History

‘Mississippi Goddam’ – Here’s the story behind Nina Simone’s most influential protest song

Activist Medgar Evers was shot in the back while standing in the driveway of his Mississippi home in the morning of June 12, 1963. Evers, who was from a meeting with NAACP lawyers, was taken to a hospital where he died after some minutes. That same year, on September 15, the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama that saw the death of four Black girls and injured many others occurred.

The girls were in the bathroom on the morning of September 15 when a bomb planted by Ku Klux Klan members went off. The explosion resulted in a hole in the church’s rear wall, and a two-foot deep crater in the ladies’ basement lounge. It also destroyed the church and even blew a motorist out of his car, destroying several cars near the site as well as other properties close to the church.

When singer Nina Simone heard what had happened, she “sat struck dumb”. “It was more than I could take,” she recalled. “The bombing of the little girls in Alabama and the murder of Medgar Evers were like the final pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that made no sense until you had fitted the whole thing together. I suddenly realized what it was to be Black in America in 1963, but it wasn’t an intellectual connection…it came as a rush of fury, hatred and determination.”

Her first reaction after the Birmingham bombing was “to go out and kill someone,” the jazz musician and songwriter remembered. “At first I tried to make myself a gun. I gathered some materials. I was going to take one of them out, and I didn’t care who it was,” Simone said. “Then Andy, my husband at the time, said to me, ‘Nina, you can’t kill anyone. You are a musician. Do what you do.’”

In an hour, Simone had composed a song called “Mississippi Goddam” — her first civil rights song. “When I sat down the whole song happened. I never stopped writing until the thing was finished,” she recalled.

Alabama’s got me so upset
Tennessee made me lose my rest
And everybody knows about Mississippi
Goddam

Simone sings in the opening line of the song. The song did take her career a different path than she perhaps expected. She was not really into ‘protest music’, she once said, explaining that “a lot of it was so simple and unimaginative it stripped the dignity away from the people it was trying to celebrate.”

The Alabama church bombing and the murder of Evers, however, changed her thoughts, she said, adding that “with ‘Mississippi Goddam,’ I realized there was no turning back.” And indeed she never turned back in her activism since then. Right after the song’s debut in New York, Simone performed it in March 1964 to a mostly white audience at Carnegie Hall who first did not get the message of the song, laughing after hearing the opening lines. It was somewhere in the middle towards the end of the performance that they began looking increasingly jittery.

“Everyone knows about Mississippi,” Simone sings as the song closes. “Everyone knows about Alabama. Everyone knows about Mississippi. Goddamn.”

“Mississippi Goddam” was included on the album “Nina Simone In Concert”. Released as a single, the swearword was bleeped out so that people are not offended yet the song received backlash. Most Southern states banned it. Venues refused to book Simone. “We got several letters where they had actually broken up this recording and sent it back to the recording company, really, telling them it was in bad taste,” Simone said during a 1964 interview on the Steve Allen Show. “They missed the whole point.”

Unperturbed, Simone went ahead to sing the song at civil rights rallies and marches, including the Selma to Montgomery Civil Rights March in early 1965. On many occasions, Simone changed the lyric, “Tennessee made me lose my rest,” during scores of live performances around the country and the world to reflect what was happening at a particular moment. When civil rights icon Martin Luther King, Jr was assassinated in Memphis in 1968, Simone mourned, “Memphis made me lose my rest.”

Music played a central role during the civil rights movement in the 20th century. Be it protest songs on racism, injustice, and violence, or songs adapted from hymns, these offered hope and strength to participants and leading activists in their quest for justice and equality. At the height of the movement in the 1950s and 60s in America, anyone who stood up for the rights of African Americans became a possible target for assassination.

Simone faced many dangers. “We encountered many people who were after our hides,” she said of her performances at various rallies and marches. “I was excited by it, though, because I felt more alive then…because I was needed, could sing something to help my people, and that became the mainstay of my life, the most important thing.”

