Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1964


Go Limp

Buy Go Limp now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




"'Go Limp'" is the penultimate track on Nina Simone's 1964 album 'Nina Simone in Concert', and is an adaptation of a protest song originally written by Alex Comfort during his involvement with the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.'The Best of Broadside 1962-1998: Anthems of the American Underground From the Pages of Broadside Magazine' (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. 2000), 34.

The melody and part of the chorus is taken from the folk ballad "Sweet Betsy from Pike".

Adaptation



In adapting Comfort's lyrics for 'In Concert', Simone made only minor alterations of Comfort's lyrics to re-situate "Go Limp" within the frame of the civil rights movement. Crucially, Simone replaces the acronym "CND" with "NAACP" in the second line of the first verse, in which the mother first appeals to her daughter. Thus, "Daughter, dear daughter take warning from me/Now don't you go marching with the young CND" becomes "Daughter, dear daughter take warning from me/Now don't you go marching with the NAACP."Simone, Nina Simone In Concert, Phillips, 1964. In both versions, however, the concluding lines of the first verse remain the same: "For they'll rock you and roll you and shove you into bed/and if they steal your nuclear secret, you'll wish you were dead."

Content and Interpretation



Framed as a dialogue between a mother and daughter, "Go Limp" ostensibly warns against the sexual consequences of a young woman's involvement in civil rights organizing.Ruth Feldstein, "I Don't Trust You Anymore,'; Nina Simone, Culture, and Black Activism in the 1960s," Journal of American History 87, no. 4 (2005), 1364. Initially assuring her mother that she will "go on that march and return a virgin maid," the song's protagonist nevertheless succumbs to the advances of "a young man with a beard on his cheek and a gleam in his eye." Forgetting the "brick in her handbag" that she carried with her to "shed off disgrace," the young woman instead takes a cue from her nonviolence training when her suitor "[suggests] it was time she was kissed." She chooses not to resist, and instead she allows herself to "go limp, and be carried away." At the end of the song, the protagonist assures her mother that "though a baby there be" (and that the father "has left his name and address"), if the civil rights movement is ultimately successful, the child "won't have to march like his da-da and me."

Performance



In both 'Nina Simone in Concert' and during a 1965 performance at the Mickey Theater in the Netherlands, Simone performs "Go Limp" and "Mississippi Goddam" together to close the set. In the latter performance, Simone remarks:'Jazz Icons: Nina SimoneLife in '65 and '68', DVD (Franklin, TN: Naxos of American DVD, 2008)

Both performances of "Go Limp" involve interaction between the artist and her audience. Simone speeds up or slows down her playing at moments when the audience is invited to laugh, provides frequent asides remarking on the song's absurdity, "forgets" the song's verses, and offers a wide range of gestural cues: gazing off into the distance, pursing her lips to conceal a smile, holding back a laugh with tensed shoulders, casting a knowing look to the band, hiding her face in awkwardness, or leaning back in laughter. Notably, Simone forgets a verse in both the 'In Concert' and the 1965 the Netherlands' recordings, and in each case cues this moment with the question "I told you about momma, didn't I?".

Additionally, in between each verse of "Go Limp," Simone invites the audience to sing along with the song's nonsensical chorus: "Singing too-ra-li, too-ra-li, too-ra-li-ay." For example: in between the first chorus and second verse of the version of the song on 'In Concert', Simone remarks "You get the gist of the song now? When we get to the chorus again I expect you to sing with lust."

Criticism



Historian Ruth Feldstein claims that in her adaptation of "Go Limp", "Simone mocked, but did not quite reject, the value of passive nonresistance as a means to improve race relations."Ruth Feldstein, "'I Don't Trust You Anymore'; Nina Simone, Culture, and Black Activism in the 1960s," Journal of American History 87, no. 4 (2005): 1365

Author Nadine Cohades describes "Go Limp" as a "sing-along folk song and a benign if mischievous tribute to the young protesters," Nadine Cohades, Princess Noire: The Tumultuous Reign of Nina Simone (New York: Pantheon, 2010), 151.

References



Category:1964 songs

Category:Songs against racism and xenophobia

Category:Songs about black people

Category:Nina Simone songs

Category:Protest songs

Category:American folk songs

Category:Songs written by Nina Simone

Buy Go Limp now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1964



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1094469630.