “I Put A Spell On You” is merely competent, not scary 11. The Jacques Brel classic sung heartbreakingly and with beautifully restrained orchestral arrangement 12. Metaphor of black bodies as strange fruit hanging from the trees is chilling as are Simone’s funereal arrangement and from-deep-down piano and vocal 13. A powerful Simone original telling the tales of four scarred but strong women; Trivia: Peaches (of electroclash fame) took her name from the fourth woman 14. An upbeat gospel tune with great churning piano and a full-bodied melody; later on in the long tune, there is a call-and-response section 15. Suggestive and challenging blues CD2 1. Another suggestive blues, now with a more laid-back feel and a languid sax 2. Great, simple sing-along tune and pointed lyrics delivered just as simply 3. The first clunker – a doofy song 4. Another dodgy choice – a Bee Gees cover 5. Motown-ish soul ballad with overdone horns and ooh-oohs 6. If it sounds Broadway-ish but also hippie-ish, it must be a song from “Hair”; not bad musically but the lyrics are sort of stupid 7. Dignified tribute to MLK, Jr that’s more good for you than good to listen to 8. Difficult to take after the beauty of the first 17 songs here 9. I guess in 1969, the look-and-feel aspects of copyright law were not as rigid as they are now but if this ain’t a ripoff of the same-titled Beatles song, I’m a Nobelist (and the songwriter credit doesn’t show any Beatles); nonetheless, this tune is snappy and hep in that late-60s way 10. Ode to “young, gifted, and black”; despite the noble sentiment, its sort of cheesy Up With People (or Amway) uplift sentiment seems oh-so-earnest now, but people were less cynical then so taken in context, it’s a good song 11. Two minutes of chat precede this originally stunning lament about the passing of time and life; I’m sad to say though that Simone here saps all life out of this tune 12. Shudder; aside from the little piano bit, this sounds like an over-arranged, under-comprehended cover of what is a song of joy 13. Unexpectedly, given the dicey cover versions preceding it, Simone here adds some welcome soul to a classic Dylan tune 14. Ike and Tina did this funkeee; Simone does it Afro-jazzy with tuned drums and a drum solo; excellent 15. It’s difficult to imagine what Simone thought she could do with such a piece of lame-assed blue-eyed soul(lessness) 16. Cheezy listening romantic comedy soundtrack-quality song |
Track Listing |
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