I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986
Showing posts with label Nina Simone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nina Simone. Show all posts

Sunday, May 25, 2025

Nina Simone [on playing the piano]



“I decided that whatever they might think of me I was probably the finest pianist they'd ever hear, so I was going to present myself as such... I put on my best long chiffon gown, fixed my make-up and hair just like I always did and went to work… Each song, which isn't the right way to describe what I was playing, lasted anywhere between thirty and ninety minutes. I just sat down, closed my eyes and drifted away on the music. On my first night, one song I played lasted for three hours without a break. The guys in the bar were used to pianists playing no more than half a dozen tunes in each set and usually repeating the same set over and over. When I played they never heard the same song twice in a night, and when I was really flying they didn't hear the same song once. I used no sheet music because it was all in my head. Between sets I sat on my own at the bar, drinking milk in my long chiffon gown. Nobody said a word to me all night."


 


 

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Remembering the great Nina Simone (February 21, 1933 – April 21, 2003)



Photo: Gilles Petard via Getty Images



Nina Simone was born Eunice Kathleen Waymon on February 21, 1933, in Tryon, North Carolina. Her mother, Mary Kate Irvin, was a Methodist preacher and housekeeper, and her father, John Divine Waymon, worked as an entertainer, barber, and dry-cleaner. The family’s home was filled with music and Simone’s mother encouraged her musical pursuits but did not approve of nonreligious music like blues and jazz. Simone took up the piano before her feet could reach the pedals, and by the age of six, she was playing during church services. 


‘If I had to be called something, it should have been a folk singer because there was more folk and blues than jazz in my playing’; Nina Simone wrote in her autobiography. Her musical style fused a range of influences including blues, gospel, pop and classical song. One of her most distinctive characteristics was her jazz contralto voice with its trademark free vibrato and dark timbre. Expression and freedom were her main focuses and, as she says, this is why “sometimes I sound like gravel, and sometimes I sound like coffee and cream”.

Don's Tunes 




Now the mods of the sixties adopted Nina early on and for who knows what reasons except that she was a diva and gorgeous interpreter of modern songs like this from the Animals’ cover and here The Bee Gees . . . I bought To Love Somebody as a single when it came out! 

Mississippi God Damn!
if you don’t know why . . . . . .find out!


Ain’t got no, I got Life . . . . 

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Song of The Day at night time - NINA SIMONE - JULY TREE (Guess I’m Dumb

  • Track Name

    July Tree

  • Artist

    Nina Simone

Nina Simone - July Tree (1965)

True love seed in the autumn ground 


The mods I knocked around with deciding whether they were my tribe worshipped odd releases that crossed boundaries and genres, Nina singing Bee Gees To Love Somebody was an instant mod classic!

Here she is in quieter mood . . . . . . . . we loved her

Friday, August 11, 2023

I don’t think I have posted much BeeGees but early on I really enjoyed Robin’s voice and the harmonies the boys managed but also their songwriting like New York Mining Disaster and especially I Started a Joke and here Gotta Get a Message To You

click it anyway!

I found this on Facebook at Smooth Radio ( I know!?) who say
The Bee Gees are known for their songwriting skills and crowd-pleasing vocals but one rarely-seen performance in 1993 showcased their acoustic harmonies to their very best.
Robin, Maurice and Barry Gibb were performing on MTV's Most Wanted when the trio sang a stripped back version of their 1968 song 'I Gotta Get A Message To You'.
Filmed in London at the MTV studios in Camden, the three brothers sit on high stools as Robin takes the lead vocals and Maurice and Barry sit on either side of him playing guitar.


 



 then I had bought a single for playing to fellow mods down at the youth club! 



here she is live . . . . . . boy those boys could WRITE!



Sunday, October 02, 2022

Song of The Day :: NINA SIMONE - BACKLASH BLUES ( poem by Langston Hughes/Nina Simone)

 


live at Montreaux Jazz Festival 1976

 . . . .  'I already got 'em . . . . . . . . give the drummer some . . . . . . . . . . . '

 . . . .  I'm gonna leave ya . . . . . . . . I'm gonna leave ya with the blues . . . . '



