Search - Artist/Band: Nina Simone

Artist Info

  • Name: Nina Simone
  • Birthday: 02/21/1933
  • Birth Place: Tryon, NC
  • Died: 04/21/2003
  • Decades Active: 1960,1970,1980,1990,2000
  • Genre: Vocal Music
  • Styles: Standards, Vocal Jazz, Torch Songs
  • Moods: Dramatic, Fiery, Passionate, Uncompromising, Austere, Bittersweet, Confident, Earthy, Gritty, Poignant, Aggressive, Autumnal, Brooding, Difficult, Freewheeling, Intimate, Melancholy, Organic, Provocative, Reflective, Sad, Theatrical, Volatile, Yearning, Delicate, Elegant, Intense, Plaintive, Refined/Mannered, Rousing, Ambitious, Distraught, Sophisticated

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • Playlist: The Very Best of Nina Simone
  • 09/15/2009
  • Angel of the Morning: The Best of Nina Simone W
  • 03/02/2009
  • Les Jazz RTL
  • 02/17/2009
  • Classic Nina Simone
  • 02/09/2009
  • Legends: Nina Simone [Decca]
  • 2009
  • The Collection [Red Box]
  • 2009
  • To Be Free WA
  • 09/30/2008
  • Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair
  • 06/13/2008
  • Nina Simone Sings the Blues/Silk & Soul WA
  • 05/13/2008
  • Very Best of Nina Simone [Deja Vu]
  • 12/28/2007
  • Only the Best of Nina Simone
  • 11/27/2007
  • Here Comes the Sun [Wonderful Music Of]
  • 11/12/2007
  • Gold WA
  • 10/16/2007
  • Colour Collection
  • 10/15/2007
  • Essential Collection [Canada]
  • 09/27/2007
  • Sings Billie Holiday & the Gospel
  • 09/24/2007
  • The Best of Nina Simone [Tomato Music]
  • 07/09/2007
  • 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Nina Simone WA
  • 06/12/2007
  • Spell on You
  • 06/04/2007
  • Collections
  • 05/28/2007
  • Just Like a Woman: Sings Classic Songs of the 1960s
  • 05/22/2007
  • Gold [Canada]
  • 05/01/2007
  • Tell It Like It Is
  • 03/05/2007
  • The Collection [Cartel]
  • 02/07/2007
  • Mood Indigo [Charly]
  • 01/29/2007
  • Remixed & Reimagined
  • 10/31/2006
  • The Nina Simone Collection [Metro]
  • 10/31/2006
  • Very Best of Nina Simone [Music Brokers] WA
  • 09/12/2006
  • Legends [3CD] [Sony]
  • 08/22/2006
  • Body and Soul
  • 06/13/2006
  • Mastercuts Presents
  • 05/16/2006
  • The Very Best of Nina Simone [Sony Jazz] WA
  • 05/01/2006
  • Forever Young, Gifted & Black: Songs of Freedom and Spirit WA
  • 01/17/2006
  • The Definitive Collection
  • 01/10/2006
  • Trouble in Mind
  • 01/03/2006
  • 36 Essential Recordsings WA
  • 10/25/2005
  • Black Swan
  • 10/25/2005
  • The Soul of Nina Simone [DualDisc] WA
  • 10/11/2005
  • Legend: The Essential Nina Simone
  • 03/21/2005
  • Remembering Nina Simone
  • 02/22/2005
  • Nina Simone for Lovers
  • 01/25/2005
  • Love Songs [BMG] WA
  • 01/11/2005
  • Mood Indigo [Atom]
  • 11/23/2004
  • Nina Simone Collection [EMI Gold]
  • 09/20/2004
  • Since I Fell for You
  • 08/03/2004
  • Jazz Biography Series
  • 07/13/2004
  • Nina Simone Soulful Anthology: RCA Years
  • 04/26/2004
  • Soulful Anthology: Philips Years WA
  • 04/26/2004
  • How It Feels to Be Free
  • 01/07/2004
  • Universal Masters Collection
  • 12/02/2003
  • Young, Gifted and Black WA
  • 09/30/2003
  • Sings the Standards [Bonus Track]
  • 09/02/2003
  • Very Best of Nina Simone [Universal International]
  • 07/29/2003
  • The Lady Has the Blues
  • 07/22/2003
  • Gold Collection
  • 07/15/2003
  • The Greatest Hits
  • 07/14/2003
  • Anthology WA
  • 07/01/2003
  • My Baby Just Cares for Me [Jazz Time] WA
  • 06/24/2003
  • The Diva Series
  • 05/20/2003
  • The Essential
  • 03/24/2003
  • It's Cold Out There
  • 02/26/2003
  • Essential Nina Simone [Metro]
  • 02/17/2003
  • The Essential Collection [UK]
  • 2003
  • Reflections
  • 05/21/2002
  • To Love Somebody/Here Comes the Sun
  • 05/07/2002
  • My Baby Just Cares for Me [303 Recordings] WA
  • 03/26/2002
  • Touching and Caring
  • 03/09/2002
  • I Loves You Porgy, The Finest
  • 2001
  • Other Woman WA
  • 12/19/2000
  • Misunderstood
  • 11/28/2000
  • Bittersweet: The Very Best of Nina Simone WA
  • 10/24/2000
  • Platinum Series
  • 07/11/2000
  • Nina Simone's Finest Hour
