I finally got around to talking to Donnie Fritts late last year: https://www.nashvillescene.com/music/nashville-cream/article/20985423/donnie-fritts-the-cream-interview
― eddhurt, Thursday, 4 January 2018 19:13 (six years ago) link
Cool. Look forward to reading.
Charles Hughes writing in Country Soul re Rick Hall is a must read
― The Harmony Illustrated Encyclopedia of Blecch (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 5 January 2018 02:16 (six years ago) link
Cover Me: The Eddie Hinton Songbook is an ace Ace import, easily findable for a nice price, on at least one ecommerce behemoth: Dusty Springfield, Bobby Womack, Aretha Franklin, Box Tops, Candi Staton, Sweet Inspirations, Tony Joe White, Cher, Lulu (both of whom do well (a duet might be even better), and a bunch of people I never heard of: one guy just walked in to sell a song, and the studio cats were like omg you gotta cut something, and he did and it's good but he sailed on somewhere---others are still in the biz, but not as singers,, and then there's an early protege of Bacharach and David (he doesn't sound like Dionne Warwick, maybe a little smooth but r&b for sure, and I want to hear him on some B&D songs. Hinton's offerings can seem a bit generic at times, but they're usually good vehicles for better singers, and though his own voice (heard here on demo of "It's All Wrong But It's Alright"), is thin and he tends to strain it, otherwise canny phrasing provides a handy template for stronger vox, as compiler Tony Rounce points out in typically astute liner notes. Don't quite hear Left Banke in the one he does, but do hear it (as a joke on sensitive Southern Gothic x LB-type sentiment?) in some of "Poor Mary Has Drowned," as lead sung by The Brick Wall's Eddie Marshall, future daddy of Chan.(speaking Hinton demos, the well-produced series on UK's Zane label is also worth checking out).I don't like all of these---Willy Deville has always seemed tiresome, Don Varner's track is a Northern Soul fave, so what---but overall, oh mah soul. track list: 1. Breakfast in Bed - Dusty Springfield 2. Down in Texas - Oscar Toney JR 3. Cover Me - Jackie Moore 4. A Little Bit Salty - Bobby Womack 5. Sure As Sin - Candi Staton 6. 300 Pounds of Hongry - Tony Joe White 7. Masquerade - Don Varner 8. Always David - the Sweet Inspirations 9. Poor Mary Has Drowned - Brick Wall 10. It's All Wrong But It's Alright - Eddie Hinton 11. Help Me Make It (Power of a Woman's Love) - Mink Deville 12. Save the Children - Cher 13. Every Natural Thing - Aretha Franklin 14. If I Had Let You in - the Box Tops 15. Satisfaction Guaranteed - Judy White 16. Standing on the Mountain - Percy Sledge 17. I Got the Feeling - the Amazing Rhythm Aces 18. Home for the Summer - the Hour Glass Featuring Greg and Duane Allman 19. Lay It on Me - Gwen McCrae 20. People in Love - Lou Johnson 21. Where You Come from - Bonnie Bramlett 22. Seventeen Year Old Girl - Mickey Buckins & the New Breed 23. Love Waits for No Man - Al Johnson 24. Where's Eddie - Lulu
― dow, Friday, 1 February 2019 00:54 (five years ago) link
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-country/donnie-fritts-songwriter-dead-obit-877617/
― a bevy of supermodels, musicians and Lena Dunham (C. Grisso/McCain), Wednesday, 28 August 2019 18:21 (four years ago) link
Aww. I need to check out Fritts most recent effort, a tribute to Arthur Alexander I believe. RIP
― curmudgeon, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 18:59 (four years ago) link
hadn't heard of that one, will look it up, thanks. My take on his 2015 album is posted on this thread, along with Edd's link to his interview, and other Fritts links.From April of this year, here's a good two-part Alabama Arts Radio interview I should have already linked. (stream/download):Pt. 1:http://www.arts.state.al.us/news_detail.aspx?ID=13261Pt. 2:http://www.arts.state.al.us/news_detail.aspx?ID=13260
Spooner Oldham:http://www.arts.alabama.gov/actc/1/listserverindividual/20151124oldham.aspx
Rick Hall:http://www.arts.alabama.gov/news_detail.aspx?ID=9717
David Hood:http://www.arts.alabama.gov/news_detail.aspx?ID=8670
Jimmy Johnson:http://www.arts.alabama.gov/news_detail.aspx?ID=8565
― dow, Thursday, 29 August 2019 18:01 (four years ago) link
Thanks for posting those links dow - working my way through them and enjoying them a lot.