Mr. Backlash, Mr. Backlash
Just who do you think I am?
You raise my taxes, freeze my wages
And send my son to Vietnam 
You give me second class houses
And second class schools
Do you think that all colored folks
Are just second class fools?
Oh, Mr. Backlash, I'm gonna leave you
With the backlash blues
When I try to find a job
To earn a little cash
All you got to offer
Is your mean old white backlash
But the world is big
Big and bright and round
And it's full of folks like me
Who are black, yellow, beige and brown
Mr. Backlash, I'm gonna leave you
With the backlash blues
Mr. Backlash, Mr. Backlash
Just what do you think I got to lose?
I'm gonna leave you
With the backlash blues
You're the one who'll have the blues
Not me, just wait and see
Songwriters: Nina Simone / Langston Hughes

Monday, July 25, 2022

Song of The Day :: To Love Somebody | various artists

  • Track Name

    To Love Somebody

  • Album

    The Complete Goldwax Singles

  • Artist

    James Carr

James Carr - To Love Somebody (1969)

"Maybe you know Nina Simone’s fabulous version of this tune, but this is the one that absolutely tears me apart.  The Bee Gees had hoped that Otis Redding would cover it but he never go the chance.  James Carr kills it." Guess I'm Dumb

James Carr did Dark End of The Street another perennial sad love song but here I guess I do prefer Nina's version . . . . . . still interesting to hear Carr's versions, the arrangement and all 

The original Nina Simone single bought when it came out from the bargain ex-jukebox bins . . . . and still a stone classic


I liked early Bee Gees though they left me cold with later hits Saturday Night Fever and the disco stuff. I am talking Robin singing I Started a Joke, songs like Words, Springhill Mining Disaster etc, Gotta Get a Message. Massachusetts, and pre 'You should be dancing', 'Jive Talking' etc etc although I do appreciate how well they were done and written  .  . . . . just not my trick bag!

by the people who wrote it . . . . . . all the way from the Isle of Man!




with great Thanks to Guess I'm Dumb for the Carr and the suggestion



Tuesday, August 18, 2020

BBC RADIO 2 'The Blues Show'


Rhiannon Giddens was the guest host on BBC Radio 2's 'The Blues Show.' She shared an hour of favorite blues songs by women artists like Geeshie Wiley, Bessie Smith, Ethel Waters, Big Mama Thornton, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Nina Simone, Odetta, Aretha Franklin, Leyla McCalla, Amythyst Kiah, and others. Listen again at

Monday, July 15, 2019

Classic pop songs of all time series

'TO LOVE SOMEBODY'

The Bee Gees



On this day in music history: July 14, 1967 - “Bee Gees 1st”, the US debut album by the Bee Gees is released. Produced by Robert Stigwood and Ossie Byrne, it is recorded at IBC Studios in London from March 7 - April 14, 1967. Following their breakthrough success with their twelfth single release “Spicks And Specks” (#3 AUS Pop) in Australia in late 1966, The brothers father Hugh sends demo tapes of their work to The Beatles manager Brian Epstein. Epstein passes the tapes on to Robert Stigwood (Cream), who invite the band to come to England in February of 1967 to audition for him. Impressed by what he hears, Stigwood becomes the bands manager, with the Bee Gees moving back to their native UK. He secures them recording contracts with Polydor Records in the UK and Atlantic Records subsidiary Atco in the US. The album is actually the third full length release by the band, but is their first to be released internationally. It spins off three singles including “New York Mining Disaster 1941” (#14 Pop), and “To Love Somebody” (#17 Pop) the latter of which is originally intended for Otis Redding. The albums’ cover is designed by artist and musician Klaus Voorman. The album is remastered and reissued in 2006 as a two CD set featuring the original mono and stereo mixes, along with unreleased tracks from the sessions and early takes. “Bee Gees 1st” peaks at number seven on the Billboard Top 200.
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One of the finest love songs ever written I would suggest and I loved many of the early Bee Gee's songs

But I heard this song first from Nina Simone and I bought it as a single when I heard it . . . . . . . . 



But there were other versions I really enjoyed too

Monday, October 08, 2018


Myrlie Evers at her husband, Medgar's funeral,1963, ©️Flip Schulke


Bob Dylan wrote his 1963 song "Only a Pawn in Their Game" a favourite stirring song for this listener and Dylan fan about the assassination of Medgar Evers who was murdered  in 1963 by Byron De La Beckwith, a member of the White Citizens' Council a white supremacist and Klansman. It took three trials to convict him the first two having jurors all of whom were white males failed to reach a verdict. Eventually De La Beckwith was found guilty and died in prison aged 80. They will NOT win . . . . . . . 
Nina Simone wrote and sang "Mississippi Goddam" about the Evers case

Evers' Wiki entry here