The Reverend
Released in 1975, this is the album that consolidated my
appreciation of the brilliance of Al Green. I will have been aware of his
genius during the early 70s with his string of hits, but this record collected
the majority of those songs by which his distinctive silky soul funk has been
defined.
As well as loving my poles of pretty folk/Americana and
heavy rock, I have always also loved soul music [which is hardly an astonishing
range]. I’ve written elsewhere that the first albums I bought were in fact
Wilson Pickett, The Four Tops and an Atlantic soul selection, albums I
threw/gave away after buying and feeling I had to adhere wholly, and
ridiculously, to Hendrix and similar psychedelic, underground music – and those soul albums have subsequently been replaced. But I bought and kept the Green after that late
60s, teenage nonsense.
Whilst I haven't seen Al Green live, nor a great range
of soul artists, I feel privileged that I did get to see The Stylistics, The
Detroit Spinners, Sister Sledge and Jimmy
Ruffin, as well as Hot Chocolate [different soul skew, I know] a little later, and then the great The Isley
Brothers, but much later in their career.
This preamble is probably somewhat of a filler as it is hard
to describe at any illuminating length Al Green’s soul sound: it is so distinct
and famous that the attempt does seem more superfluous than usual when writing
about a genuinely great talent [Rolling
Stone place him at 66 in their list 100
Greatest Artists Of All Time, but I’m sure I’d have him higher]. The
relevance of the history of my love of soul is in how Green epitomised its
spirit in those measured but funky grooves, the lyrics about enduring love, and
the stunning expressive sweetness of his vocal.
It is that voice of course – quite restrained in terms of
volume, but gliding around and around at his falsetto with such soulful feeling
– yet those arrangements too: the funky female chorus interjections, stabs of
horns, the rolling organ grooves. Movement encapsulated in music. Obviously it’s
sexual.
The opening track Tired
of Being Alone introduced those distinctive horn hits. Green groans and
squeals as if he is right there in that moment, stuttering as he conveys his
urge and need and the seduction of it all. Third I’m
Still in Love With You lets the horns introduce again, then he almost
whispers the premise of his singing – female vocal support echoing bits of the
message – and there he goes again, emoting with such genuine yearning and
persuasion, all wrapped up in the love.
Then there’s fifth How
Can You Mend a Broken Heart. So slow, so pained, so glorious. The organ
pumps brooding empathy in the background, strings layering their own pain,
then menace [even a quick mimetic ‘breeze’]. And throughout, Green’s voice is
all questioning and despair for mending, the repetition rising in an
agonising rhetorical climb. Sixth Let’s Stay
Together – here we go: horn jabs, organ wisps and rolls, a funkier rhythm,
chorus supporting with together, good or bad, happy or sad, such reasoning in his declaration of that enduring
love already mentioned as a key theme.
The coolest picture there is of Green, so here it is again |
I’ve purposefully focused on those slow, sensitive numbers.
There are upbeat tracks, like the wonderful Here
I Am [Come and Take Me] where the horns are more active and strutting
throughout, the rhythm chugging within the familiar organ’s increased huff and
puff, so an honourable mention here as well to Green’s musical collaborator/engineer/arranger
Willie Mitchell.
All of this nostalgic revisiting of Green’s music during the
soul 70s, and listening as I write this, reminds me of how much I lived
it then. As a longhair who headbanged to so much heavy rock of the time I also had
my soul/disco alter-ego where I’d don a three-piece suit or velvet jacket
and go to the local nightclub to dance so-smooth all night to those cool
grooves. I’m sure it was smooth –
even if in this picture I look rather foppish. I’m certain it is just an
aberrant stance. And I don’t think those background flowers help.....
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