Nina Simone At the Village Gate, 1962

01-Just In Time
02-He Was Too Good To Me
03-House Of The Rising Sun
04-Bye Bye Blackbird
05-Brown Baby
06-Zungo.
07-If He Had Changed My Name
08-Children Go Where I Send You
Pubblicato in: on 30 Aprile 2008 at 21:54 Commenti (2)
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Nina Simone, Little Girl Blue

That’s all I want from you

Pubblicato in: Senza Categoria on 26 Aprile 2008 at 21:17 Lascia un Commento
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Barb Jungr – Just Like a Woman [Hymn to Nina] (2008)

Barb Jungr – Just Like a Woman [Hymn to Nina] (2008)

Genre: Jazz Vocal | MP3 320 kbps | 123 MB | 53 min.

‘Just Like A Woman’ is Barb Jungr’s hymn to the late, great Nina Simone. This beautiful album combines Barb’s compelling arrangements and resolute delivery to bring a fresh perspective on songs associated with her heroine Nina Simone. Barb Jungr proves she is a peerless interpreter and makes these wonderful songs her own, drawing subtle qualities from the lyrics with a moving lightness of touch to make their message utterly contemporary. Barb is perhaps most famous for her re-workings of Bob Dylan songs and has included: ‘Ballad Of Hollis Brown’, ‘The Times They Are A Changing’ and a soul-meets-reggae influenced ‘Just Like A Woman’. Barb has surrounded herself with some of the UK’s finest musicians including Danny Thompson on bass and Mark Lockheart on saxophone and clarinets.

Track Listings
01. Black is the Colour / Break down and let it all out
02. Just like a woman
03. Lilac wine
04. The times they are a changing
05. Angel of the morning
06. Don t let me be misunderstood
07. Keeper of the flame
08. To love somebody
09. One morning in May / The pusher
10. Ballad of Hollis Brown
11. Feeling good

Produced by calum malcolm with barb jungr
barb jungr – vocals and backing vocals
jenny carr – musical director, piano and backing vocals
jessica lauren – organ, harmonicas, mbira, autoharp, mellotron, electronic tanpura and backing vocals
johnny lee – percussion, drums, clock sample
danny thompson – bass
mark lockheart – saxophones and clarinets

Barb Jungr’s new CD features her versions of songs originally recorded by Nina Simone. Needless to say, although the album is intended as a tribute to her heroine, Jungr puts her own stamp on each song, and each is transmitted through her sensitivity and craft. There are no slavish reproductions either of Simone’s interpretations or arrangements here, but rather shining original versions.
I believe that the sequence of seven songs from Angel of the Morning through to Hollis Brown may be the finest thing that Jungr has recorded. These are songs about lost love, unhappiness, yearning, wanting more and being prepared to settle for less, tears, regret, loss and death, yet the whole thing is done with such a delicate intelligence and such a depth of understanding that we begin to think that there may be something in the concept of catharsis – or perhaps we can simply sit back and enjoy wonderful songs sung by someone who knows what she is about and can show us things about the songs which we would never have thought of ourselves. The musicians here underpin and punctuate the words throughout the album with nuances and subtleties while Jenny Carr’s piano weaves a filigree of silver wire around that lovely, pellucid voice.
Of the three Bob Dylan songs which appear, Just Like A Woman and The Times They Are A-changin’ seem almost jaunty in these arrangements, but the Ballad Of Hollis Brown is more satisfactorily dark. Elsewhere on the album, the sleevenotes suggest that the tree in Lilac Wine grows in a graveyard. It seems a reasonable conclusion. I would go further and say that the cemetery itself is situated on the junction of Desolation Row and Lonely Street – and those of us who know Barb Jungr’s Heartbreak Hotel will be aware of just what kind of place that must be.
It occurs to me, of course, that all this harping on darkness and misery is not perhaps the best way to persuade you that this would be a good thing to buy with one click. Fair enough, but if it’s unremitting cheerfulness you’re after you probably won’t have read this far anyway. Be reassured that in the final track all the emotion which singer and band have kept under control is allowed to burst out in an expression of joy in life and living. Buy this one.
:~ Eric Blair(sic)

Nina Simone embraced utterly louis armstrong’s understanding of music: “what we play is life” and, “my whole life, my whole soul, my whole spirit is to blow that horn.” Nina sang and played with everything she had, and she took songs and inspiration from everything in her life and world. this was both her strength and her weakness, for that full commitment, that passion, is too strong a flavour for those of faint heart.

