Gospel

Bill Withers “Still Bill” (Sussex, 1972)

West Virginia-born troubadour Bill Withers’ first three albums warmed the US charts and the hearts of millions of listeners with their salt-of-the-earth lyricism, distinctively soulful vocals, and subtle funkiness. I highly recommend owning all of them: Just As I Am, Still Bill, and +’Justments.

As a youth growing up in the Detroit area in the ’70s, I heard Withers’ songs on the radio daily, and hits such as “Use Me,” Lean On Me” (both on Still Bill), “Ain’t No Sunshine,” and “Lovely Day” became part of my DNA. For chart fodder, these tunes possessed a depth beyond most of their popular counterparts. Bill came across as a blue-collar dude who just happened to be a supremely gifted singer-songwriter. That checks out, because Withers served nine years in the Navy and worked as a mechanical assembler for Douglas Aircraft, IBM, and Ford.

As noted, Still Bill boasts those two immortal hits, and man, they still resonate like hell. With backing from members of Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd St Rhythm Band, Withers attained a career peak on these 10 songs. Right away with “Lovely Town, Lonely Street,” Withers distinguished himself from the R&B pack with some tough folk-funk, augmented by violins. Lyrically and musically nuanced, “Who Is He (And What Is He To You)?” purveys low-slung funk as Withers portrays a man who’s suspicious of his woman’s infidelity; it’s an ideal merging of sonic and verbal themes (Stan McKenny penned the lyrics). “Kissing My Love” opens with James Gadson’s killer break of extreme, Meters-like funkiness—not unlike “Just Kissed My Baby,” in fact, which arose two years after this—and Benorce Blackman’s wah-wah-guitar accents. It’s hard to believe that “Kissing My Love” didn’t light up the charts, like Still Bill‘s other singles did.

If there’s one thing that Still Bill proves, it’s that Withers excels at creating simmering, brooding, bluesy funk. For example, there’s “Another Day To Run,” a low-key gem reminiscent of Sly & The Family Stone‘s more understated material before it accelerates into a clap-along, gospel-ish raveup. Both “I Don’t Want You On My Mind” and “Take It All In And Check It All Out” creep in on a stealthy path, with Blackman’s shafts of blaxploitation-flick guitar really animating things in the latter song.

As for those classics that everybody knows, “Use Me” barges in on that famous clavinet riff and rimshot pattern, which will never not make hairs stand up on backs of necks. Those rimshots are some of the most evocative of the 20th century. Bill’s rightly upset over how his woman mistreats him, but apparently the sex is so good, he wants to tell everyone about it. “Lean On Me” justifiably became a unifying hymn of sorts. It miraculously blossomed from a personal display of friendliness into a universal expression of mutual aid. Although it flirts with sentimentality, this undeniable song has medicinal, soul-soothing qualities.

Throughout Still Bill, Withers’ robust yet intimate singing draws you in to his gripping songwriting. It reminds us of a time when the top of the charts harbored high-quality artistry. -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.

Joe Tex “I Gotcha” (Dial, 1972)

Joe Tex (1935-1982) was a Texas-born soul singer/songwriter who branched out into funk, country, gospel, and lord have mercy, disco. No less a keen judge of talent than Little Richard claimed that in the early ’60s, James Brown imitated Tex’s dance moves and microphone machinations. JB proceeded to take them to the bank, and Brown and Tex became rivals, with the former obviously outshining the latter commercially. (Brown even covered a Tex composition, “ Baby You’re Right,” and scored a hit with it in 1962, so real recognized real.)

While Tex had his own chart successes, he seems not to have had a lasting presence in the public consciousness. Nevertheless, director Quentin Tarantino had the sharp instincts to place Tex’s unforgettable “I Gotcha” in his 1992 film, Reservoir Dogs. It’s the lead-off track from Tex’s LP of the same name, and gotdamn, it is one of the lustiest and gruffest R&B/funk tunes ever to storm a chart. No wonder it’s been sampled 107 times… One caveat: Heard with 21st-century ears, the song’s lyrics come across as kind of creepy, even verging on threatening toward the singer’s inamorata. But the bobbing bass line, cat-wail guitar riffs, and soaring horns mitigate such concerns.

Almost as outrageously sexy as “I Gotcha,” the funk gem “Give The Baby Anything The Baby Wants” is stealthier—and as filthy as anything Mr. Brown was releasing in the early ’70s. So it’s a shock when the orchestral, gospel-tinged ballad “Takin’ A Chance” eases in, starting out sounding like “A Whiter Shade Of Pale,” before burgeoning into widescreen grandiosity. “Baby Let Me Steal You” is a slightly more restrained version of “I Gotcha,” and consequently more seductive, yet it still generates plenty of funky friction. The first of a couple of simmering, Al Green-esque soul numbers, “God Of Love” will inflate your heart and put a pep in your step. (the consoling, warm “The Woman Cares” is the other one.) On “Bad Feet,” Tex writes a quirky, catchy soul tune while in poised crooner mode.

“You Said A Bad Word” is almost a carbon copy of “I Gotcha,” but I’m not complaining. If a template is as satisfying as Tex’s demanding, libidinous funk, you might as well milk it. So Tex does it again on “Love Me Right Girl,” appealingly halting rhythm and all. Closing the LP, “You’re In Too Deep” is a low-key funk nugget with a fantastic, descending bass line.

Peaking at #5 on the R&B chart and #17 on the pop chart, I Gotcha is a pretty typical romance-/sex-obsessed record from the early ’70s, but Tex’s outsized personality, robust pipes, and ability to recycle memorable themes make it a keeper. Tarantino would agree. -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.