Regina Leader-Post

ONCE MORE, WITH FEELING

Celebrator­y song made popular by Simone resonates through years

- DAVID CHEAL

More than any other art form, music has the power to make us feel good: a guitar riff that gets the spine tingling, a soaring crescendo that makes us swoon, an aria that sets nape hairs bristling.

And Feeling Good is perhaps the ultimate feel-good song: it soars and swoops, invoking the joy of nature, the freedom of a bird flying high. It thrills.

Feeling Good was written to express a particular kind of euphoria: that which comes with liberation from oppression. It was written by British songwriter­s Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse for their stage musical The Roar of the Greasepain­t — The Smell of the Crowd; the show toured provincial British theatres in 1964 (with a young Elaine Paige making her profession­al debut in the chorus) before opening on Broadway in 1965.

Roar is a curious, allegorica­l musical about power, class and race. Two characters, Sir and Cocky, play an endless, Samuel Beckett-esque game that is rigged in favour of the superior, supercilio­us Sir — but the arrival of The Negro (renamed The Stranger or The Black Man in later production­s) shakes things up. While Sir and Cocky argue, and after being the object of racist taunts, The Negro wins the game and celebrates his victory by singing Feeling Good.

In its original arrangemen­t, Feeling Good — as sung by Cy Grant in the U.K. and Gilbert Price on Broadway — hardly seemed the kind of song that would set the world on fire: it had little in the way of pulse and featured a rather saccharine children’s chorus. What power the song had lay in the strong vocal performanc­es of Grant and Price.

Before the show opened on Broadway (starring Newley — who recorded his own version of Feeling Good — as Cocky), an original cast recording album was released to drum up interest. This meant that Feeling Good was in circulatio­n before it reached the stage, and singers and musicians seized on it. Among the first was John Coltrane, a man with an ear for a show tune; in his version, the theme typically drifted in and out of focus as Coltrane’s sax floated and fluttered. Sammy Davis Jr. gave it gravitas, with twangly electric guitar.

It took Nina Simone to find the song’s essence. In 1965, she and her arranger Hal Mooney brought in a big band, gave it a swing and a kick, emphasized the first and third beats like the strides of loping giant, introduced a tingling piano triplet, and unleashed Simone’s rebel spirit in a stunning vocal performanc­e. Released during the ferment of the civil rights protests, Simone’s Feeling Good was a manifestat­ion of that movement’s burning desire for freedom.

Simone’s interpreta­tion became a template for almost all subsequent versions (though one band, Traffic, went its own way with a self-indulgent organ-heavy jam on its 1969 album Last Exit). Foremost among these was Muse’s blistering cover on its breakthrou­gh 2001 album, Origin of Symmetry. Singer Matt Bellamy’s falsetto histrionic­s took the song into the realm of hysteria, while the video tapped into the band’s affinity for “outsiders,” featuring a roaming tribe of young people with digitally disfigured features.

Michael Bublé’s swinging, blowsy interpreta­tion in 2005 and its accompanyi­ng video channelled James Bond theme songs — aptly, as Newley had co-written Goldfinger.

A 2009 version from American Idol alumnus and sometime Queen singer Adam Lambert closely followed Muse’s, including the falsetto vocals.

But Lambert’s exhilarate­d performanc­e brought a different subtext to the song: that of a man who was feeling good about being gay. (Lambert’s version is the subject of a lengthy academic discussion by Elizabeth Gould of the University of Toronto: Intertextu­al Apparition­s: Haunting Adam Lambert’s Feeling Good.)

Lauryn Hill tapped into the spirit of Simone on one of her six contributi­ons to a 2015 tribute album that tied in with the release of a documentar­y about the singer, What Happened, Miss Simone? George Michael went big band on his Symphonica album, in a version that was his last single before his death in 2016.

Several rappers have sampled it, the most curious example being Kanye West and Jay-z’s New Day. On this track from their 2011 collaborat­ive album Watch the Throne, Feeling Good is a barely recognizab­le, heavily autotuned vocal doodle that floats over the lyric’s sombre view of fatherhood. This was a rare excursion into darker territory for a song that has overwhelmi­ngly been treated as a celebratio­n of being free, and of being alive.

The Life of a Song Volume 2: The Fascinatin­g Stories Behind 50 More of the World’s Best-loved Songs, edited by David Cheal and Jan Dalley, is published by Brewer’s.

The Financial Times Limited (2017). All rights reserved. FT and Financial Times are trademarks of the Financial Times Limited. Not to be redistribu­ted, copied or modified in any way.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Nina Simone, seen in 1968, found the essence of the song Feeling Good and her version became a template for those that followed.
GETTY IMAGES Nina Simone, seen in 1968, found the essence of the song Feeling Good and her version became a template for those that followed.

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