Rev. James Cleveland: Where is Your Faith

James Cleveland: Where is Your Faith

The Reverend Dr. James Cleveland, read more from Wikipedia

Julkaisupaikka on kesäkuu 19, 2009 at 3:35 ip Kommentoi
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Muscle Shoals Keyboard Legend Barry Beckett in His Own Words By Barney Hoskins

Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section members Roger Hawkins and David Hoo.

When it got to Paul Simon, that’s when it really developed. That was the first time we cut a true pop act. Of course the reason he came down was to get a black sound. He liked what we got on the Staples’ ‘I’ll Take You There’. We cut ‘Mardi Gras’ in thirty minutes, so he pulls out six more songs and asks which ones we wanna cut. We said, ‘This is it, if we don’t jump on this one, we’re losing our chance.’” Barney Hoskyns, Sonic Boomers

Originally Published: 06/15/2009, Rock’s Backpages

Julkaisupaikka on at 3:19 ip Kommentoi
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Naomi Shelton and the Gospel Queens

Naomi Shelton & the Gospel Queens

“Naomi Shelton is no ordinary gospel singer. Though she, like many others, grew up singing with her sisters in their Alabama church, she has also spent much of her life in the soul clubs around New York, and her 45s, “41st St. Breakdown” and “Wind Your Clock” b/w “Talking ‘Bout a Good Thing,” have long been revered and prized by funk DJs around the globe. Now, with her first official full-length release coming this May, it’s clear that her singing is equally influenced by both facets of her life. This is soul music – informed by the church, perhaps, but soul music nonetheless, relatable to all. Which means that What Have You Done, My Brother?, an uplifting record that conveys Naomi’s energy, her excitement, her love of music, her compassion, is no ordinary album.

This humility, this generosity of spirit, is also on display at her live shows. From her weekly Friday-night gigs at New York’s Fat Cat, where former James-Brown bassist Fred Thomas helps to fill out the Driver-led ensemble, to special performances at Daptone Revue’s, great care is taken to make sure everyone in the audience feels connected to the music, and in turn, to Naomi herself.

What Have You Done, My Brother? is an extraordinary album by a woman who sings directly from her soul, whose experience cannot be duplicated, whose authenticity cannot be disputed. It’s an album whose positivity, no matter your beliefs, is immediately felt. An album that exudes a happiness, and a hopefulness, that is necessary now more than ever.

Cliff Driver is the musical director of the group, and leads the band with his inimitable honky-tonk piano style. Jimmy Hill, the organist on the record, leads his own blues and R&B band and has a pedigree rivaling Driver himself, including a stint in the late sixties backing Wilson Pickett. The record also features guitarist Tommy “TNT” Brenneck and Bosco Mann, both of Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings and each a producer in their own right. Brenneck is also part of The Budos Band, The Menahan Street Band, and heads his own imprint, Dunham Records. His country approach to rhythm-and-blues guitar handily won him a place at the table with Driver, who often features Tommy’s twangy guitar figures in his arrangements. The drums on the record were played by Brian Floody, a fixture on the bluesier end of the New York jazz scene who beats an indispensable if understated pulse.” Daptone Records, Press Release

Julkaisupaikka on kesäkuu 17, 2009 at 6:32 ip Kommentoi
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Chris Gaffney Tribute – The Manof Somebody’s Dreams

Hacienda Brothers with Dan Penn: What’s Wrong With Right (Live)

“A founding member of the Hacienda Brothers and a renowned west coast country-soul singer/songwriter, Chris Gaffney moved people as much with his smile as with his trademark croon. Gaffney passed away in 2008 after a courageous battle with liver cancer and is survived by his family and the litany of musical heroes he called friends and collaborators.

The track list reads like a who’s who of country, rock and americana, with heavyweight friends like Alvin, Joe Ely, Los Lobos, Calexico, Alejandro Escovedo, Tom Russell, James McMurtry, fellow Hacienda Brother Dave Gonzalez and more, all weighing in with their versions of Gaffney’s classic country tunes.” Yep Roc Records

Julkaisupaikka on at 6:11 ip Kommentoi
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Bettye LaVette’s new iTunes-only EP

Bettye LaVette & Bon Jovi: A Change is Gonna Come (Live, 2009)

“Vanity Fair Daily: So the new EP is named after “A Change is Gonna Come.” When did you first sing that song?

Bettye LaVette: Maybe a week after Sam [Cooke] did. I mean, it’s a song that everybody sung. I’m very happy about the resurgence of it and the recognition of it, but it wasn’t that big, you know, when it came out. It became much more significant after Sam died [in 1964, at the age of 33], but only because Sam had died. It was many years later that somebody, probably somebody white, associated it with the Civil Rights struggle. And now it’s turned into something else. But I’m very glad that it did, because it’s Sam’s song.

But on the new EP, you sing jazz and soul classics, which might seem more expected.

Well, all this while, that y’all weren’t hearing about me, these are the songs I was doing for $50 a night. I was working in places where maybe it was just me and my keyboard player. So these are songs that I’ve always done, other than “A Change is Gonna Come.”

