By the time she returns to the microphone to address the audience again, the mood had changed. What they get instead is a woman transformed by the relentless horrors and humiliations of the African American experience. The audience laughs, all set for an irreverent romp. Beginning with the jaunt of a show tune, Simone quips with the audience: “The name of this tune is ‘Mississippi Goddam’… And I mean every word of it”. The bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama by the KKK which had left four black girls dead was barely six months old, but it took Simone just an hour to pen ‘Mississippi Goddam’. But rather than polite themes from show tunes and restive ballads, Simone’s ’64 performance bristled with a new energy. In March 1964 she took to the stage at New York’s Carnegie Hall in front of an audience of largely white, affluent jazz enthusiasts expecting an evening similar that of a recording made in the Hall the previous year. Recording over 40 albums, from show tunes to Civil Rights anthems, her’s was a message that was indistinguishable from the music.Īnd it’s on that uncomfortable juncture between show tunes and Civil Rights that Simone’s career hinged. A troubled icon whose defiance and singular voice has influenced a generation, there has never been an artist quite like Nina Simone.
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