  • 06/13/2000
  • Here Comes the Sun [Remastered] WA
  • 05/09/2000
  • My Baby Just Cares for Me [Import]
  • 04/25/2000
  • Nina: The Essential Nina Simone
  • 04/25/2000
  • The Gold Collection: Classic Performances WA
  • 04/11/2000
  • Forbidden Fruit/Nina Simone Sings Ellington/Folksy Nina WA
  • 02/08/2000
  • Quiet Now: Night Song
  • 01/25/2000
  • House of the Rising Sun
  • 10/01/1999
  • Moon of Alabama
  • 10/01/1999
  • The Amazing Nina Simone WA
  • 06/22/1999
  • Verve Jazz Masters
  • 01/11/1999
  • Nina Simone and Piano!/Silk & Soul WA
  • 1999
  • The Great
  • 1999
  • My Baby Just Cares for Me [Entertainers]
  • 11/24/1998
  • Lovin' Woman
  • 11/03/1998
  • Nina Simone [Forever Classic]
  • 09/15/1998
  • Wonderful Music of Nina Simone
  • 09/01/1998
  • Folksy Nina/Nina with Strings WA
  • 07/28/1998
  • Forbidden Fruit/Nina Simone at Newport WA
  • 07/28/1998
  • The Very Best of Nina Simone: Sugar in My Bowl 1967-1972 WA
  • 07/28/1998
  • My Baby Just Cares for Me: The Best of Nina Simone WA
  • 06/23/1998
  • The Great Nina Simone [Music Club]
  • 02/24/1998
  • The Ultimate Nina Simone
  • 11/04/1997
  • Lady Blue
  • 04/22/1997
  • Saga of the Good Life and Hard Times
  • 01/28/1997
  • Private Collection
  • 01/01/1997
  • Masters [Cleopatra]
  • 1997
  • Released
  • 1997
  • Anthology: The Colpix Years WA
  • 11/19/1996
  • Verve Jazz Masters 58: Nina Sings Nina WA
  • 09/24/1996
  • Nina Simone [Eclipse]
  • 01/01/1996
  • Something to Live For WA
  • 12/12/1995
  • Porgy
  • 11/21/1995
  • Imaginative Ballads WA
  • 08/01/1995
  • My Way
  • 07/14/1995
  • After Hours WA
  • 1995
  • The Essential Nina Simone, Vol. 2
  • 08/02/1994
  • BMG Best Selection WA
  • 03/08/1994
  • Feeling Good: The Very Best of Nina Simone
  • 1994
  • Tomato Collection
  • 1994
  • Verve Jazz Masters 17
  • 1994
  • A Single Woman WA
  • 1993
  • The Best of the Colpix Years WA
  • 1993
  • The Essential Nina Simone
  • 1993
  • Compact Jazz: Nina Simone WA
  • 01/21/1991
  • The Blues
  • 01/16/1991
  • The Collection [BMG 1991]
  • 1991
  • Pastel Blues/Let It All Out WA
  • 10/23/1990
  • Wild Is the Wind/High Priestess of Soul WA
  • 10/23/1990
  • Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood WA
  • 1989
  • Nina's Back WA
  • 1985
  • Fodder on My Wings WA
  • 1982
  • Nina Simone 1980
  • 07/18/1980
  • Baltimore WA
  • 01/1978
  • Songs of the Poets WA
  • 1976
  • It Is Finished WA
  • 1974
  • Nina Simone and Piano!
  • 1970
  • The Best of Nina Simone [RCA]
  • 1970
  • Black Gold WA
  • 1969
  • The Best of Nina Simone [PolyGram] WA
  • 1969
  • Silk & Soul WA
  • 1967
  • High Priestess of Soul WA
  • 1966
  • Let It All Out
  • 1966
  • Nina Simone with Strings
  • 1966
  • Wild Is the Wind WA
  • 1966
  • I Put a Spell on You
  • 01/1965
  • Broadway-Blues-Ballads WA
  • 1964
  • Folksy Nina WA
  • 1964
  • Nina's Choice
  • 1963
  • Nina Simone Sings Ellington!
  • 1962
  • Forbidden Fruit
  • 1961
  • Nina Simone [Koch]
  • 1958
  • Ne Me Quitte Pas WA
  • 11/01/1954
  • In Paris
  • Most Famous Hits
  • The Essential Nina Simone: The Verve Jazz Essentials
  • The Nina Simone Collection [Deja Vu]
  • The Very Best of Nina Simone [RCA] WA
  • Individual Bio

    Of all the major singers of the late 20th century, Nina Simone was one of the hardest to classify. She recorded extensively in the soul, jazz, and pop idioms, often over the course of the same album; she was also comfortable with blues, gospel, and Broadway. It's perhaps most accurate to label her as a "soul" singer in terms of emotion, rather than form. Like, say, Aretha Franklin, or Dusty Springfield, Simone was an eclectic who brought soulful qualities to whatever material she interpreted. These qualities were among her strongest virtues; paradoxically, they also may have kept her from attaining a truly mass audience. The same could be said of her stage persona; admired for her forthright honesty and individualism, she was also known for feisty feuding with audiences and promoters alike.