i grew up loving Nina Simone; that uncategorisable voice, her uncompromising approach to material, fearlessness in changing lyric and arrangement to make songs personal, and courageous musicianship. so when i heard her spirit speak demanding that i make a collection dedicated to her, i complied without question. this is my ‘hymn to Nina’. barb jungr january 2008

black is the color of my true love’s hair
the water flows to the sea, and when we stand beside that mighty river, it’s easy to cry for all that lost love and time, easy to break down and let it all out.

just like a woman
it’s just like bob dylan to write a song as beautiful as this.

lilac wine
there’s a unique and near perfect relationship between lovelessness and drink that only the abandoned truly understand. and in this song there’s also a supernatural aspect, that lilac tree is surely in a graveyard, the lilac flowers hanging over the lichen-covered stones as the clock of time ticks slowly, endlessly on.

the times they are a-changin’
this song is as perfect today as it was when it was written, the sense for Nina of those changing times may have been different, but every word of this rings true, right here, right now.

angel of the morning
this song is the reverse of ‘maggie may’, indeed it might be her song. such a simple song, with so much quiet depth.

don’t let me be misunderstood
“i have thoughts like every other one”, a very dark, dark song, velvet… and bloodstained.

keeper of the flame
“when the fire is burning out and the angels call my name” i may still be singing this beautiful and true torch song.

to love somebody
the gibb brothers have written some stunning songs, and this has always been one of my favourites.

one morning in may / the pusher
these songs had to go together, and the pusher became a hymn all of its own suddenly, and it is about so much more than drugs.

ballad of hollis brown
why would a man kill all of his family and turn a gun on himself? as always dylan reveals the reason by simply telling the story.

feeling good
“it’s a new dawn, it’s a new day, it’s a new life”. this is my 6th recording for linn records, but it feels like the first, somehow. “and i’m feeling good”.

:~ Liner Notes

The Sunday Times, 09 March 2008 4 stars
After deconstructing Elvis, Dylan and Jacques Brel, the British singer pays homage to Nina Simone. Jungr being Jungr, nothing follows a conventional path in this oblique collection, which veers between gospel, folk, R&B and discreet jazz. She doesn’t go for obvious covers or try to compete with Simone’s idiosyncratic delivery – her voice is lighter and almost girlish. The real pleasure lies in the typically thoughtful juxtapositions of material. The bleak sentiments of The Pusher sit side by side with the pastoral cadences of One Morning in May, while Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood is unashamedly dark. Fans will be pleased that the Dylan quota remains high. Clive Davis

The Independent, 07 March 2008 4 stars
A vocal stylist acclaimed for her interpretations of Jacques Brel and Bob Dylan, Barb Jungr here turns her attention to Nina Simone, with an album drawn from the late pianist’s repertoire. The most striking pieces may be the medleys with which Jungr brings a trad-folk tone to. Particularly the seamless segueing of One Morning in May with the old Steppenwolf drug song The Pusher. Oddly for a Dylan specialist, her reggae-styled Just Like a Woman grates inappropriately, though her Ballad of Hollis Brown, with the delicate madness of the piano part evoking the protagonist’s descent into despair, is much more effective. It’s all brought to a close with a rousing, exultant blues arrangement of Feeling Good that pays true homage to Nina’s feisty spirit.

Andy Gill

in: http://freebooksource.com/?p=9186

Pubblicato in: Senza Categoria on 17 Aprile 2008 at 16:30 Commenti (3)
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‘Why?’: Remembering Nina Simone’s Tribute to the Rev. Martin Luther King. Jr.

Listen Now

simone 300

Simone’s song “Why? (The King of Love is Dead)” is available on her Anthology CD.

Weekend Edition Sunday, April 6, 2008 – Three days after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968, performer Nina Simone and her band played at the Westbury Music Festival on Long Island, N.Y. They performed “Why? (The King of Love is Dead),” a song they had just learned, written by their bass player Gene Taylor in reaction to King’s death.

Simone’s brother, Samuel Waymon, who was on stage playing the organ, talks with Lynn Neary about that day and reaction to the civil rights leader’s assassination.

“We learned that song that (same) day,” says Waymon. “We didn’t have a chance to have two or three days of rehearsal. But when you’re feeling compassion and outrage and wanting to express what you know the world is feeling, we did it because that’s what we felt.”

