Blue-eyed and Memphis soul summit pays dividends
By redtunictroll Jul 30, 2008 | 1 out of 1 found this Nudge It Up A Notch review helpful
Pros: Cropper and Cavaliere both sound energized and vital; some excellent new songs.
Cons: A few contemporary moments that don't measure up.
On paper itâs a dream match made in soulsville: the iconic guitarist of Booker T and the MGâs writing and recording with the legendary blue-eyed soul vocalist of The Young Rascals. On disc, forty years after their respective chart conquests..., their chops are in superb shape, their songwriting talents intertwine smoothly and they sound remarkably fresh and energized. Cavaliereâs vocals retain the summery emotion of his Young Rascals days, combining soulful phrasing with a horn-like edginess to his high notes, and Cropperâs guitar â both as a lead and rhythm instrument â retains every bit of its defining Memphis identity. In addition to his voice, Cavaliereâs organ gives a few tracks the old Rascals feeling, and the rhythm section of Shake Anderson and Chester Thompson is solid and surprisingly lyrical throughout. The albumâs biggest payoff is the mid-tempo âIf It Wasnât for Loving You,â combining Cropperâs instantly identifiable rhythm guitar licks (and a sweet solo) with a heartfelt vocal by Cavaliere, a hook-filled melody, and a clever a cappella coda. This would have been a huge AM hit in 1967, but might slip through the cracks of todayâs balkanized formats. Also winning are the contemporary soul-blues âTo Make It Rightâ and âOne of Those Days.â The former finds Cavaliere failing to satisfy his mateâs material and emotional desires, with Cropperâs guitar neatly echoing the lyrical anxiety. The latter demonstrates the anguished aftermath of love gone wrong, with a bottom-heavy rhythm, call-and-response vocals and a guitar solo thatâs perfectly woven into the chugging beat. The duo explore more contemporary sounds with the soul-rap âMake the Time Go Fasterâ and proto-funk of âStill Be Loving You,â and Cropperâs guitars turn swampy (and Thompsonâs drums get heavy) for the instrumental âFull Moon Tonight.â Two more instrumentals, âCuttinâ It Closeâ and the ska-rhythmed âJamaica Delight,â are undermined by dated sounds from Cavaliereâs keyboard, and though the same might have been true of the synthesized strings on the soft soul âImpossible,â itâs saved by Cavaliere and his background singers. The albumâs closing instrumental âLove Appetiteâ is likewise plagued by synthesizers on its edges, but Cropperâs charging guitar and Cavaliereâs Ramsey Lewis-styled piano provides salvation. This album delivers what it promises: two soul legends combining their talents into a contemporary album that deeply echoes the past. The real surprise is how vital both players sound. [©2008 redtunictroll at hotmail dot com] Read more Less
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