― Tim, Friday, 30 August 2019 12:43 (four years ago) link
Listening to Donnie Fritts album June: A Tribute to Arthur Alexander , from 2018. He's sounding like a more soulful Randy Newman on first couple of cuts
― curmudgeon, Monday, 2 September 2019 21:21 (four years ago) link
Totally forgot about Arthur Alexander being called “June.” /pvmic
― The Fearless Thread Killers (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 2 September 2019 21:42 (four years ago) link
Me too.
Some cuts sound a bit like The Band
― curmudgeon, Monday, 2 September 2019 22:50 (four years ago) link
@JasonIsbellDonnie Fritts was a legend back home, and a guide for many of us when we started writing and making music. I met Prine while working on Donnie’s album, and when I met Kristofferson and Willie all I had to say was “I’m a friend of Donnie Fritts.” Very proud to be able to say that.10:24 AM · Aug 28, 2019
― dow, Wednesday, 4 September 2019 01:09 (four years ago) link
Aww man, now Jimmy Johnson of the Stompers at 66
https://www.al.com/life/2019/09/swampers-guitarist-jimmy-johnson-has-died.html
Johnson recorded w/ Aretha; & cuts by Etta James (“Tell Mama”), Wilson Pickett (“Mustang Sally,” “Land of a 1000 Dances”), Paul Simon ""Kodachrome," “Loves Me Like a Rock”), Staple Singers (“I’ll Take You There," ”Respect Yourself"), Jimmy Cliff (“The Harder They Come”); Arthur Conley “Sweet Soul Music “
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 10 September 2019 04:02 (four years ago) link
Age 76 not 66
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 10 September 2019 04:03 (four years ago) link
Quite an impressive list of songs he played on.
― curmudgeon, Wednesday, 11 September 2019 03:26 (four years ago) link
Incredible list
― curmudgeon, Wednesday, 11 September 2019 13:33 (four years ago) link
Patterson Hood pieces on Donnie Fritts and Jimmy Johnson
― Brad C., Wednesday, 11 September 2019 14:04 (four years ago) link
David Hood on Jimmy Johnson, as told to Matt Wake---looked a lot better in the News, but just keep scrolling past the ads---and at the very bottom, see links to Wake's in-depth overage of Roger Hawkins, also pieces about Fritts, Johnny Sandlin and maybe others:https://www.al.com/life/2019/09/a-swamper-a-brother-david-hood-talks-jimmy-johnson.html
Bham Newsman Mike Oliver's memory of a late and not so great Hinton gig:https://www.al.com/alabama/2018/11/this-alabama-man-was-the-best-soul-singer-few-have-heard-mvc-confirms.html
Good interview w Dan Penn:https://www.al.com/life/2019/07/shoals-songwriting-icon-talks-aretha-royalty-checks.html
― dow, Saturday, 14 September 2019 15:12 (four years ago) link
Johnson & Hood holding forth just a few months ago:https://www.al.com/entertainment/2016/12/muscle_shoals_has_got_the_swam.html
― dow, Saturday, 14 September 2019 15:21 (four years ago) link
First listen to Reggie Young's Guitar Session Man has my headphones spinning: so much to take in, so much goodness coming at me from all directions, and would be so even if there weren't 24 tracks on one CD. Most thread-relevant elements noticed so far:The only Muscle Shoals-recorded track is Little Milton's '02 version of Vince Gill's '90s country hit "Whenever You Come Around," here with a questing soul orchestra, layered and strong as the ones released like hounds in '60s Memphis, on the Box Tops' cover of Hank Snow's "I'm Movin' On" and Elvis's run with Percy Mayfield's "Stranger In My Own Hometown."Most of this is from Memphis, incl. duh Dusty Springfield's performance of Gerry Goffin & Carole King's "Don't Forget About Me," which was on a single w the Fritts-written "Breakfast in Bed."Fritts' KK bandmate Billy Swan rolls out of Nashville with a fast version of his own "Lover Please," a big late-doo wop hit for Clyde McPhatter :this take is more like what Ringo was doing at his 70s solo peak.We also get the prime of James Carr, Solomom Burke, Bobby Blue Bland, and many others---my absolute fave rave at the moment is Jackie DeShannon's departure with "I Wanna Roo You," here a fast crashy waltz, mostly (slowing down for the bridge, but it's a set-up, like the mellow verses on "I'm Movin' On), and she's often, though not always, wailing the chorus as "I want to ruin ruin ruin you. Ruin you tonight."
