Protest Anthology

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (51 ratings)
Protest Anthology album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 60:58

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Britt Robson

eMusic Contributor

Britt Robson has written about jazz for Jazz Times, downbeat, the Washington Post and many other publications over the past 30 years. He currently writes regula...more »

04.22.11
The soul-shaking sound of spirit and fire — an indispensable collection.
2008 | Label: Andy Stroud Inc. / The Orchard

What made Nina Simone's racially self-identified “protest” music so compelling was its blend of passion and craft. You bet songs like “Mississippi Goddamn” and “Old Jim Crow,” were angry: they were written at the height of the Civil Rights tumult, when “Negroes” were being hosed, hung, beaten and blown up, and Simone didn't wait for the scales of justice or the judgment of history (or her own tactful restraint) to tilt in her favor before weighing in. That said, those and most of Simone's other angry political songs are celebratory in nature, glorifying in the idea that it's better to vent than silently acquiesce.

While the singer-pianist was indeed adept at pushing the hot button, the best material here is not angry but anguished. “Four Women” is a theatrical production melodramatically distilled to 4:09, a brilliant piece of work. The palpable sorrow of “Nobody” reminds us that poverty and loneliness are exacerbated by discrimination. And Simone's version of “Strange Fruit” is superior to Billie Holiday's definitive version (a claim I don't make lightly), with its spellbinding, plummeting, extended note at its climax that is harrowing and beautiful all over again each time you hear it.

It's a great idea to include… read more »

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Love it!

Raisam

I really enjoyed listen to the interviews with Nina Simone in this compilation. I now have a greater appreciation for these songs. Every time I listen to Mississippi Goddamn I imagine that frustration she had and her stomping down and up a hallway and this song just belting out of her!

user avatar

Nice document, bootleg sound...

aguyandaguitar

It's really nice to hear these interviews conducted while Nina was in the thick of it with these songs. It's hard to imagine a classic being "written three years ago" and hearing about contemporary reactions to it. It's also nice to hear the songs with different arrangements and asides. Just be aware that this sounds like a cassette recording most of the time and these aren't definitive versions of the material.

user avatar

Heads Down...

skylarking

The problem with The King of Love seems to be rectified. I have it in all its nine+ minute glory.

user avatar

PROBLEM

MRTOJO

The song "Why ? The King of Love is Dead", which is supposed to be 9:20, cuts out at 2:22 and never comes back on...HEADS UP.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Six Degrees of Mirel Wagner’s Mirel Wagner

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

0

Icon: Nina Simone

By Elizabeth Isadora Gold, eMusic Contributor

To say Nina Simone was "one of a kind" is an understatement. Her particular talents and passions absorbed, in seemingly equal measure, Bach, southern spirituals and oddball pop hits. Her activities ranged from the radically political to party animal (she loved to strip off her clothes and dance the night away). Then, of course, there was Simone's musical genius: that phenomenally expressive yet flat-sounding voice, coupled with possibly the best piano hands of her generation. Born… more »