Turning George Harrison's My Sweet Lord from "a gentle cosmic entreaty into a howl of spiritual abandonment and accusation."
KURATED NO. 93
THROWBACK THURSDAY / SONG OF THE DAY
Nick Cave on Nina Simone’s fist-shaking live version of  George Harrison’s My Sweet Lord
CONTENTS
  • INTRO: In praise of Nina Simone’s protest
  • ARTICLE: Nick Cave writes on Nina Simone in The Red Hand Files
  • PLAYLIST: Emergency Ward on YouTube and on Spotify
  • VIDEO: Nick Cave on meeting Nina Simone in 1999.
    Running time: 2:08 
Kurated93ninamysweetlord
Nina Simone (Jack Robinson photo)

IN PRAISE OF NINA SIMONE’S PROTEST

Turning My Sweet Lord from a “gentle cosmic entreaty into a howl of spiritual abandonment and accusation”

“Perhaps, this is the voice of protest we need right now — intelligent, questing, transcendent, raging and thrillingly complex ,” writes musician Nick Cave about the legendary Nina Simone.

In the July issue of his enewsletter, The Red Hand Files, Cave contends that Simone’s 1972 live version of George Harrison’s My Sweet Lord “could well be her greatest musical achievement. 

“Nina Simone’s interpretation of George Harrison’s gentle cosmic entreaty ends up, in her hands, as a howl of spiritual abandonment and accusation,” he writes.

The 18-minute medley of My Sweet Lord/ Today is a Killer appears on Simone’s album Emergency Ward which concludes with another Harrison classic – Isn’t It A Pity. 

As you’ll read below, Cave’s praise is effusive and analytical. The Red Hand Files is a candid exchange between Cave and his fans. I’ve been a subscriber for most of this year and find that his submissions are insightful, consistently thoughtful and well written.

Kurated is a music sharing project.
Stay tuned,
Kris Sig Plastic V3

27 August 2020

Issue #104 / July 2020

By Nick Cave

To further augment JP’s (Issue #102) question about political songs – is there a protest song out there that you greatly admire for the way it was written or arranged?

Damian, Melbourne, Australia

Dear Damian,

 In 1972 Nina Simone released a live album entitled Emergency Ward! that was, by her own admission, her oppositional response to the Vietnam War. This record begins with an eighteen-minute rendition of ‘My Sweet Lord’, that could well be her greatest musical achievement. Nina Simone’s interpretation of George Harrison’s gentle cosmic entreaty ends up, in her hands, as a howl of spiritual abandonment and accusation.

The song begins with a thirty-second chant of —

We want Nina!
We want Nina!

before the band launches into a raucous reanimation of the George Harrison classic. Nina’s entry couldn’t be more casual, inside the manic energy of the song —

Oh my Lord
My sweet Lord

This rendition is a gospel thrill ride, with mantras, wild syncopated handclaps and weird background whoops, courtesy of the Bethany Baptist Church Junior Choir of South Jamaica, New York. The Hare Krishna chant has been removed and more ‘Hallelujahs’ have been added as Nina reaches back to her Methodist roots and proclaims —

I really want to see you, Lord
But it takes so long

And further on —

The world is looking for you
Won’t you show yourself, Lord?

then surges back in, each time with increased abandon. At around six minutes there is an exquisite breakdown and Nina’s plea grows more pressing —

I really want to see you
I really need to see you
But everything today is a killer
Today is a killer
Today is a killer
How am I gonna see you?
Nobody has taught us any patience, Lord
And now it is too late, too late, my Lord

And yet again the song storms back in, the sense of cosmic desertion growing stronger and stronger. Each breakdown, each entreaty, each surge becomes more fraught, as if the whole world is fracturing and collapsing around Nina’s petitions.

At twelve minutes Nina incorporates a poem by David Nelson of The Last Poets and the song falls into a kind of weird reverie —

I often sit there in the sea
And dream dreams
And hope hopes
And wish wishes
And I listen to the wind song
As it dances a beautiful dance for me
But these moments never last long…

And there is a further rupturing of the narrative as Nina drags us into the sudden horror of the historical moment, with lines like —

Comes the reality of today
Grinning its all-knowing, fiendish grin
Pressing his ugly face against mine
Staring at me with lifeless eyes
Crumbling away all memories of yesterday’s dreams
Because today is a killer
And only you can save us, Lord

Nina still beseeching, still calling into the vacuum —

I certainly never hoped
That one day I’d be screaming
Something my mother told me I needed
In the beginning
In the beginning
In the beginning

and then a long held note, an ululation cast into the roaring void, as her meditation turns finally, to condemn the indifferent heavens and her ‘sweet Lord’ for his ultimate betrayal —

Today, where are you, Lord?
YOU ARE A KILLER!

The great Nina Simone was a living grievance machine — her race, her gender, her misused talents (she wanted to be a classical pianist) — and this rage infused all her work, and is what makes it so multi-layered. Even her most beautiful love songs, which I count as some of the most incandescent works of art ever recorded, were marinated in a sense of resentment and contempt for the workings of the world. It is this exhilarating collision of opposing forces — love and scorn — that makes Nina Simone’s existential and political protestations so compelling.

In this extraordinarily bold statement, Nina Simone stands defiant in the face of spiritual oblivion, and a world (and God) that so readily allows war and senseless carnage to occur. It is a protest song par excellence that serves as a form of transport, a vehicle that takes us on a complex and nuanced journey into transcendent rage. The song itself becomes a forge of fury, where Nina Simone stands conflicted and defiant and, in the final lines, pulls the heavens crashing down around our ears.

Perhaps, this is the voice of protest we need right now — intelligent, questing, transcendent, raging and thrillingly complex —

We want Nina!
We want Nina!

Indeed.

Love,
Nick

Check out  The Red Hand Files.