Waymon and the band’s performance of “Why? (Then King of Love is Dead)” lasted nearly 15 minutes as Nina Simone sang, played and sermonized about the loss everyone was feeling.

The song later appeared on several greatest-hits collections, most recently on the Anthology release from RCA.

in: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=89418339

Pubblicato in: on at 16:12 Commenti (1)

I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free

And I wish I knew how
It would feel to be free

I wish that I could break
All the chains holding me
I wish I could say
All the things that I’d like to say
Say ‘em loud say ‘em clear
For the whole round world to hear
I wish I could share
All the love that’s in my heart
Remove every doubt
It keeps us apart
And I wish you could know
What it means to be me
Then you’d see and agree
Every man should be free

I wish I could live

Like I’m longin’ to live
I wish I could give
What I’m longin’ to give
And I wish I could do
All the things I’d like to do
You know they’ll still miss part of you
Yes Sir…
And I’m way way over due

I wish I could be like a bird up in the sky
How sweet it would be
If I found out I could fly
So long to my song
And look down upon Ihe sea
And I sing because I know
I would see you
I sing because I know
I would see you
And I sing because I know
I would see you
To be free Yea

…e vorrei sapere come
ci si sente ad essere liberi
vorrei poter rompere
tutte le catene che mi trattengono
vorrei poter dire
tutte le cose che mi piacerebbe esprimere
dirle forte, dirle chiaramente
perchè il mondo intero le senta….

ogni uomo dovrebbe essere libero.

Proposto da IncrediGif

Traduzione di JazzFromItaly

Pubblicato in: Senza Categoria on 15 Aprile 2008 at 22:33 Lascia un Commento
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Laura Fedele e Gianni del Savio a La Coldana, Lodi (Italia, Lombardia

Blue Music Line, La Coldana, Lodi: Nina Simone, 10 Aprile.

Blue Music Line:
Laura Fedele e Gianni Del Savio presentano
Nina Simone, La Coldana,
Lodi, 10 aprile

Con l’arrivo degli eventi primaverili ed estivi si conclude la ricca stagione di Blue Music Line alla Coldana di Lodi.
Un evento eccezionale: il concerto di una protagonista assoluta della blues e del jazz in Italia, Laura Fedele,
e, in contemporanea, la presentazione del libro di David Brun-Lambert Kowalski) a cura dell’ esperto di musica afroamericana, Gianni Del Savio.

Per prenotazioni e ulteriori informazioni
www.lacoldana.it ristorante@lacoldana.it

telefono 0371431742, fax 0371436476

Nota biografica: Laura Fedele
http://www.laurafedele.it/Biografia.html

Nota biografica: Gianni Del Savio
http://www.bluesandblues.it/delsavio/index.

David Brun-Lambert, Nina Simone, Kowalski editore Una vita, come spiega il titolo sulla bella copertina, forse non basta a raccontare tutte le storie vissute da Nina Simone. Sublime cantante (tra le più grandi di sempre), protagonista di mille battaglie (non ultime quelle contro i propri personali, lancinanti e umanissimi dolori), diva inarrivabile e tormentata, rivoluzionaria indomita Nina Simone ha davvero “attraversato mezzo secolo di musica e di importanti cambiamenti sociali” come scrive David Brun-Lambert nel prologo.

Una vera e propria odissea che da lì in poi viene raccontata con l’affetto e il calore di un appassionato, ma anche con la premura, la precisione e il rigore di un ricercatore. L’equilibrio tra queste due tendenze, insieme a un raffinato gusto per le citazioni letterarie (vengono
ripresi, tra gli altri, frammenti di Jim Harrison, Toni Morrison, James Baldwin e Bruce Chatwin) e a una scrittura elegante e fluida portano a sfogliare la vita di Nina Simone come se fosse un romanzo (e in molti frangenti lo è stata davvero), ma arrivati in fondo ci si accorge di aver letto un pezzo importante della nostra storia.

Last but non least, una breve ma efficace discografia ragionata in appendice è curata da Gianni Del Savio, tra i massimi esperti di musica afroamericana che, con la ben nota precisione, aiuta non poco a districarsi tra la straripante eredità di Nina Simone. Qualcosa in più
di una semplice biografia.

www.lacoldana.it

Nina Simone, A Single Woman, 1993

  • Montaggio Fotografie-Audio di Amalteo (in fase di apprendimento)