― dow, Tuesday, 22 October 2019 00:06 (four years ago) link
Wow
― Beware of Mr. Blecch, er...what? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 22 October 2019 00:07 (four years ago) link
Yeah! And Ace Records annotator Bob Dunham mentions Young's hot solos on the Swan track as prob not the sort of thing released on Nashville product since Mac Gayden's previous work with Area Code 615, which reminds me that this selection is immediately followed by the Gayden-written "Morning Glory," vigorously presented by James & Bobby Purify---they and the Box Tops also did versions of "I'm Your Puppet," right?
― dow, Tuesday, 22 October 2019 00:16 (four years ago) link
Yes. They had the hit on that one.
― Beware of Mr. Blecch, er...what? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 22 October 2019 00:18 (four years ago) link
thanks discogs:
Tracklist1 –Eddie Bond & His Stompers* Slip, Slip, Slippin' In 2 –Bill Black's Combo Carol 3 –Bobby Bland A Touch Of The Blues 4 –Jerry & Reggie* Dream Baby 5 –The Box Tops* I'm Movin' On 6 –Willie Mitchell The Champion - Part 1 7 –Solomon Burke Meet Me In Church 8 –Joe Tex Chicken Crazy 9 –King Curtis & The King Pins* In The Pocket 10 –James Carr More Love 11 –Dusty Springfield Don't Forget About Me 12 –Elvis Presley Stranger In My Own Home Town 13 –Jackie DeShannon I Wanna Roo You 14 –Dobie Gray Drift Away 15 –Sonny Curtis Rock'N Roll (I Gave You The Best Years Of My Life) 16 –Delbert McClinton Victim Of Life's Circumstances 17 –Billy Swan Lover Please 18 –James & Bobby Purify Morning Glory 19 –J.J. Cale Cocaine 20 –Merle Haggard I Think I'll Just Stay Here And Drink 21 –Waylon Jennings / Willie Nelson / Johnny Cash / Kris Kristofferson Highwayman 22 –Natalie Merchant Griselda 23 –Little Milton Whenever You Come Around 24 –Waylon Jennings Where Do We Go From Here
― dow, Tuesday, 22 October 2019 00:19 (four years ago) link
The Joe Tex track is not up to several of his hits mentioned in the notes, where Dunham says they would have picked "Skinny Legs and All," but it's already on another Young-inclusive Ace comp,Memphis Boys. Damm it, whiiiine
― dow, Tuesday, 22 October 2019 00:23 (four years ago) link
Judy Hood, self-dubbed "Swampette" (she's Mrs. David Hood), is now performing weddings* at Muscle Shoals Sound, still located at 3614 Jackson Highway---in the Before Times, revenue was mostly from studio tours, "merch sessions," fundraisers, and. oh yeah, recording---now not so much; they've had to augment. Base price for wedding experience(studio rental/ceremony): $400. Looks like fun, and something to keep in mind: https://www.al.com/life/2021/01/weddings-rock-at-iconic-muscle-shoals-recording-studio.html*Judy: "I am not, by any stretch of the imagination, a bona fide religious leader." She doesn't have to be! All you need to get married in Alabama now is a notarized contract (so nobody has to perform a gay marriage).
