She is her own woman, a singer, songwriter and performer whose ability to
transcend genres echoes the tradition of her mother, musical icon and
pioneer Nina Simone. Blessed with a rich vocal range, an innate skill for
lyrical interpretation and a soul-deep understanding of music as a means of
healing, empowerment and celebration, Simone is very much her mother's
daughter, she is most assuredly a multi-talented artist in her own right.
A highly-praised live performer whose impressive resume includes starring
roles on Broadway in such acclaimed musicals as Rent and Aida, Simone has
developed an exciting and diverse repertoire of pop, soul, jazz, rock and
funk, expressed in shows she's done throughout the U.S. and in the UK,
Ireland, Holland, Finland, Spain and France. With the release of her first full-length album, Simone On Simone (a big band
tribute to her mother produced by famed jazz musician and arranger Bob
Belden), music lovers worldwide will discover
the vocal dynamism that live audiences have witnessed for over a decade.
"This is my tribute to my mother, a chance for me to do the songs I love
the most the way I hear them. It's a glimpse of my life over four decades."
Born Lisa Celeste Stroud in Mount Vernon in upstate New York, Simone's
earliest exposure to music naturally came through her mother's work as a
globally-loved musician and freedom fighter but she recalls, "I heard a lot
of other artists because we had albums by Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding,
Gladys Knight & The Pips, gospel records by all of the Hawkins family and
Reverend James Cleveland. The radio was on when my mother was traveling to
gigs so I heard everything - The Beatles and The Mamas & The Papas to two of
my all-time favorites, Ronnie Dyson and Donny Hathaway. Of course I heard
my mother's music: the albums I remember the most are "Silk & Soul" and "The
High Priestess Of Soul." Miriam Makeba was a constant favorite in our house
but I didn't hear much jazz and even though my mother was classically
trained, I never heard much classical music either."
Simone - who was featured in 1972 with her mother in a photo spread for
"Essence" magazine - spent most of her early childhood in New York City, and
then in Nina's home state of North Carolina before accompanying her
globe-trotting mother to Liberia, Barbados and Switzerland. She completed
her education in the U.S. and joined the USAF in 1982. "Actually, I
originally planned to be an international lawyer," Simone recalls with a
smile. "Then I went through 'reactive active rebellion' and enlisted in to
the military!"
Studying civil engineering ("I can drive Hummers and Deuce-and-a-Half
trucks!") and rising to the rank of staff sergeant, Simone's first onstage
appearance happened during her tenure in Germany when a friend heard her
sing at a nightclub and later received a call from an American singer based
in Europe asking if Simone would like a gig as a background singer. That led
to more shows and each weekend, Simone (who took the stage name in honor of
her mother) would find herself onstage, oftentimes working with 'The Magic
Platters,' singing the songs of the popular '50s and '60s group. It was
during a 1991 show at a ski resort in Switzerland that Simone first sang a
song closely associated with her mother. "I did 'My Baby Just Cares For Me'
and afterwards, I thought, 'this is what I should do with my life.' Singing
was like breathing for me," she recalls. In spite of her parents'
misgivings, Simone continued to follow her heart and travel the world. She
found herself doing background vocals for Latin superstar Raphael.
Simone traveled with the Spanish hitmaker for two years, performing
throughout Spain, Puerto Rico, South and North America doing shows for SRO
crowds at Madison Square Garden in New York, the Universal Amphitheater in
Los Angeles and the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Auditorium in Miami. "After I
left Europe with Raphael, I headed to Los Angeles on my 'quest for
superstardom,'" Simone recalls with a grin. "I moved in with two other
girls, we formed a group called Aura and we spent six months trying to make
it. I spent my last $2,500 on a Hyundai!" Towards the end of 1994, Simone
began doing regular shows at The Atlas club with the B-Sharp Quartet,
performing at venues like The Baked Potato and Shanghai Reds (where her
mother saw her onstage for the first time), "being a waitress, singing at
open 'mikes' and doing children's theater."
The period of paying dues in Los Angeles paid off when Simone was approached
in 1995 to audition for the national touring company of the
already-successful musical, Jesus Christ Superstar. "Initially, I turned
them down!" she remembers but when she was cast for the role of
Soul Sister, she subsequently went on to appear as both Mary and Simon
(becoming the first woman to ever play that part during the run).
In 1996, intent on making her first recording, the singer/actress did her
first demo but her plans were interrupted when she got a call to audition
for the musical Rent. The opportunity to star as Mimi Marquez in Rent's
First National Tour soon presented itself and Simone spent almost 18 months
traveling across the US thus earning her nominations for both Helen Hayes
and Jefferson Awards for her show-stopping performances.
In 1998, Rent headed to Chicago; six months after the show's run ended
there, Simone decided to stay in the area, becoming the lead singer for the
acid jazz band, Liquid Soul earning a Grammy nomination for the album
"Here's The Deal" (for which she was a contributing writer), in her own
words, "performing at every 'House Of Blues' in the country!" In 1999,
Simone fulfilled a long-held dream, appearing for the first time onstage
with her mother at the Guinness Blues Festival in Dublin and opening for her
at London's prestigious Royal Albert Hall. In May of that year, she gave
birth to a daughter, RéAnna and "three days later, I was called to audition
for The Lion King."
