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Thread started 04/22/03 4:04am

alexnvrmnd

RIP Nina Simone

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Reply #1 posted 04/22/03 4:04am

gooeythehamste
r

SAD!
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Reply #2 posted 04/22/03 5:10am

Rhondab

sad
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Reply #3 posted 04/22/03 5:25am

Brother915

A strong creative spirit she was...May she rest in peace...
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Reply #4 posted 04/22/03 5:32am

noepie

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no more wild is the wind, it's a sad thing.
WHAT IF THERE IS NO TOMORROW? THERE WASN'T ONE TODAY!
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Reply #5 posted 04/22/03 5:41am

MrBliss

very sad
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Reply #6 posted 04/22/03 5:51am

lulirom

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C-YA!
sigh
*********************************
"don't mind me: I'm just jamming"
*********************************
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Reply #7 posted 04/22/03 5:58am

TRON

'You Can Have Him, I Don't Want Him'

If you haven't heard this song, please listen to it.
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Reply #8 posted 04/22/03 8:25am

butterfli25

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to the High Priestess of Soul Rest in Peace...
butterfly
We all should know that diversity makes for a rich tapestry, and we must understand that all the threads of the tapestry are equal in value no matter what their color.
Maya Angelou
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Reply #9 posted 04/22/03 8:32am

revelationsuns
hine

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Nina Simone was amazing artist. She will truly be missed.
***************************************************
"Every passing minute is another chance to turn it all around."
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Reply #10 posted 04/22/03 10:16am

cborgman

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she was fabulous... gotta listen to some nina tonight
Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely. - Lord Acton
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Reply #11 posted 04/22/03 10:39am

dearlybeloved

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I just said this on another post (sorry). My father and I were talking about her last night to find out this morning that she passed was very sad. May she rest in peace and sing beautiful melodies to God.
1 Thessalonians 5:23
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Reply #12 posted 04/22/03 10:58am

TheResistor

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dearlybeloved said:

I just said this on another post (sorry). My father and I were talking about her last night to find out this morning that she passed was very sad. May she rest in peace and sing beautiful melodies to God.



This is very sad.
I just got into her this year...

SINNERMAN is an intense song...gives me chills every time I hear it...
rainbow

"...literal people are scary, man
literal people scare me
out there trying to rid the world of its poetry
while getting it wrong fundamentally
down at the church of "look, it says right here, see!" - ani difranco
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Reply #13 posted 04/22/03 11:53am

Harlepolis

My father shed tears 4 the 1st time over someone he don't know, Nina was a [SCHOOL] if you wanna get schooled about love, heartbreak, racisum, black history, womenhood, community, policy and music then get her stuff. She did alot to the black community, nobody eva had the nerve to stand up and speak their minds like she did(at least 4 a female in a time full of racisum) eva read her interviews?? You'll be shocked at what you read,,very upfront and outspoken persona it ain't even funny.

May Allah Mercy On Her Soul cry
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Reply #14 posted 04/22/03 12:12pm

Harlepolis

David Nathan wrote a moving tribute article:

NINA SIMONE: A Tribute
by David Nathan



Nina Simone
(Apr. 22, 2003) For people the world over, the passing of the great, legendary Dr. Nina Simone will be met with much sadness. An often-unsung hero and pioneer in the civil rights movement, Nina was a woman of conviction who left her country of birth rather than compromise her artistic integrity, a woman who challenged the status quo, but more than that, a woman who knew how to touch the hearts of so many with her distinctive musical blend of jazz, blues and soul.

I was blessed to have my own first hand experience of Nina at the tender age of sixteen when I formed the very first British fan club for her in 1965. I remember vividly going out to the airport, flowers in hand, to meet this woman who had made such an impact on me through the albums she made in the '60s. Mixing Billie Holiday classics with spirituals, folk songs with African chants, old English odes with movie themes, Duke Ellington with George Gershwin, Nina was a one-of-a-kind artist whose music moved me such that I felt compelled to be involved somehow in sharing her brilliance with others.

Thus, the fan club and a life full of memories of my encounters with the amazing Dr. Simone! Like the time in 1967 when she played a London club frequented by Jamaican patrons who demanded she sing "My Baby Just Cares For Me" …how she slammed down the piano and walked off and had to be coaxed back by a few words of wisdom from me and a couple of glasses of gin! Like watching her leave a Dutch television audience in stunned silence with a rendition of Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit." Like laughing uproariously but a few years ago as she shared stories of her romantic exploits at the ripe young age of 70!

Nina was a character, beginning to end. A fearless warrior for truth and injustice, her music was not easily accepted by the music industry establishment: when she performed songs of protest like "Mississippi Goddam" or sang to uplift a generation with her original version of "To Be Young, Gifted And Black," the white male-run record labels of the '60s and '70s did not warm to her.