― dow, Saturday, 23 January 2021 21:56 (three years ago) link
I did the tour there a few years ago. Did Fame studios first and then Muscle Shoals Sound. A fun, interesting day that was part of a great vacation that also included Nashville, Memphis, Clarksdale, and more .
― curmudgeon, Sunday, 24 January 2021 05:32 (three years ago) link
Oh yeah, you saw the permanent Nashville Skyline exhibit, right? Think there's something like that, since installed, related to the Outlaws and Armadillos: Country's Roaring 70s comp.
― dow, Sunday, 24 January 2021 18:35 (three years ago) link
Um, I don't think so re Nashville Skyline
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 26 January 2021 05:33 (three years ago) link
If I did see a Nashville Skyline exhibit, it would likely have been in Nashville or maybe Memphis . Although once saw a bunch of Jon Langford paintings of J Cash ( and Dylan too I think) at Other Music in NY. But not in Muscle Shoals.
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 26 January 2021 19:09 (three years ago) link
Nashville Skyline exhibit, -- is that the Dylan exhibit at the Country Music HOF?
― Washington Generals D-League affiliate (will), Tuesday, 26 January 2021 19:32 (three years ago) link
This is the one I meant, at the Country Music Hall of Fame: "Dylan, Cash, and the Nashville Cats:: https://cmhof.imgix.net/content/uploads/2019/05/11071546/Dylan-Cash-long-exhibit-image.jpg
https://countrymusichalloffame.org/education/school-programs/teacher-resource-portal/dylan-cash-the-nashville-cats/
Much more here, though don't know how it went, with quarantine etc:https://countrymusichalloffame.org/press-release/country-music-hall-of-fame-and-museum-announces-2020-exhibition-schedule/
― dow, Tuesday, 26 January 2021 22:49 (three years ago) link
Really appealing Memphis Commercial Appeal feature by Bob Mehr, re The Last Soul Company: The Story of Malaco Records, by Rob Bowman, ethnomusicologist and author of Soulsville U.S.A., a study of Stax. He also wrote the notes to a Malaco box in the 90s. That was for the label's 30th Anniversary--for the 50th, a Malaco co-founder pitched him the idea to write "a lavish coffee table book that would tell the company's complete history." (So it's authorized, I take it, but on this piece, Bowman doesn't always agree w co-founder's comments). "It's the longest-running independent record label in American musical history," RB mentions, and and Mehr specifies, "It's existed in various forms: first as a booking agency, then a recording studio, then home to a hot house band, and ultimately a record label that has flirted with and found success across a number of genres from soul-blues to gospel." Mississippi Fred McDowell, King Floyd, Jean Knight, Little Milton, Johnny Taylor, Denise LaSalle, and (I think) ZZ Hill, many more were on there, and the house band also recorded with the Pointer Sisters, Rufus Thomas, and Paul Simon as mentioned here. https://www.commercialappeal.com/story/entertainment/music/2021/03/23/malaco-records-the-last-soul-company-rob-bowman-music-books/4735772001/
― dow, Monday, 29 March 2021 23:30 (three years ago) link
Oh, speaking of Nashville museums, the one of African-American Music is intriguing:https://nmaam.org/
― dow, Monday, 29 March 2021 23:34 (three years ago) link
And speaking of hit house bands, May will see a legit release of the Alex Chilton x Hi Rhythm live album, from a Memphis benefit show, Fredstock---details in here:Alex Chilton S&D
― dow, Monday, 29 March 2021 23:40 (three years ago) link
Just came scross ilxor Alfred Soto's most enticing review of latest Dusty re-collecion:
The Complete Atlantic Singles 1968-1971 collects most of the magisterial Dusty in Memphis (1969), its lesser follow-up A Brand New Me (1970), and a bevy of tracks orbiting the albums like lonely satellites. Yeah, it's all been scooped up before, but the way he describes so much of it, incl. what's highlit in "sparkling new mix," makes me want to get it: https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/dusty-springfield-the-complete-atlantic-singles-1968-1971/Also liked "Old Soul, revisiting the sounds of Dusty Springfield, " in Feb. 8 New Yorker, much more than I usually do the writing of Amanda Pretrusich.
