Blues historian Gerard Herzhaft identifies "Trouble in Mind" as a
blues standard "that has been recorded over and over again in
jazz, blues, and
pop". In 1924, Thelma La Vizzo was the first to record the tune, with Jones accompanying her on piano. Two years later,
Bertha "Chippie" Hill recorded it, with Jones and
Louis Armstrong on
cornet (sometimes identified as trumpet). In a review of Hill's 1926 rendition by early jazz critic
Rudi Blesh, he noted "poetically and musically it is of rare order... The voice sings in
high register, except for the downward cadences which end the phrases; the taut, muted trumpet is very blue in tone; underneath, the piano is simple and rich". In 2020, the
Blues Foundation inducted Hill's rendition into the
Blues Hall of Fame as a "Classic of Blues Recording". When
Georgia White recorded the song in 1936, she also was accompanied by Jones on piano, and by a guitarist and bassist. According to
Big Bill Broonzy, her performances beginning in 1929 with
Jimmie Noone helped to popularize the piece long before she recorded it. In 1952,
Dinah Washington recorded "Trouble in Mind", which was released shortly after her rendition of "
Wheel of Fortune". Hers was the first recording of the song to reach the record charts, peaking at number four on the
Billboard Rhythm & Blues chart. Reviews from 1952 welcomed her return to a blues singing-style after pop-oriented songs, such as "Wheel of Fortune".
Nina Simone also scored a hit with it in 1961, when her recording reached numbers 11 on the R&B chart and 92 on the
Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. Several additional recordings by Simone are in release, including a live performance from the 1960
Newport Jazz Festival (
Nina Simone at Newport) and a more intimate small-combo studio version from 1965 (
Pastel Blues). In a review of the 1965
Antibes–
Juan-les-Pins Jazz Festival in France,
Billboard noted her performance of "Trouble in Mind" as "the blues at its most compelling and featured such unorthodox lyrical variations as 'Gonna let the 2:19 train and
barbiturates ease my troubled mind'". A 2011 live recording from
Levon Helm and
Mavis Staples appears on the 2022 album
Carry Me Home. ==See also==