Charlie Rich It Ain't Gonna Be That Way - The Complete Smash Sessions (CD)

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Charlie Rich: It Ain't Gonna Be That Way - The Complete Smash Sessions (CD)
The 29 tracks he cut are gathered up here – repeating a long deleted US CD release of the material in the early 90s – and reveal an artist who was hugely talented, but also out of place in trying to score pop hits. ‘Mohair Sam’, written by Dallas Frazier, was a slick slice of R&B-influenced pop with a somewhat novelty lyric. It captivated radio stations and their listeners, as Charlie’s performance seems to epitomise the easy swagger of “fast grooving, slow walking, good looking Mohair Sam”, but elsewhere on his Smash material – many tracks written by him – themes seem a lot more grown up, and a lot less happy. ‘I Can’t Go On’ tells the tale of a man whose lover has left him, and it moves from a mournful beginning through to a storming denouement. Charlie wails, almost operatically at times, and it isn’t difficult to hear in this the basis for the arrangement that would be used for Elvis on ‘Suspicious Minds’ some years later. ‘No Home’, with its sparse arrangement of strings, piano, bass and vibraphone, sounds like George Martin arranging for Roy Orbison and is the perfect setting for Charlie’s mournful tale of lost love in which his velvety rich voice is only interrupted by a piano solo of such bluesy intensity that Horace Silver would have been proud of it.
Rich released two albums in his time at Smash, both gorgeous ensembles of numbers ranging from his wife’s beautiful song ‘Field Of Yellow Daisies’ to the R&B dancer ‘Party Girl’, where Kennedy’s production creates a perfect setting for the tale of the girl who wouldn’t stay home. This CD is a collection of an artist at the very top of his game.
By Dean Rudland
Article properties:Charlie Rich: It Ain't Gonna Be That Way - The Complete Smash Sessions (CD)
Interpret: Charlie Rich
Album titlle: It Ain't Gonna Be That Way - The Complete Smash Sessions (CD)
Genre Country
Label Ace Records
Artikelart CD
EAN: 0029667044721
- weight in Kg 0.1
Rich, Charlie - It Ain't Gonna Be That Way - The Complete Smash Sessions (CD) CD 1 | ||||
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01 | It Ain't Gonne Be That Way | Charlie Rich | ||
02 | Party Girl | Charlie Rich | ||
03 | That's My Way | Charlie Rich | ||
04 | Just A Little Bit Of You | Charlie Rich | ||
05 | Something Just Came Over Me | Charlie Rich | ||
06 | No Home | Charlie Rich | ||
07 | I Can't Go On | Charlie Rich | ||
08 | Dance Of Love | Charlie Rich | ||
09 | Mohair Sam | Charlie Rich | ||
10 | Man About Town | Charlie Rich | ||
11 | Everything I Do Is Wrong | Charlie Rich | ||
12 | Have I Stayed Away Too Long | Charlie Rich | ||
13 | Tears A Go-Go | Charlie Rich | ||
14 | The Best Years | Charlie Rich | ||
15 | A Field Of Yellow Daisies | Charlie Rich | ||
16 | So Long | Charlie Rich | ||
17 | Just A Little Bit Of Time | Charlie Rich | ||
18 | Blowin' Town | Charlie Rich | ||
19 | You Can Have Her | Charlie Rich | ||
20 | I Washed My Hands In Muddy Water | Charlie Rich | ||
21 | Down And Out | Charlie Rich | ||
22 | Let The Party Roll On | Charlie Rich | ||
23 | When My Baby Comes Home | Charlie Rich | ||
24 | She's A Yum Yum | Charlie Rich | ||
25 | Double Dog Dare Me | Charlie Rich | ||
26 | Moonshine Minnie | Charlie Rich | ||
27 | Hawg Jaw | Charlie Rich | ||
28 | Lonely Weekends | Charlie Rich | ||
29 | Santa Claus' Daughter | Charlie Rich |
CHARLIE RICH
If ever a musician deserved attention for more than his hit records, it was Charlie Rich. To several generations of casual listeners, Charlie was nothing more than the ‘Silver Fox’: the guy who sang Behind Closed Doors and The Most Beautiful Girl.The tunnel vision of pop culture has done a profound disservice to Charlie Rich. He was much, much more than those records.
Even listeners who remember his earlier work like Mohair Sam and Lonely Weekends rarely see the full picture. Charlie Rich was a true original in a field that pays lip service to originality but doesn't know what to do with it. An irrepressible eclectic in a field that is enslaved to musical categories. A singer/songwriter/musician in a field that prefers you to be just one thing so everyone else can earn a living.
