While stories of American vocal legend Nina Simones erratic onstage behaviour are well documented, for those with only the singers audio output as a guide the abject freakiness captured in this collection of Simones Montreux appearances will be a disheartening eye-opener. The craziness begins the moment she enters the room: a completely zoned-out Simone, accompanied by a lone drummer, stands beside her piano staring off into the distance in search of an errant sound no one in the room can hear but her. After a few uncomfortable moments of disjointed dialogue, the singer finally sets into her completely natural and captivating performances of classics "Little Girl Blue, "Be My Husband and "I Wish I Knew. But the disconnected babblings (at one point she stops to search that audience for an obviously absent David Bowie) continue between each song and what you glean from a clearly wrecked Simone is that she, like the now AIDS-stricken Gil Scott Heron, seems a completely broken result of her various Civil Rights experiences, as conversational references to fallen friends slip in and out of her monologue. Its a sad testament to such a holder of clear musical genius.
(Eagle Vision)Nina Simone
Live At Montreux 1976
Published Feb 19, 2007