Nina was not conventional: she wore African garb long before it was 'acceptable'; her Afro pre-dated that of practically every black female entertainer; she did not compromise her look or her stance for anyone. Ultimately, her refusal to acquiesce or give in to the demands of an industry that wanted black female artists to conform to a specific look and sound led to her self-imposed exile. Nina spent much of the past thirty years living outside the US - in the Caribbean, Africa and finally in Europe, residing in France in a new home she proudly told me in 2000, 'overlooks the Mediterranean!'

Thanks to the compact disc revolution, thousands of record buyers discovered Nina Simone's music during the past decade. Exposure to her work was certainly aided by the use of some of her songs in television commercials and her recordings were prominently featured in the film "Point Of No Return." Ultimately, years after she stopped recording on a regular basis, Nina sold over one million CDs, an amazing feat in itself. That renewed success led to a series of concert appearances in the US, and always performing before packed houses, Nina cajoled, laughed, berated, smiled…but mostly, gave people an experience they would never forget.

I still remember watching her sitting at the piano, opening her set with "Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair," the very first song I ever heard by her back in '65 before ending her set with an emotionally wrenching version of "Ne Me Quitte Pas." The title of that Charles Aznavour song translates as "Don't Leave Me." Well, Nina - with all the external bravado that hid a warm and tender heart - has left but her memory lingers on through her timeless music. Peace be still, Nina: I am so much richer for you having been such a presence in my life.


David Nathan is the owner of http://www.soulmusic.com and the author of the book "The Soulful Divas" which contains a chapter on Nina Simone. His first CD, "Reinvention" - now dedicated to Nina - is due out within the next few weeks.
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Reply #15 posted 04/22/03 3:53pm

alexnvrmnd

Harlepolis said:

David Nathan wrote a moving tribute article:

NINA SIMONE: A Tribute
by David Nathan



Nina Simone
(Apr. 22, 2003) For people the world over, the passing of the great, legendary Dr. Nina Simone will be met with much sadness. An often-unsung hero and pioneer in the civil rights movement, Nina was a woman of conviction who left her country of birth rather than compromise her artistic integrity, a woman who challenged the status quo, but more than that, a woman who knew how to touch the hearts of so many with her distinctive musical blend of jazz, blues and soul.

I was blessed to have my own first hand experience of Nina at the tender age of sixteen when I formed the very first British fan club for her in 1965. I remember vividly going out to the airport, flowers in hand, to meet this woman who had made such an impact on me through the albums she made in the '60s. Mixing Billie Holiday classics with spirituals, folk songs with African chants, old English odes with movie themes, Duke Ellington with George Gershwin, Nina was a one-of-a-kind artist whose music moved me such that I felt compelled to be involved somehow in sharing her brilliance with others.

Thus, the fan club and a life full of memories of my encounters with the amazing Dr. Simone! Like the time in 1967 when she played a London club frequented by Jamaican patrons who demanded she sing "My Baby Just Cares For Me" …how she slammed down the piano and walked off and had to be coaxed back by a few words of wisdom from me and a couple of glasses of gin! Like watching her leave a Dutch television audience in stunned silence with a rendition of Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit." Like laughing uproariously but a few years ago as she shared stories of her romantic exploits at the ripe young age of 70!

Nina was a character, beginning to end. A fearless warrior for truth and injustice, her music was not easily accepted by the music industry establishment: when she performed songs of protest like "Mississippi Goddam" or sang to uplift a generation with her original version of "To Be Young, Gifted And Black," the white male-run record labels of the '60s and '70s did not warm to her.

Nina was not conventional: she wore African garb long before it was 'acceptable'; her Afro pre-dated that of practically every black female entertainer; she did not compromise her look or her stance for anyone. Ultimately, her refusal to acquiesce or give in to the demands of an industry that wanted black female artists to conform to a specific look and sound led to her self-imposed exile. Nina spent much of the past thirty years living outside the US - in the Caribbean, Africa and finally in Europe, residing in France in a new home she proudly told me in 2000, 'overlooks the Mediterranean!'

Thanks to the compact disc revolution, thousands of record buyers discovered Nina Simone's music during the past decade. Exposure to her work was certainly aided by the use of some of her songs in television commercials and her recordings were prominently featured in the film "Point Of No Return." Ultimately, years after she stopped recording on a regular basis, Nina sold over one million CDs, an amazing feat in itself. That renewed success led to a series of concert appearances in the US, and always performing before packed houses, Nina cajoled, laughed, berated, smiled…but mostly, gave people an experience they would never forget.

I still remember watching her sitting at the piano, opening her set with "Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair," the very first song I ever heard by her back in '65 before ending her set with an emotionally wrenching version of "Ne Me Quitte Pas." The title of that Charles Aznavour song translates as "Don't Leave Me." Well, Nina - with all the external bravado that hid a warm and tender heart - has left but her memory lingers on through her timeless music. Peace be still, Nina: I am so much richer for you having been such a presence in my life.


David Nathan is the owner of http://www.soulmusic.com and the author of the book "The Soulful Divas" which contains a chapter on Nina Simone. His first CD, "Reinvention" - now dedicated to Nina - is due out within the next few weeks.

Sigh...co-sign (to this and your previous post), with authority!
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