Monday, January 20, 2014

NRBQ: "Ridin' in My Car" (1977)


All Hopped Up was NRBQ's fourth album (and first with drummer Tom Ardolino, solidifying a lineup that would last for close to 20 years. It would be one of 32 album releases over their long career. Not only is the title track "Ridin in My Car" an underrated song, the entire band may be the most underrated in history.

Founded in 1967, NRBQ (New Rhythm and Blues Quartet) sought to fuse everything, from rockabilly to jazz as well as rock and country. They also had a huge sense of humor that is evident in such songs as "Howard Johnson has his Ho-Jo Workin" and "Housekeeping", a song so funny that it may well be featured on this blog in the future.

Known as one of the best live bands ever, it was impossible not to be impressed with their no set approach to shows with Pianist Terry Adams beating his piano to death and always in danger of knocking his microphone over. Al Anderson's hands flew up and down the neck of his guitar and he moved very little compared to Adams. He wrote and sang the song although when we saw them, the vocals were sung by Tom Ardolino.

To our knowledge, the song was never released as a single. The song would be named to the Rolling Stone 50 Best Summer Songs of All Time.

While NRBQ had a rabid cult following, they would record and be dropped again and again by record companies due to poor overall sales.

While "Ridin In My Car" was a simple tale of Summer love lost, most of their material required a sense of humor or a sophisticated ear due to their willingness to experiment and not have a particular theme throughout the albums.


Well, I went to the place
where ev'rybody hangs out
To see what ev'rybody
was talkin' about
and over in the corner
all alone with you
was a boy from last summer
singin' songs to you

but he can't sing like I can sing
Oh, It's so hard
and I still think about you
every time I'm Ridin' in my car


Rock critic Mark Deming:
"Can anyone explain why Al Anderson's wonderful and engagingly heart-tugging "Riding in My Car" wasn't a hit single? All Hopped Up also features a handful of stellar covers, including a jumped-up take on "I Got a Rocket in My Pocket" (Adams' barrelhouse piano truly shines), a swinging version of "Cecilia," and a rollicking ride through Big Joe Turner's "Honey Hush," and the band's loosely tight communication is a fine thing to hear on all cuts. And even the album's token weird one from Adams, "Call Him Off, Rogers" could pass for a serious pop tune if you didn't pay too much attention to the lyrics (about a dog with designs on Adams' arm). Just in case you thought NRBQ had gotten all normal on us, though, the album closes with the most extraordinary version of the theme from "Bonanza" you will ever hear. It's hard to say why anyone would want an entirely serious album from NRBQ, but All Hopped Up is closer than most, and proves their charm and their talent is what makes them great, not their idiosyncratic sense of humor."

Lots of people have covered this song, most notably She and Him in March of 2010, which we are including here. You will want both for your Summer car excursions this year...





Saturday, January 11, 2014

Nat King Cole Trio: "I've Got a Way With Women" (1947)


We may never have heard of this song if it were not for Ray Gelato. His cover of this brilliantly lyricized song led us to look back and find that the song was originally recorded as the final track on 1947's Nat King Cole Trio Volume 3. The album was released as a package of three 10' records made out of shellac. There is very little else in way of history on this song other than it was written by Abner Silver, Fred Wise and Roy Alfred. Silver was a productive vaudeville songwriter. Fred Wise wrote Perry Como's "A-You're Adorable". He also wrote many of the songs Elvis sang in his movies.

As for Nat King Cole, he was a legend. Nathaniel Adams Coles was born in Montgomery Alabama. The family would move to Chicago where he would  learn organ from his mother who played in the same church where Nat's father was minister. He would move to California and was provided a recording contract. 

From the late 40's right trough the first few years of the 1960's, Cole had a string of hits and made a large body of recordings. He had his own television show and appeared in over thirty movies including his first appearance as a piano player in the film classic "Citizen Kane".

He had two failed marriages, the second producing the famous artist Natalie Cole. He would spend time living with Gunilla Hutton who played Billie Jo Bradley in television's Petticoat Junction.  

A major smoker, he believed cigarettes gave him his rich voice and even after being diagnosed with a stomach ulcer, refused to stop. He would die of cancer in 1965.

Cole fought discrimination all his life and helped plan the famous march on Washington as well as being active in the Kennedy campaign.

Back to the song. I've Got a Way With Women" is about a self proclaimed casanova who can't miss with women. The lyrics are genius in their play on words:

Some men wanna be brilliant
Some want a lot of cash
Some have a whim for the social swim
Just so they can make a splash

I have none of these talents
Still I'm doin' ok
Please don't think I'm conceited
When I say...

I've got a way with women
They like my dreamy eyes
I've got a way with women
A casanova in disguise
I've got a way of talkin'
and moonlight walkin'
Girls just can't resist
And when i started flirtin'
I'm always certain
They just can't wait to be kissed

I've got a way with women
But one girl made me fall
And out of all the women
I really loved her best of all
See I was doin' swell
Until she fell for somebodyelse's line
I've got a way with women
But someone got a way with mine


So here it is as performed by Nat King Cole as posted by our staff on YouTube and following that the brilliant cover done in 1998 by Ray Gelato's Giants, off of The Men From UNCLE. An album very worth owning.






Saturday, January 4, 2014

Bill Withers: "Use Me" (1972)




Born in the town of Slab Fork, West Virginia (a chamber of commerce name if we ever heard one), Bill Withers grew up in Beckley and was the youngest of six. He joined the navy and afterward moved to L.A. to try his luck (1965).

He worked in a factory while putting out demo tapes around town. He was picked up by Sussex Records and put out his first album called "Just as I Am" in 1971 which featured Booker T.(Booker T. and the MG's) as producer and Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass as well as Stephen Stills on guitar. The song yielded the hit "Ain't No Sunshine," which went to number three on the U.S charts. This is the song that Bill sings the words "I know" 26 times. This would win him a Grammy Award.

In 1972, he would record the album "Still Bill." The single "Lean on Me" was released in July of 1972 and shot to number one. In August, "Use Me" was released and made it to number two on the charts.

"Use Me" has such a great opening hook as provided by Bassist Melvin Dunlap and keyboards by Ray Jackson. It takes you in right away. More than any song Withers did, this one seems like a narrated story, but with lots of emotion:

My friends feel it's their appointed duty
They keep trying to tell me all you want to do is use me
But my answer yeah to all that use me stuff
Is I want to spread the news that if it feels this good getting used
Oh you just keep on using me until you use me upUntil you use me up

Everyone he knows wants him out of this relationship but himself. This might remind you of our post about Kristy McColl's "They Don't Know", which has the same message.

Withers would have other hits including "Just the Two of Us" (with Grover Washington Jr.) in 1982.

How cool is "Use Me"? No fewer than thirty-one covers of the song have been released to date, including versions by Mick Jagger, Liza (I'll cover anything) Minnelli and Rockapella. We are of course including his recording along with a cover by Hootie and the Blowfish and Liza with a "Z" for comparison.