My manager, Jim Lewis, who has now passed away but who got me around 1967, agreed that my waistline was small and my booty was big, but he told me I couldn’t sing. And I’m like, “But I’ve got a record in the chart,” and he said, “That’s cause everybody doesn’t know you can’t sing. But if these records don’t sell, you’re gonna have to know how to sing.” And I was of course resentful, and hostile. I had a record selling, that was in the charts, and he took me to see Billy Eckstine, and Billy Eckstine hadn’t had a damn record in 20 years. And Jim took me to the dressing room and said, “Billy, I want you to meet a young lady who wants to be a singer.” Oh, it broke my heart. And I couldn’t say anything.

But Jim showed me how I could always sing. He said, “Just keep learning songs. Any song you like. Any song. Don’t make no difference which song it is.” I had records with people the whole while I was with him, but he didn’t think very much of them. And as it turns out, he was right.”” Michael Hogan, Vanity Fail

Julkaisupaikka on at 5:52 ip Kommentoi
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Philadelphia Soul

Billy Paul: Me & Mrs. Jones (1972)

“As usual with city-wide movements, it was a case of the right people coming together in the right place at the right time. The right people: classically trained songwriter-arranger-producer Thom Bell and producers-songwriters-label heads Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff; ambitious vocal groups willing to take some chances; and a wealth of talented musicians who formed a house band known as MFSB, which could stand head and shoulders with Motown’s Funk Brothers or Stax’s Booker T. & The MGs. (The abbreviation is short for “Mother Father Sister Brother,” by the way.) Bell, Gamble, and Huff had all been kicking around successfully for a while. Gamble and Huff helped craft late-’60s hits for The Intruders, Archie Bell & The Drells, and others; those songs now sound like the missing link between the ’60s and the ’70s. After cutting his teeth on the Cameo label, Bell was already on to the next thing with string-and-harmony-drenched hits for The Delfonics like “La-La Means I Love You” and “Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind This Time).” Sometimes working together and other times apart, they helped steer soul toward the intricately orchestrated, carefully arranged but tangibly organic, irresistibly catchy sounds that became known as Philadelphia Soul. (Or Philly Soul, or the Philadelphia Sound, or to borrow the title from MFSB’s hit theme song for Soul Train, The Sound Of Philadelphia.)” A.V. Club

Julkaisupaikka on kesäkuu 16, 2009 at 7:43 ap Kommentoi
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Barry Beckett R.I.P.

Tribute To Barry Beckett (Bob Seger: Down on meanstreet)

“As a studio musician in the 1960s, Mr. Beckett played in the band affiliated with Fame Studios, the production house that turned an unlikely Southern town, Muscle Shoals, Ala., into a center of indigenous American popular music. The band, known as the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section and also called the Swampers, split from Fame in 1969 and, helped by the producer Jerry Wexler, created its own studio, the Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, in nearby Sheffield.

Either with the Rhythm Section — which also included the guitarist Jimmy Johnson, the bassist David Hood and the drummer Roger Hawkins — or on his own, Mr. Beckett played behind a remarkable list of performers. They include Aretha Franklin, the Staple Singers, Percy Sledge, J. J. Cale, Boz Skaggs, Paul Simon — he played the organ solo on Mr. Simon’s “Kodachrome” — Bob Seger and Leon Russell. The Swampers were immortalized in Southern rock ’n’ roll when the band Lynyrd Skynyrd tipped hat to them in the 1974 hit “Sweet Home Alabama”” Bruce Weber, New York Times

Julkaisupaikka on at 7:12 ap Kommentoi
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Around Nashville

A trip to Music City should include a visit to the Country Music Hall of Fame, the Grand Ole Opry, Opryland and many more landmarks, Jim Farberm New York Daily News

Julkaisupaikka on kesäkuu 15, 2009 at 7:59 ip Kommentoi
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Holly Williams loves stripped-down music

Holly Williams: Without Jesus Here With Me (only song, not video)

““I don’t want to reject country music because obviously that is what made my family,” she says. “But I was not raised on country. We listened to everything. I love stripped-down music like Nick Drake and Leonard Cohen. But I have to be careful in interviews in Nashville because if I say I don’t listen to country radio, I sound like I am being snobbish. It is a very political world. I love Dolly Parton because she is a great songwriter but I also love Radiohead. But in Nashville they have never heard of those people. Even Bob Dylan is considered way out there.” Bernadette McNulty, Telegraph

Julkaisupaikka on kesäkuu 14, 2009 at 12:10 ip Kommentoi
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Huey Long R.I.P.

The Ink Brothers (medley)

“And so began an 80-year career in jazz and popular music. For the rest of the century Mr. Long, who took up the guitar in 1933, performed with an extensive list of greats in a journey that began with Dixieland, moved into swing and jumped forward to bebop. Along the way, he spent nine months in 1945 as a guitarist and singer with the Ink Spots, the enormously popular and influential vocal quartet that paved the way for rhythm and blues and rock ’n’ roll.

He died on Wednesday in Houston, the last surviving Ink Spot from the days when the group still had some of its original members. He was 105.” William Grimes, New York Times

Julkaisupaikka on kesäkuu 13, 2009 at 7:42 ap Kommentoi
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