Simone, inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2018, is now known not only for her mix of jazz, blues and folk music from the 1950s but for her contributions to the civil rights movements. Born on February 21, 1933, in Tryon, North Carolina, she nurtured her music passion from the beginning. After leaving the Julliard School in New York where she was studying classical piano, she turned to perform in nightclubs focusing mainly on jazz, blues and folk music. Becoming an activist, she later left the U.S. for Europe to escape racism and segregation.

Her mark as a musician is being felt even today. She has been sampled by a number of musicians including Kanye West, Jay Z, John Legend, Talib Kweli, Timbaland, Lil Wayne, and Bilal, among others.

According to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame:

Simone’s groundbreaking compositions like “Mississippi Goddam” and “Four Women” defined a songwriting voice that was proudly, defiantly black and female. Her radical rearrangements of other songs have been covered by everyone from George Michael to the Animals, Whitney Houston to Jeff Buckley. An icon whose tortured life was the subject of an Oscar-nominated documentary, Nina Simone was a unique creative force.

Mildred Europa Taylor

Mildred Europa Taylor is a writer and content creator. She loves writing about health and women's issues in Africa and the African diaspora.

Recent Posts

Meet one of the young trailblazers in Somalia’s film-making scene who was banned from watching movies as a child

Director Abshir Rageh oversees film production at Astaan, a privately held cable television network in…

5 mins ago

Nigerians in high spirits as they anticipate Meghan’s royal visit after discovering she is 43% Nigerian

Nigerians are eagerly awaiting to welcome their "daughter" Meghan Markle's royal visit next month alongside…

16 hours ago

Restaurant employee arrested for putting his genitals in food items

Othello Larenzo Holmes has been charged with attempted indecent assault and faces five counts of…

17 hours ago

Howard graduate working at the deli counter at Walmart vies for Olympics

Dylan Beard is a Howard University graduate who is currently working at a Walmart deli.…

17 hours ago

Mike Tyson says he’s avoiding sex with his wife as he prepares for the Jake Paul fight

Boxing legend Mike Tyson is not taking any chances as he prepares for his July…

19 hours ago

LeBron James uncertain over his future at LA Lakers after playoff loss to the Denver Nuggets

LeBron James has cast uncertainty over his future with the Lakers by declining to confirm…

19 hours ago

Florida: Four teens die after crashing suspected stolen car during police chase

Four Florida teenagers were killed after they crashed a suspected stolen car during a police…

20 hours ago

8th grader rescues students on school bus after their driver passes out

When their school bus driver experienced a medical emergency, Acie Holland III came to the…

21 hours ago

‘Why is life so unfair and merciless?’ – Francis Ngannou mourns death of 15-month-old son Kobe

Former UFC heavyweight champion cum professional boxer Francis Ngannou took to social media on Monday…

1 day ago

This Sudanese teen has tried to cross the Channel to Britain on a small boat over 100 times to see his mother

A 17-year-old migrant from Sudan, Abdul Usman, has attempted to cross the Channel from France…

2 days ago

How these under-11-year-old sisters are making history in Maryland as CEOs

Tatiyana, Danyelle LaShay, and Jyniah Smith -- the Smith sisters -- are some of the…

2 days ago

Mother-daughter duo set to graduate from nursing school in full circle moment

It's a full circle moment for mom Tangenicka "Tange" Williams and her daughter Chyna set…

2 days ago

Fat Joe recalls how his followers made him lose $2 million

Fat Joe is widely known for hits like Lean Back, All the Way Up, and…

2 days ago

From his living room, he launched a software company that recently raised $20m with clients like Ford

Get to know Jordan Taylor; he is the founder of Vizcom, a software company that…

2 days ago

Mother charged after children walk more than a mile to Walmart alone

38-year-old Tanice Spence-Clarke was arrested and charged with child neglect without physical harm after police…

2 days ago