To Be Free
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Mood Indigo
- I Loves You, Porgy
- My Baby Just Cares For Me
- Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out
- You Can Have Him (Live)
- Wild Is The Wind (Live)
- Trouble In Mind (Live)
- When Malindy Sings/Swing Low Sweet Chariot (Live) [previously unreleased]
- See-Line Woman
- Pirate Jenny (Live)
- Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood
- I Put A Spell On You
- Ne Me Quitte Pas
- Feeling Good
- Four Women
- My Man's Gone Now
- I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free
- To Love Somebody
- Sunday In Savannah (Live)
- Backlash Blues (Live)
Disc 2:
- Mississippi Goddam (Live)
- In The Morning
- Ain't Got No-I Got Life [previously unreleased in the U.S. - alternate version]
- Do What You Gotta Do
- Seems I'm Never Tired Loving You
- Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
- The Times They Are A-Changin'
- Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is A Season)
- The Other Woman (Live)
- I Think It's Going To Rain Today (Live)
- Save Me (Live)
- Revolution (Live)
- To Be Young, Gifted And Black
- Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair (Live)
- Westwind (Live)
- Who Knows Where The Time Goes (Live)
- Suzanne (Live) [previously unreleased in the U.S.]
Disc 3:
- No Opportunity Necessary, No Experience Needed (Live) [previously unreleased]
- Just Like A Woman
- Here Comes The Sun
- Tanywey [previously unreleased]
- Funkier Than A Mosquito's Tweeter (Live)
- My Sweet Lord/Today Is A Killer (Live)
- Let It Be Me (Live) [previously unreleased]
- Poppies
- Mr. Bojangles (Live)
- I Want A Little Sugar In My Bowl (Live)
- Nina (Live) [previously unreleased]
- Zungo (Live) [previously unreleased]
- Baltimore
- A Single Woman
Disc 4:
- Ain't Got No-I Got Life (DVD content)
- Pirate Jenny (DVD content)
- Don't You Pay Them No Mind (DVD content)
- Milestones(DVD content)
- Go To Hell (DVD content)
- Backlash Blues (DVD content)
- Percussion/Drums/Clapping/Dancing (DVD content)
- I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free (DVD content)
- Precious Lord (DVD content)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4187 in Music
- Released on: 2008-09-30
- Number of discs: 4
- Format: Box set
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Nina Simone was one of those controversial figures American pop music puts forward from time to time, with the notable exception that she started her controversy earlier in the 1960s than, say, Bob Dylan. To see this African-American woman get angry about the racial situation in her country, right there on stage, was a shock to people who'd come to hear her sing "I Loves You, Porgy." Not that she cared; she figured that it was the artist's job to deliver the truth, and if the truth hurt, so be it. Of course, events wound up proving her right, but she never stopped being prickly about one thing or another. It was just part of who she was, and part of why her music has endured while that of some of her contemporaries has faded: she's still contemporary.
To Be Free: The Nina Simone Story is a 3 CD Career Retrospective (1957-1993) including her work for Bethlehem, Colpix, Philips, RCA, CTI and Elektra, PLUS a DVD featuring the 1970 Emmy-nominated never-before-released documentary. This package includes 54 songs, 8 previously unreleased tracks, including some never recorded elsewhere. The box includes all chart hits (U.S. and U.K.) and her most famous signature songs. An added bonus are liner notes which include track-by-track commentary from Simone biographer, David Nathan, and introduction by Ed Ward, NPR's "rock & roll historian", and never-before-seen photos from her family archives, recording sessions and performances.
Customer Reviews
Great Live Recordings and DVD Documentary...
This box set is really amazing!!! As I wrote in the new PASTE magazine [...]
"It beautifully documents the mysterious wonders of Simone's rich voice and her quirky yet emotional phrasing." It's particularly nice that the collection includes so many "live" recordings since Nina was such an electric and inventive performer, almost always reinterpreting her songs in concert.
In addition, the box includes a DVD of an excellent 1970 documentary. It looks beautiful and it features some fantastic live material: a searching "I Wish I Knew (How It Would Feel to Be Free)" and a heartbreaking "Don't You Pay Them No Mind." The interview footage is also great. My favorite part comes when she's talking about her artistic mission:
"Everybody is half-dead. Everybody avoids everybody, all over the place, in most situations, most all the time. I know; I'm one of those 'everybodys.' And, to me, it's terrible. And so all I'm trying to do, all the time, is just open people up so they...let themselves be open to somebody else. That is all. That's it."
-- Craig Seymour, author of All I Could Bare: My Life in the Strip Clubs of Gay Washington, D.C.
A Worthy Collection
I've owned the complete Nina Simone discography for some time, but I wanted this box set specifically for the 8 previously unreleased tracks and the 1970 documentary that I assumed had been lost.
The new material is fantastic. I'd gladly have paid just to hear the new, live recording of "Suzanne" included in this set. It's a brilliant concert piece, equal parts bold and vulnerable. I'd heard Nina sing with her brother Samuel at a 1968 Paris concert on the album Live at the Great Show, but if not for the release of "Let it Be Me" included on this set for the first time, I would never have known how truly talented and soulful he was. Music must have been a familial trait.
The DVD is brief (only about 20 minutes) but packs a punch. Nina is engaging and captivating, especially when she muses with her interviewer that freedom must be the equivalent of having no fear. A rehearsal cut of "Don't You Pay Them No Mind" before a concert is overwhelming. This was always one of my favorite songs on the High Priestess of Soul album and to see her perform it with the accompaniment of her grand piano, her mighty vibrato trembling with emotion, is something to behold. She closes a concert with "I Wish I Knew How (It Would Feel to Be Free)," taking the song in a new and liberating direction, singing along and quoting Bible scripture while her band provides a hypnotic melody.
This could easily pass as an introduction to Nina Simone's work, if that is what you're looking for. I don't agree with all of the choices included here as a career spanning collection, but this is an artist who recorded so many albums on so many different labels, if you took two Nina fans and asked them to assemble her best work, you'd inevitably come up with two completely different collections. It's part of the beauty of her music.
Attached to the set is a booklet with extensive track notes for every song, written by David Nathan, a founder of Nina's British fan club and frequent biographer of her life and career. While strained in some parts, his devotion to the artist is clear.
This is a great collection and I'm thankful to the producers who continue to memorialize this incomparably brilliant, yet often overlooked Diva of song.
Highly recommended.
Smoothed out Nina Simone
This is a wonderful collection for Nina Simone to gain more fans. The choices of the versions of songs for this collection, are the smooth more soothing ones. Each song easily fits together on the same album with any of the other songs. The DVD is really just for already fans. (I guess if your buying a box, you must already be a major fan)The mix of the clips of her performances and the interview disturbs the full experience. They should have had the performance then the interview. Do not get me wrong. I highly recommend this box set to anyone. I am personally a fan of the coarser versions of some songs. One thing I really like about Nina Simone, is that no two performance of her are the same.



