“We will shape and mold this country or it will not be molded and
shaped at all anymore. So I think we don't have a choice. How can you be an
artist and not reflect the times?”
Someone
I follow on YouTube Tweeted out one day “Here’s the problem with music today:
Artists in the past wanted you to know the music. Artists now want you to know
them.” That is actually very accurate and very sad. We hear more about how certain
musicians are getting into trouble or what they were doing on their day off
than we hear their music. Before we had all this social media to follow our favorite
music acts and all these tabloid and gossip rags got out of hand all we knew
about musicians and singers was their music. If they were a singer/songwriter
we heard their beliefs and worries and struggles. If they were a pop singer
with a bouncy catchy song, we just knew their song and had a great time
bouncing along with it. If a singer had a ballad out, we knew and felt their
heartache whether true or untrue to their lives.
There
are a few songs I like that deal with social issues of certain decades. Bob
Dylan made his career singing about his times. N.W.A. found fame and notoriety
with their song “Fuk tha Police” about the intense unrest between African
Americans and the police in the late 80s early 90s. In the 1950s through to the
1970s Nina Simone soulfully sang about injustices.
Nina
Simone and her thoughts on racial inequality and her life are told in the
Netflix documentary What Happened, Miss
Simone? Her story is told in her own voice through interviews throughout
the decades of her fame and by her family, friends, and colleagues.
Simone
was born and raised in the south to a poor family. She found her talent for
playing the piano through church and was given lessons by an old lady in town.
When she was a young age, Simone played in a church recital. Her parents were
forced to stand in the back but her music teacher told the all-white parish
that Simone’s parents were to sit in the front to see their girl play or she
would not play at all. Her mother wanted her to be the first black classic
pianist to play at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Simone was accepted to one
school for music but was denied entry to another to complete her studies
because, as she found out decades later, because she was black. Simone
supported herself and her family for a while playing piano at place in Atlantic
City. The club owner told her if she wanted to keep her job she better sing.
And thus began her singing career.
Simone
scored success with her song “I Loves You Porgy”. After that for a long time
she toured jazz festivals. Simone hit some nerves when she released her Civil
Rights song “Mississippi Goddamn.” The song was very controversial but it
mirrored Simone’s disgust and anger over the Civil Rights movement and how
African Americans were being treated. According to Simone’s daughter, her
mother’s voice was never the same after singing that song so much because her
anger ran that deep and emotional.
The
rest of Simone’s life was fraught with difficulties. For a long time, she did
not perform because her personal life was in shambles. She divorced her abusive
manager-husband, lived abroad in Africa for a while, was abusive to her
daughter, and only started to perform again when she needed money.
Before
watching this documentary, I did not know who Nina Simone was. I believe I have
heard of her through the years since I like music so much but I never heard any
of her songs. Simone’s voice was incredible and her piano playing was amazing.
What I liked about this documentary was that certain songs were played in full
so instead of just hearing snippets I was able to hear the entire songs. There
were great messages to her songs that were able to get out and create impact
because of her voice and musical talent. I particularly liked the part of the
documentary where Simone’s intense feelings about the Civil Rights movement was
discussed. Today I do not believe musicians would ever write a song along the
lines of “Mississippi Goddamn” and strongly voice their opinions out loud like
Simone did. Simone literally said in an interview how she wished she could arm
African Americans against the police and fight with guns for their rights and
freedom. The Civil Rights movement and the death of Martin Luther King, Jr.
really impacted Simone and her life.
I
know quoted that YouTuber’s tweet about how singers back then wanted you to
know their music rather than today where singers want you to know them and then
proceeded to review a documentary that went more into the personal life of a
singer. I think What Happened, Miss
Simone? was a great balance of getting to know the singer as well as her
music. There was only Nina Simone, her colleagues, and family and friends
telling her story. There was no narration. You got to know Simone as a singer
and pianist and got to know her songs as they played in full in the background.
To me a good documentary makes me interested in learning more about its subject
or, in this case, hearing more of the music and that is exactly what this
documentary did. As soon as the documentary was over, with an understanding of
Nina Simone and her music, I listened to some of her songs. I got to hear them
without any talking over them and they were incredible. What Happened, Miss Simone? has gotten much praise and with good
reason. I definitely suggest watching What
Happened, Miss Simone? if you have access to Netflix.
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