Worse yet, Charlie Rich was a profoundly shy man with virtually no desire for stardom. He was thrust into a spotlight he feared and distrusted. A quiet, intense man pushed nearly beyond the limits of his endurance to severe substance abuse. A performer so talented and good looking that nobody could stand to leave him alone. A press agent's dream and a promoter's nightmare. Charlie was a gentle giant who would rather spend quiet time with his family and play anonymous gigs in smoky clubs than endure the scrutiny and demands of a hit record and a concert tour.
Charlie Rich began a career that spanned more than three decades at the legendary Sun label in Memphis, recording for Sam Phillips. Without question, Rich's earliest work is his most interesting. It is also the rawest, least disciplined and most revealing. Rich was never more prolific as a songwriter than during his formative years at Sun. There is nothing in his later career that wasn't foreshadowed in some manner at Sun. Unfortunately, however, there is much in these earliest recordings that was lost or remained undeveloped in Rich's later work.
Never before have Charlie Rich's Sun recordings been examined in such depth. Most reissues have taken a Greatest Hits approach, focussing on Lonely Weekends and half a dozen single releases and cuts from his lone Sun LP. In fact, Charlie's catalogue is much deeper. He recorded over a hundred titles for Sun. Many were carefully produced masters; others were rough publishing demos. Almost all were compelling.
We have divided Charlie's music into three categories. The first CD presents every title originally issued on the Phillips International label as a single or on an LP. Note that these tracks are not necessarily carbon copies of the originals. In some cases, we have remixed the original master tapes into stereo, although the original 45s were reduced to mono. In some cases, we have removed the choral or string overdubs that marred the original releases. For the first time you can hear Charlie's performance as it actually sounded in the studio before the producers started painting the proverbial mustache on the Mona Lisa.
The second CD contains a combination of finished studio performances that were overlooked by Sun - for whatever reason - during Charlie's five year stay with the label beginning in 1958. Many of these titles first surfaced only after Shelby Singleton bought the original Sun masters and began issuing LPs during the late 1960s/early '70s. Other titles - so called ‘deeper catalogue’ - appeared during the peak period of Sun archaeology prompted by British and European record collectors in the 1970s. But there are still some surprises here. We have managed to find titles that escaped all this scrutiny. In addition, this CD contains alternate takes of familiar titles that will surprise even hardcore Sun and Charlie Rich fans.
The third CD contains Charlie's demos. Some have been issued before, although many exist only on rare or out-of-print LPs. Others appear here for the first time. These demos are undoubtedly the least polished recordings but, in many ways, his most rewarding. Bear in mind that none of them was ever intended for release. This is a very special glimpse into the development of Charlie's music. Some of it would probably have embarrassed him. During his earliest period Charlie was almost always searching musically. He was taking chances, playing in styles that were alien to him. Some of these experiments were surprisingly successful. Others were expendable failures. Some were abandoned, nearly on the spot. Others gave rise to patterns, songs, even instrumental riffs that would surface later in his career.
Most of the facts of Charlie's life have already been documented. Some of this material is worth re-examining, especially in the context of his Sun days. Perhaps most interesting are the memories of and reactions to Charlie by the persons closest to him during the Sun years and immediately thereafter. Many of these words about Charlie have not been publicly shared before and their speakers welcomed the opportunity to do so. Charlie Rich provoked deep reactions in those around him. Both his music and his personality stirred indelible memories. Nearly 40 years later, these impressions remained vivid to colleagues like guitarist Roland Janes, drummer J. M. Van Eaton, saxman Martin Willis, vocalist Barbara Pittman, and drummer/manager Harold Murchison. Here, pieced together with reminiscences by his widow Margaret Ann, is Charlie Rich's story.
THE EARLY YEARS
Despite his affinity for the blues, it would be sheer fantasy to claim that Charlie Rich grew up dirt poor in the rural South, scuffling for his next meal or a warm bed to sleep in. Such tales of rural poverty may not be far removed from the lives of Carl Perkins and Elvis Presley, but they bear little similarity to Rich's background. Rich was born on December 16, 1932 in Forrest City, Arkansas. There probably weren't many affluent people living in Forrest City during the Great Depression, so the Riches' economic circumstances were hardly exceptional. By the 1940s, the family's finances had stabilized and they settled in Colt, Arkansas (population 312).
Charlie Rich The Sun Years, 1958-62 (3-CD)
Read more at: https://www.bear-family.de/rich-charlie-the-sun-years-1958-62-3-cd.html
Copyright © Bear Family Records

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