• The English blues rock band
Black Cat Bones covered the song on its only album,
Barbed Wire Sandwich, released in 1970. • The song was adapted by filmmaker
Julie Dash into a 1978
short experimental film of the same name. •
Sandra Bernhard performs the song in her one woman show, filmed in 1990 by
John Boskovich and released as the film ''
Without You I'm Nothing''. • Merrill Nisker has performed under the name
Peaches since the late 1990s, named after the character in "Four Women". • The group
Reflection Eternal, which is made up of rapper
Talib Kweli and producer
Hi-Tek, has a song titled "For Women", inspired by Simone's song, on its 2000 debut album
Train of Thought. • Berlin soul singer
Joy Denalane, featuring Sara Tavares, Chiwoniso & Deborah, interpreted the song on her 2002 debut album
Mamani. • A cover version of this song was featured in the ending credits of the 2010 movie
For Colored Girls, featuring a sample of Nina Simone singing the first verse (as Aunt Sarah) with newly re-recorded vocals performed by Nina's daughter,
Lisa Simone, singing Safronia's verse,
Laura Izibor singing the role of Sweet Thing, and
Ledisi singing Peaches's verse. • The song was on the 2010 show
Black Girls Rock! It is covered by R&B vocalists
Kelly Price as Aunt Sarah,
Marsha Ambrosius as Safronia,
Jill Scott as Sweet Thing, and
Ledisi as Peaches. • In 2017, Jay Z's track "The Story of O.J," samples "Four Women," weaving Simone's vocals into a critique of colorism, identity and modern wealth in America. This sample creates a direct, intergenerational conversation between two Black artists, paying homage to Simone's bravery while extending her critque into the 21st century. • A cover version of this song by
Ledisi, along with
Lisa Fischer,
Lizz Wright, and
Alice Smith was released on Ledisi's tribute album to Nina Simone called
Ledisi Sings Nina in July 2021. The song was recorded live with the
Metropole Orkest at the
Royal Albert Hall in
London during her
Nina and Me Tour in 2019. • American experimental band
Xiu Xiu covered "Four Women" on its 2013 Nina Simone tribute album
Nina. • The song inspired the 2016 play
Nina Simone: Four Women by Christina Ham. In the play, Nina meets the first three women (she is the fourth) at the site of the
16th Street Baptist Church bombing, and they become the characters in her song. • Jamaican musician
Queen Ifrica released a
reggae version in 2021. ==References==