― dow, Tuesday, 30 March 2021 22:10 (three years ago) link
Judging by "Boogie Shoes" on YouTube, most of the appeal of the Alex Chilton/Hi Rhythm live album might be insrumental, which reminds me: here they are with Terry Manning, better known as a producer and engineer at Ardent etc. but his rough-and-ready vocal approach works better with HRS live than Chilton's (comparing just one track to another):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5lyZHzReSk
― dow, Sunday, 2 May 2021 17:58 (three years ago) link
(Chilton seems a bit cautious by comparison---their set was a one-off, but so was Manning's w HRS---filling in at the last minute for a no-show, and just taking the plunge, what the hell---this is the only live track on his album, and really seemed like the only keeper---according to the press sheet, he did a Box Tops Chilton parody for kicks, and was ordered to create an album around it, which mostly seemed like filler, but I didn't listen much)
― dow, Sunday, 2 May 2021 18:08 (three years ago) link
David Hood interviewed just after news of Roger Hawkins' death (keep scrolling past the ads, or blanked space for same, heh), says it was time, after long-ass illness:https://www.al.com/news/2021/05/david-hood-remembers-fellow-muscle-shoals-music-legend-roger-hawkins.html
― dow, Sunday, 23 May 2021 23:07 (three years ago) link
From January---another inviting presentation: Memphis Commercial *Appeal* indeed:
'From Elvis in Memphis': New book explores hometown sessions of the King at creative peakBob MehrMemphis Commercial Appealhttps://www.commercialappeal.com/story/entertainment/music/2021/01/06/elvis-presley-books-from-elvis-memphis-chips-moman-hometown-sessions/4128498001/
― dow, Monday, 24 May 2021 01:50 (three years ago) link
Does sound appealing, but probably would be more so if Bob Mehr had written it.
― Blue Yoda No. 9 (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 24 May 2021 10:26 (three years ago) link
V.tempted by the Elvis American Sound 1969box Mehr mentions---here's an interview w Roger Hawkins in 2019:https://www.al.com/life/2019/08/swampers-drum-legends-hot-beats-and-cold-winter.html
(Also see the upthread link to him and Hood talking about then-recently deceased Jimmy Johnson)
This has some links, and an intriguing quote, “I was a better listener than I was a player and I think the other guys were too,” Hawkins said in 2019. “Because they loved music and they had catalogs of music in their brains, just like I had a catalog of stuff where I could pull out certain things and make it work with newer stuff.”https://www.al.com/news/2021/05/swampers-drummer-muscle-shoals-sound-studio-cofounder-roger-hawkins-has-died.html
― dow, Monday, 24 May 2021 16:15 (three years ago) link
Maybe my favorite part of his, which I was miscrediting for years, is “Rock Steady.”
