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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent,
By
This review is from: Soul Directions (Audio CD)
Music as archaeology: I got this on vinyl, still in shrink wrap with a $1.99 sticker saying "Woolworth's TV Special." Music hoarders spend hours discussing such details, like sport fans discuss the texture of astro turf.And this is music worthy of discussion: you likely know Arthur Conley from his "Sweet Soul Music" hit in 1967, and you well should. The melodic bounce was the peak of middle of the road soul--rhythmic brilliance that could compete with Top Forty ranging from the 1910 Fruitgum Company to the Fab Four Apple Princes themselves. But listeners have not been given enough chance to hear soul albums--the voices you know so well on the tracks you don't. Among the great soul people of the era, it is a myth that the albums were--like too much pop top forty--a hit and nine tracks of filler. Soul Direction contains no hits, but the Southern 60's stamp that made "Sweet Soul Music" so astoundingly indelible is in full force here: ballads, funk, cookers--the sound you know and can't help embracing. Its time to look deeper than the local oldies station, and we should all look at albums like Soul Direction
4.0 out of 5 stars
Conley's tragedy turned into great soul music,
By hyperbolium (Earth, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Soul Directions (Audio CD)
Southern soul singer Arthur Conley is known to most for his perfect celebration, "Sweet Soul Music." Based on a "Yeah Man" by his vocal inspiration, Sam Cooke, and co-written with his mentor, Otis Redding, the song topped out in 1967 at #2 on both the Hot 100 and R&B charts and became the lasting emblem of the `60s soul movement. But like so many true artists that have one defining single, Conley recorded terrific material both before and after the lightning strike. This 1968 album was a bittersweet affair that collected singles and album sides recorded just months after the airplane crash that killed Redding and the Mar-Keys.Unlike Conley's earlier hits, which had been waxed at Muscle Shoals, the album was mostly recorded at the same American Studios in Memphis where Elvis would cap his late-60s comeback. Conley wrote half the songs, including the somber memorial "Otis Sleep On," and collected a pair from Spooner Oldham and Dan Penn. Memphis horns resound in "Funky Street," "Hear Say" and "People Sure Act Funny," and Conley draws from both Redding and Cooke in the pleading "This Love of Mine." Conley saves his most scorching vocal for the Redding written and produced "Love Comes and Goes." This is a terrific, deeply felt album that should be in the collection of all soul music fans. [©2011 hyperbolium dot com]
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