    If Simone had a chip on her shoulder, it probably arose from the formidable obstacles she had to overcome to establish herself as a popular singer. Raised in a family of eight children, she originally harbored hopes of becoming a classical pianist, studying at New York's prestigious Juilliard School of Music -- a rare position for an African-American woman in the 1950s. Needing to support herself while she studied, she generated income by working as an accompanist and giving piano lessons. Auditioning for a job as a pianist in an Atlantic City nightclub, she was told she had the spot if she would sing as well as play. Almost by accident, she began to carve a reputation as a singer of secular material, though her skills at the piano would serve her well throughout her career.

    In the late '50s, Simone began recording for the small Bethlehem label (a subsidiary of the vastly important early r&b/rock & roll King label). In 1959, her version of George Gershwin's "I Loves You Porgy" gave her a Top 20 hit -- which would, amazingly, prove to be the only Top 40 entry of her career. Nina wouldn't need hit singles for survival, however, establishing herself not with the rock & roll/r&b crowd, but with the adult/nightclub/album market. In the early '60s, she recorded no less than nine albums for the Candix label, about half of them live. These unveiled her as a performer of nearly unsurpassed eclecticism, encompassing everything from Ellingtonian jazz and Israeli folk songs to spirituals and movie themes.

    Simone's best recorded work was issued on Philips during the mid-'60s. Here, as on Candix, she was arguably over-exposed, issuing seven albums within a three-year period. These records can be breathtakingly erratic, moving from warm ballad interpretations of Jacques Brel and Billie Holiday and instrumental piano workouts to brassy pop and angry political statements in a heartbeat. There's a great deal of fine music to be found on these, however. Simone's moody-yet-elegant vocals were like no one else's, presenting a fiercely independent soul who harbored enormous (if somewhat hard-bitten) tenderness.

    Like many African-American entertainers of the mid-'60s, Simone was deeply affected by the Civil Rights Movement and burgeoning Black Pride. Some (though by no means most) of her best material from this time addressed these concerns in a fashion more forthright than almost any other singer. "Old Jim Crow" and, more particularly, the classic "Mississippi Goddam" were especially notable self-penned efforts in this vein, making one wish that Nina had written more of her own material instead of turning to outside sources for most of her repertoire.

    Not that this repertoire wasn't well-chosen. Several of her covers from the mid-'60s, indeed, were classics: her revision of Weill-Brecht's "Pirate Jenny" to reflect the bitter elements of African-American experience, for instance, or her mournful interpretation of Brel's "Ne Me Quitte Pas." Other highlights were her versions of "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," covered by the Animals for a rock hit; "I Put a Spell on You," which influenced the vocal line on the Beatles' "Michelle"; and the buzzing, jazzy "See Line Woman."

    Simone was not as well-served by her tenure with RCA in the late '60s and early '70s, another prolific period which saw the release of nine albums. These explored a less eclectic range, with a considerably heavier pop-soul base to both the material and arrangements. One bona fide classic did come out of this period: "Young, Gifted & Black," written by Simone and Weldon Irvine, Jr., would be successfully covered by both Aretha Franklin and Donny Hathaway. She did have a couple of Top Five British hits in the late '60s with "Ain't Got No" (from the musical Hair) and a cover of the Bee Gees' "To Love Somebody," neither of which rank among her career highlights.

    Simone fell on turbulent times in the 1970s, divorcing her husband/manager Andy Stroud, encountering serious financial problems, and becoming something of a nomad, settling at various points in Switzerland, Liberia, Barbados, France, and Britain. After leaving RCA, she recorded rarely, although she did make the critically well-received Baltimore in 1978 for the small CTI label. She had an unpredictable resurgence in 1987, when an early track, "My Baby Just Cares for Me," became a big British hit after being used in a Chanel perfume television commercial. In 1993, her record A Single Woman marked her return to an American major label, and her profile was also boosted when several of her songs were featured in the film Point of No Return. She published her biography, -I Put a Spell on You, in 1991, but grew increasingly frail throughout the late '90s and had to be helped on to the stage during a 2001 Carnegie Hall performance. Nina Simone died on April 21, 2003 at her home in Carry-le-Rouet, France, where she had been spending much of her retirement. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide