Showing posts with label steve cropper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steve cropper. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 November 2022

The Dock Of The Bay: The Definitive Collection - Otis Redding

Provenance: When I were a lad, Bournemouth had two local radio stations that, seemingly, the entire town listened to - 2CR FM and Classic Gold. 2CR FM was the 'popular contemporary' station, based out of a rather scruffy building on Southcote Road. It once played a song recorded by my brother's Year Two primary school teacher, and it was the launchpad for Christian O'Connell's media career. Gosh!

Classic Gold (828 MW - burned into my memory banks) was the oldies station. Alarmingly, the relative time periods now dictate that I must consider 'Don't Cha' by the Pussycat Dolls as an 'oldie', given the gap between its release in 2005 to today corresponds with that of the material being played on Classic Gold in the 1990s. 

I have a lifelong habit of leaving a radio on at low volume as I sleep; these days it's tuned to a talk station, but it began with Classic Gold. As such, I now possess a fairly comprehensive knowledge of popular music from the 1960s and 1970s due to it being zapped into my skull in the moments between slumber and wakefulness. And one of the songs I feel like I heard on this endless looping timewarp was '(Sittin' On) the Dock of the Bay' by Otis Redding.

So, when the opportunity arose to buy this cheap Atlantic Records compilation for, I believe, about three quid, I bit. A small price to pay for a big slice of one's childhood.

Review: When you're young and know no better (as opposed to being old and knowing no better), one's imagination - operating on a level of overdrive - fills in the gaps. For example, when I first heard 'The Logical Song' by Supertramp I was genuinely scared by this article of truth, that transitioning to adulthood would render life cold, grey and meaningless. Another example is the picture I held in my head of Otis Redding purely on the basis of hearing '...Dock of the Bay'. Evidently, on the basis of this song, I was listening to an old man, wearied by life's tribulations, probably fated to die a vagrant's death on the dockside. It was much, much later that I learned Redding was twenty-six when he recorded it.

I implore you to bear two things in mind - one, to a young mind, the literal 'truth' is much easier to buy into than that of the performer or fabulist. The world seems much more obviously delineated, and so when a man sings of whiling away the time at 'the Frisco Bay', I believed that was precisely what happened. I wasn't so gullible as to not understand the concept of acting, but both then and now there's an aura of verisimilitude in music that has the ability to wrong-foot me. The other factor is that in the early-to-mid 1990s it was the norm to not know things like a legacy artist's biographical information or appearance. No Wikipedia, no internet, and no guarantee that as an eight- or nine-year-old you would encounter Otis Redding in a magazine or book you might be reading. Simply put, the Voice was the Truth.

Forgive me my ramblings on youthful befuddlement, especially as I grew up and learned the documented tragedy of a life cut short at twenty-six due to a plane crash. It's humbling, therefore, to reflect on how much was accomplished in such a short space of time. Otis Redding's recording career lasted less than seven years.

Yet, virtually every cut on this twenty-track compilation has something to commend it; and the best material absolutely soars. Of course, the moving parts revolve around Redding's agonised, rough-hewn country-soul voice. It is an astonishing instrument that can be deployed to almost any end, whether it's the braggadocious strut of 'Love Man', late-night rumination on 'Cigarettes and Coffee' and, yes, the sleepy-eyed shoulder-shrug that is '...Dock of the Bay'. He is every bit as adept at interpreting the work of others, as demonstrated on '(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction' or his breath-taking version of Sam Cooke's 'A Change Is Gonna Come'. The latter is a remarkable song in its original iteration, but Redding somehow unlocks even greater depths of emotion - the moment he wails "I was born by the river, in a little tent..." the power and history unleashed upon the listener is enough to provoke a physical reaction.

So, we've got one of the most potent, emotive voices of the twentieth century; and on virtually every track he's backed by one of the greatest backing combos ever assembled. Yep, it's the Stax house band, Booker T. & the M.G.s, so we've also got the collective genius of Booker T. Jones, Steve Cropper, Isaac Hayes, Donald Dunn et al. to contend with. Unsurprisingly, every track crackles with an electricity borne out of the band's rare alchemy. There's a fizz and pulse to proceedings, most obvious when the band are rocking and horns are blaring as on 'Hard To Handle', but even the slower numbers possess a coiled sense of energy and purpose. 

(I should also add that, 'A Change Is Gonna Come' aside, every track clocks in at less than three minutes. In, out, job done - every song a little bullet of stuffed with soul and feeling.)

What else is there to say? The Dock of the Bay: The Definitive Collection is an ugly, unwieldy title but as an overview of a career, it's a triumph many times over. Otis Redding's talent burned briefly but with a magnesium brightness. Comedy, tragedy, vulnerability, loss, wistfulness and passion - it's all here. The best soul singer to ever do it? Discuss.

Sunday, 9 May 2021

In One Eye And Out The Other - Cate Brothers

 

Provenance: Saw these cats playing on the title track on a BBC4 compilation show called Southern Rock at the BBC. I'm reasonably sure it was from The Old Grey Whistle Test.

The track was really fresh, true, but the best bit was that the Cate Brothers appeared to be near-identical twins - a couple of healthy looking lads with haircuts seemingly achieved by using each other as mirrors. Criteria enough for me to hunt down the album.

As a sidenote, although I wrote my X-Ray Spex review to coincide with the anniversary of Poly Styrene's passing, I'm mildly pissed off that I didn't do this one beforehand, thus continuing the run of eponymous bands that began with Van Halen and continued with Santana


Review: One of the best things about Southern Rock at the BBC was that it really did play fast and loose with the word 'rock'. Taking a rather catholic approach, it wound up including, of course, the likes of Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Atlanta Rhythm Section (playing 'So Into You' - cool), but also Dobie Gray, Charlie 'Benghazi ain't going away' Daniels and the Cate Brothers. There is a rock edge to the track 'In One Eye and Out the Other', true, but it's more a funk number, and going by this album, the brothers' true metier was funky blue-eyed soul. 

Fortunately for them, and me - and perhaps you, dear reader, if you decide to check the Cates out after this review - on In One Eye... they do this very, very well. Brother Ernie tends to take lead vocal duty and plays the keys (including some real 'come to church' organ), whilst Earl works the guitar and harmonises nicely. It's a pretty hot bunch backing 'em up too - Steve Cropper and Donald 'Duck' Dunn of the M.G.'s, sax greats Jim Horn and Bobby Keys (literally everyone), Jay "I played the solo on 'Peg'" Graydon and David "I've won sixteen Grammy Awards and I'm Tommy Haas' father-in-law" Foster. With this kind of talent onboard, you'd think it was impossible to make a bad album, right?

The opener 'Start All Over Again' sets the tone, a widescreen soul weepy with Ernie emoting over a river of organ, but things really get cooking on the title track; a slippery, stuttering funk number featuring cute chromatic runs, a crackerjack solo from Earl and a monstrous chorus. Honest to God, this is one of my favourite joints not only on the album, but in the entire funk genre.

I recall when I first heard In One Eye... I was ever so slightly disappointed that, title track aside, it lacked any other real stompers, and altogether was a little soft. I should get my ears syringed, because whilst that it true in a formal sense, closer inspection reveals so much that is warm and accomplished. The closest the Cate Brothers get to replicating 'In One Eye...' comes right at the end of the record, the barrelling 'Where Can We Go' wrapping things up in exhilarating fashion. 

What I hadn't properly appreciated was the brothers' facility with writing nagging, ear-wormy parts that don't always hit in the obvious places. Yes, their choruses are hooky, but on tracks like the prowling 'Give It All To You' the chewiness is in Ernie's tough singing in the verses and the incredible groove the band lay down. The breezy catchiness of the chorus to 'I Don't Want Nobody' works, yes, but it's amplified through rubbing up against the nervy chicken-scratch guitar of the verses. It's just well-crafted material played by crack musicians. When I try to explain the appeal of Nils Lofgren's music to me, I always fall back on "good singing, good playing" and the same applies here. I should point out that Ernie Cate is a much, much better singer than Nils (no offence dude), and one of the most underrated soul vocalists out there.

Really, the only track that still does little for me is the sappy 'Music Making Machine', which just about tips into schmaltz with it's self-pitying lyric. You want to shake them, and point out they've already done their 'road song', 'Travelin' Man', a bouncing horn-powered rave-up that would've slotted nicely onto Dr John's In The Right Place. I guess they went for Al Jarreau but ended up more... (NB: I've no idea where I was going here - Al Pacino? Al Qaeda?)

One minor blemish aside, In One Eye... is superior stuff, an album I play frequently, which is something you should look into doing also.  

A bit of fun trivia for you here, by the way - Jay Graydon and David Foster would go on to collaborate in the short-lived AOR band Airplay, and together with Alan Thicke would write the incredible theme music to Thicke of the Night