Four Women
Nina Simone Simone Laura Izibor & Ledisi Lyrics


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My skin is black
My arms are long
My hair is woolly
My back is strong
Strong enough to take the pain
inflicted again and again
What do they call me
My name is AUNT SARAH
My name is Aunt Sarah

My skin is yellow
My hair is long
Between two worlds
I do belong
My father was rich and white
He forced my mother late one night
What do they call me
My name is SAFFRONIA
My name is Saffronia

My skin is tan
My hair is fine
My hips invite you
my mouth like wine
Whose little girl am I?
Anyone who has money to buy
What do they call me
My name is SWEET THING
My name is Sweet Thing

My skin is brown
my manner is tough
I'll kill the first mother I see
my life has been too rough
I'm awfully bitter these days
because my parents were slaves




What do they call me
My name is PEACHES

Overall Meaning

Simone's song Four Women was released in 1966, during the height of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. Simone used her music as a platform for political activism, and Four Women is a prime example of her commitment to addressing the injustices faced by Black women in America. The song is an ode to the strength and resilience of Black women throughout history, told through the personas of four different characters.


The first character, Aunt Sarah, embodies the stereotype of the Black woman as a caretaker and servant. Despite the pain and mistreatment inflicted upon her, she remains strong and resilient. Saffronia, the second character, represents the light-skinned Black woman who is caught between two worlds. Her mother was forced to have sex with a white man, resulting in Saffronia's birth. She struggles with her identity and her place in society. Sweet Thing, the third character, is a sexually objectified Black woman who is valued only for her physical beauty. She is seen as a commodity to be bought and sold. Finally, Peaches is a bitter and angry Black woman who has been scarred by the legacy of slavery. Her anger is a response to the long history of oppression that she has endured.


Line by Line Meaning

My skin is black
My black skin is a part of my identity and reflects centuries of history and struggle.


My arms are long
My long arms are a physical attribute that enables me to endure and survive hardship and pain.


My hair is woolly
My hair, like my skin, has a texture that is different from what is considered 'mainstream' and often subject to discrimination.


My back is strong
My strong back supports my body and represents my resilience and ability to persevere.


Strong enough to take the pain, inflicted again and again
Despite facing repeated trauma and injustice, I am able to withstand and rise above it, so much so that it becomes a part of who I am.


What do they call me, My name is AUNT SARAH
Despite being an individual with my own unique identity, society labels and reduces me to a generic, diminishing nickname based on my status as a black woman.


My skin is yellow
My yellow skin highlights my mixed ethnic heritage and the complexities and challenges that come with being 'in between' multiple cultures.


My hair is long
My long hair, which is often associated with femininity and beauty, is a trait that is inherited from my white father and carries political significance.


Between two worlds, I do belong
I exist in a liminal space, not fully embraced by either the black or white community due to my mixed heritage.


What do they call me, My name is SAFFRONIA
Similar to Aunt Sarah, my unique identity is overlooked and replaced with a name that reflects society's tendency to stereotype mixed-race women based on appearance.


My skin is tan
My tan skin represents a racially ambiguous appearance that makes it difficult for society to define me.


My hair is fine
My fine hair is a contrast to the woolly texture attributed to black women, yet still faces discrimination due to its association with whiteness and Eurocentric beauty standards.


My hips invite you, my mouth like wine
My sexuality and beauty are often overemphasized and objectified, reducing my value as a person to my physical attributes.


Whose little girl am I? Anyone who has money to buy
As a victim of poverty and economic exploitation, I am forced to sacrifice my dignity and agency in order to survive and provide for myself.


What do they call me, My name is SWEET THING
Similar to Aunt Sarah and Saffronia, my name reflects a patronizing and dismissive attitude towards women who are sexualized and commodified.


My skin is brown
My brown skin is a symbol of my connection to my African ancestry and the legacy of slavery and oppression that comes with it.


my manner is tough
My tough demeanor is a response to the trauma and struggle that has defined my life and the need to display strength in order to survive.


I'll kill the first mother I see, my life has been too rough
The constant pain and suffering that I have experienced have left me with a deep anger and resentment towards the world and those who benefit from my oppression.


I'm awfully bitter these days, because my parents were slaves
The legacy of slavery is not a distant history, but an ongoing reality that continues to affect the lives of black people today, causing deep trauma and bitterness.


What do they call me, My name is PEACHES
Even when expressing anger and bitterness, society still attempts to label and dismiss me with a cutesy and stereotypical nickname.




Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Written by: NINA SIMONE

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@BHAKTIBROPHY

??
What's wrong with the audience? Why "sadly"?

This is Nina's former band (mixed race). And no musician phoned it in.

I'm not understanding why 'sadly' look at the audience.

Music is a thread that ties us all together, from the depths of our being, The Self/Atman.
That's beyond the mind, beyond thought, beyond the roles we're playing in this lifetime.

It doesn't deny anyone's experience. Quite the opposite: it unites us in our shared experiences throughout the ages.



All comments from YouTube:

@imaniwjwright4362

Nina's daughter singing such a passionate classic written by her mother, gives me indescribable feelings.

@leilarahmi3412

Omani J W Wrght, to you in particular, the most recent comment I have found:
'Do I understand absolutely this cry from the heart.
So long suppressed/massacred by the self-serving human trait - which gave rise to Colonialism, (the tafficking for both enslaved labour in private plantations, AND, in the hideously large, ever-growing sex industry, this video, women's male testosterone so fired by injustice and the lack of respect for the power, the deep wisdom inherent in all awakened women,' called herself Peter.

In lieu of 22 years of corruption and exploitation faced in Indonesia and Malaysia (cleaned out, blackmailed, retained in horrendous conditions in two detention centres - one for many weeks, then eventually released for a 10% of initial demands), in an ongoing attempt to retain freedom of speech - the right to protest injustice and corruption, so often forced to change my name on the WEB/NET, also totally fed up with bowing to pressure, desiring to press on at any cost, (my recent songs: music and lyrics, all improvised and stored in a private collection I've entitled 'In the Moment - From my Heart,' so inspired by this, my next song I'll name, or simply sign off here, 'Just Call Me Eve.' 😘

@bleumoon2u

One of my favorite Nina Simone songs ever. This rendition is devastatingly beautiful. So deep and heartfelt. Thank you, Peaches, all!

@bryancooker175

How are you doing today my name is Bryan cooker

@fatimamachado6818

¡Divinas!🥰✊🏾💪🏾👏🏾👏🏾

@kimberlyjackson1337

After over 3 months of Covid and 800 years of oppression...this is salve to my wounds...I'm a music teacher and this whole thing is balm to my injured ❤️

@revjys

Since I first heard this song ... my life has been different. Launched onto some new trajectory by the realities of the women in my life. My mothers, my aunties, my sisters, my cousins, and my grandmothers especially. These were their struggles and we all must sit quietly in repose, recalling their hardships. "4 Women" was for me ... AN INSTANT CLASSIC!!

@bryancooker175

How are you doing today my name is Bryan cooker

@kimberlyjackson1337

@@bryancooker175 I’m ok today and thank you for asking ...my mom passed the end of February and today I can stand and say that I made it

@bryancooker175

@@kimberlyjackson1337 okay cool and I'm so sorry so where are you from

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