― Blue Yoda No. 9 (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 24 May 2021 16:22 (three years ago) link
xxxxpst So Chilton does okay after all, though yeah of course Hi Rhythm Gang is the main interest, esp. horns and bass, though everybody steps up--most songs go on a little over four minutes and a half minutes; the studio originals were at least a minute shorter, but but we get more solo turns and full Section flexing, comfortably. Fave is the penultimate performance, "Hello Josephine," where a Hi man starts the vocal, Chilton coming in later: a very robust 7:12 work-out, calm as ever. Also: Motown gets the Memphis treatment on "Where Did Our Love Go," with Chilton as okay stand-in for Diana Ross, though this is one of he shorter ones, as it probably should be).Does not sing as high, loud and fast there as on "Lucille" or "Maybelline." Sounds like Pat Boone looking to go rong on "Kansas City." Any of yall heard this one? xgau sez:On the Loose [Hi, 1976]In which Al Green's sidemen, perhaps disgruntled at Al's unwillingness to record their material, get together and cut it. Some stickler for detail is sure to point out that the singing on side two is completely out of tune, but that's OK--so is most of the singing on side one, which I prefer to Full of Fire. One of the more carefully thought out tracks features a mildly malicious lyric about Green himself, but it's the eccentricity of the music, which sounds as if it includes a banjo, that does him in. Loose indeed. A-Anyway, very good music for a holiday weekend, has me looking to go for b-b-q chicken.
― dow, Thursday, 1 July 2021 21:33 (two years ago) link
In the wake of Summer of Soul and Respect, Fresh Air is excerpting a lot of archived interviews, starting today w Aretha, bookending Wexler and and Penn; going through Labor Day, we'll also get Gladys Knight, ?uestlove, several others. Did not know Aretha did an autobiography!
― dow, Wednesday, 1 September 2021 00:11 (two years ago) link
Dan Penn?
― Gwar ina Babyon (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 1 September 2021 00:12 (two years ago) link
Or
― Gwar ina Babyon (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 1 September 2021 00:23 (two years ago) link
Penn Jillette?
― Gwar ina Babyon (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 1 September 2021 00:42 (two years ago) link
Yeah, in the middle, with Aretha interviews as strong start & finish.
― dow, Wednesday, 1 September 2021 01:03 (two years ago) link
That interview series concludes today w Mavis Staples and Gladys Knight.From a group email discussion, my two cents on Respect:
1. As you've prob read by now, Respect is a helluva biopic, if you have any tolerance for the usual biopic arc---which, as reviewer Justin Chang pointed out is def. the/an arc of some artists' lives . quite plausibly Aretha's. within this '52-'72 segment: her father, as portrayed by Forest Whittaker in all evidence I know of (incl. hos own records, with sermons built around for inst "I Heard It Through The Grapevine," heard on black Sunday radio in early 70s B'ham) could be an overwhelming presence, an inescapable influence, for good and bad (deserving his own biopic and biobook), Also, in his own strenuous way, part of the collaborative experience of her music-making, along w John Hammond Sr (reaching his limit, self-admittedly), Jerry Wexler, the initially fraught Muscle Shoals sessions, and with her sisters, whose fills make the title song even more ir-re-re-re-sistable than Otis's original (otehrwise, his and Aretha's versions might be a draw) Another kind of collaboration comes from unexpectedly table-tossing Dinah Washington (Mary J Blige), deliveringl home truths. I've never seen nor heard Jennifer Hudson before, but her singing and acting are otm, in scenes that take as much time as they need. Would like to see the whole mini-series too.
― dow, Monday, 6 September 2021 19:18 (two years ago) link
Two hours of v. enjoyable streams, frequently sporting singles I didn't remember as sounding this good, also several I hadn't heard at all, interspersed with (not too many)good comments, backstories:
SWEET INSPIRATION: DAN PENN & TRUDY LYNNSinger Songwriter Dan Penn is the master behind so many well loved R&B songs, from James and Bobby Purify’s “I’m Your Puppet” to Aretha Franklin’s “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man” and Alex Chilton and the Box Tops “Cry Like a Baby,” and many more. We’ll talk with him about his prolific catalog of songs, plus stories behind the scenes at Fame Records in Muscle Shoals and American Recordings in Memphis, and scoring his very first with a rockabilly Conway Twitty. Then, from Houston’s Fifth Ward, it’s Blues singer Trudy Lynn, who got her start as a high schooler singing with Albert Collins and Archie Bell and the Drells before going on to her own career in blues and R&B.Playlists and links:http://americanroutes.wwno.org/archives
― dow, Monday, 24 January 2022 17:45 (two years ago) link