In 2001, Simone took on the leading role of Aida in the Tim Rice-Elton John
musical of the same name for the national touring company. She had worked
on Aida during its initial workshops for the award-winning show, noting, "it
felt good to be remembered." She headed up Aida's First National Tour
earning the "National Broadway Theater Award for Best Actress in a Musical."
She reprised the role on Broadway to critical acclaim in 2002.
Dr. Nina Simone came to see her daughter play the role in April of the same
year and with a grin, Simone recalls how her mother "yelled out from the
audience when I was onstage!" It would be the last time the two would see
each other: one year later, on April 21, Nina passed away at her home in the
South of France, just days before her daughter was due to visit during a
break from her Broadway performances in Aida.
The loss of her mother was understandably a time for reflection and pause
for Simone: "My mother began to support me in my choice of a musical career
in 1999. She finally wanted my star to rise. I remember when did sing
together - at The Wiltern Theater in Los Angeles. We sang one of her songs,
"Compensation" and she accompanied me. She would grin in spite of herself."
Simone coordinated, performed and eulogized her mother at the packed
memorial service held at the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, completing
her performances in Aida in June, 2003 and doing some shows in and around
New York. In 2004, Simone performed with her Uncle, Sam Waymon in a tribute
to her mother at New York's "Blue Note" and with members of Nina's original
band at Carnegie Hall in a JVC Jazz Festival tribute the same year.
An invitation from Sandra St. Victor, former lead singer with the soul/funk
band The Family Stand to work on a show entitled "Daughters Of Soul" (with
the offspring of Chaka Khan and Donny Hathaway as well as Nona Hendryx, St.
Victor and other special guests) began a three-year association that
resulted in performances in The Netherlands, Finland, France, Spain and the
U.K. "It's a chance to be around some great female performers and have a
really good time. It's wonderful," Simone recalls.
On April 21, 2006, three years after her mother's passing, Simone paid
tribute to her at Town Hall in New York, at the very venue where forty-seven
years earlier a 26-year old Nina Simone had enjoyed her first major show in
the city. With some of the original members of the band who had accompanied
her mother then (including longtime musical associate, guitarist Al
Shackman), Simone's spellbinding, soulful performance turned into the
genesis for the recording of Simone On Simone. "The idea had been pitched to
me before but I had been writing a lot of my own material for almost ten
years and my goal was to record those songs. It felt like an obstacle
between me and that goal to do a tribute record to my mother. But after the
Town Hall performance, I started considering it seriously."
Fortunate to have gotten over fifty of her mother's original arrangements,
Simone began working with producer Bob Belden (whose credits include work
with Woody Herman, Donald Byrd, Mel Lewis and Dianne Reeves and extensive
credits as a premier jazz reissue producer) on the recording project,
culling eleven songs from Nina Simone's repertoire, including one live
performance on which her mother accompanied her and featuring one poignant
and highly personal song, "Child In Me" which Simone fondly refers to as "my
love song to my mother."
Choosing a big band setting for the project, Simone notes, "I never really
listened to jazz growing up and I've always been approached to do jazz. I
was more of a funk and R&B kind of singer, along the lines of a Chaka Khan
but the truth is, I could do gospel and jazz in my sleep, given the presence
of my mother's music around me since I was born." Aware that music buyers
may wonder "if I sound like my mother," Simone has approached the recording
of Simone On Simone with a commitment to putting her own distinctive stamp
on the songs she's chosen.
She succeeds admirably turning in tour-de-force performances on little-known
gems from her mother's recorded repertoire such as "Keeper Of The Flame," "I
Hold No Grudge" and "Don't You Pay Them No Mind" (all from Nina Simone's
1966 LP High Priestess Of Soul) as well as reworkings of such classics as
"Feeling Good," "Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair" (given a
completely new and original twist), "Work Song," the spirited "(You'll) Go
To Hell" and swinging versions of "Love Me Or Leave Me" and Duke Ellington's
"Gal From Joe's." Rounding out her first of many future albums: "I Wish I
Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free" (the Billy Taylor tune closely identified
with her mother as one of the potent message songs which were so much a part
of Nina Simone's catalog of music with themes of freedom, self-empowerment
and justice for all) and "How Long Must I Wander," a plaintive song that
speaks to Simone's own formative years traveling across the globe with her
mother.
In addition to completing work on her debut CD in 2007, Simone performed in
a week-long St. Louis production of Les Miserables and did shows with "The
Daughters Of Soul" in the U.K. and Holland. Since her mother's passing, she
has been busy managing Nina Simone's extensive estate as well as co-founding
in 2003, the Nina Simone Foundation, a non-profit organization whose mission
- fulfilling her mother's wish - is to raise money for the education of
African-American children and children of African descent.
Encouraged by the constant support of God, family, friends and fans, Simone
says her commitment is to "keep singing, keep writing, keep performing,
spreading the word, spreading the healing, spreading the message and
spreading the love!" With a rich heritage to draw from, a wealth of
accomplishments and accolades as a Broadway star and live performer and a
finely-developed sense of her own unique artistry, Simone is ready to
establish herself as a successful recording artist of the first order.
She's off to a wonderful start with Simone On Simone, an album that honors
her mother's musical contribution while beginning a new chapter in her own
musical journey.