
Revered in the UK as the “Queen of Northern Soul,” American R&B singer Gloria Jones is probably best known for her 1965 hit “Tainted Love,” which was written by Ed Cobb. (Synth-oriented British groups Soft Cell and Coil later covered it in drastically different and interesting styles.) “Tainted Love” is an all-time classic that Jones redid on her third album, 1976’s Vixen, on which the diva adapted to the disco craze that was overtaking the music industry in the mid ’70s. Not as fleet as Jones’ original version, this one bears a beefier rhythm section for the stringent demands of disco-club requirements. It’s an interesting twist on a classic, but the OG version still rules over it.
The follow-up to Share My Love, her solid 1973 soul album for Motown, Vixen carries some traces of Jones’ Northern soul past in the artful backing vocal arrangements. She was a throaty belter in the Tina Turner/Marva Whitney vein, a style that translated well to the disco and glam song structures on display in Vixen. Gloria’s lover at the time, Marc Bolan, wrote/cowrote several songs and produced the LP with Ms. Jones. (Before cutting Vixen, she had sung backing vocals and played clavinet with T. Rex in the mid ’70s. Tragically, Jones was at the wheel in the London car crash that took Bolan’s life in 1977.)
Now, if you’re a Bolan completist, you need this record. That being said, Marc wasn’t at his best here. Cowritten with Jones, “High” is a stilted, glammy ballad on which Jones emotes mightily, but her vocal prowess can’t lift the song out of mediocrity. Bolan tries his hand at sleazy, orchestral disco with only moderate success on “Drive Me Crazy (Disco Lady).” “Sailors Of The Highway” is a sweeping ballad that almost tilts into facetious Tenacious D territory. Better are “Tell Me Now,” which has the celebratory air of the Faces and the orchestral melodic flair of T. Rex, and “Cry Baby,” a maximal glam-disco mash-up with wild string arrangements, sitar, and hand percussion.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Vixen peaks with the two takes on “Get It On.” “(Part 1)” is an exorbitantly AMPED, disco-fied cover of T. Rex’s only US hit. The tempo’s increased while a wickedly warped synth pulsates through the familiar machinations, and Jones sings like her paramour just promised her the strongest orgasm of her life. It’s so over the top, it’s kind of funny. “(Part 2)” is a much slower rendition that takes the famous tune to a XXX porn set, replete with fried, wah-wah’d guitar squawks and filthily funky beats. Again, it’s absurdly excessive, and all the better for it.
Parlophone reissued Vixen on Record Store Day 2025, so copies should be relatively affordable and easy to find. -Buckley Mayfield
Located in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood, Jive Time is always looking to buy your unwanted records (provided they are in good condition) or offer credit for trade. We also buy record collections.