Wednesday, June 11, 2014

CD Odyssey Disc 627 and 628: Bill Withers

As is my new custom when I roll a disc that is actually two albums repackaged on one disc I review them at the same time, but treat them as two separate albums, since that is what they are intended to be.

Disc 627 and 628 are….Just As I Am and Still Bill
Artist: Bill Withers

Year of Release: 1971 (Just As I Am) and 1972 (Still Bill)

What’s up with the Cover? This combo version has a bad bit of art featuring Bill playing the guitar and some black and white photo that looks like it was lifted from the internet.

The original covers are both shown in miniature at the bottom right. “Just As I Am” features Bill looking like a regular Joe heading to work, lunch bucket in hand. “Still Bill” features Bill looking like the same regular Joe (hey, it is called Still Bill) but this time engaged in off-work activities. Clockwise from left this looks like: 1) lurking in parks 2) going out without a jacket and regretting it 3) standing on a street corner and 4) back in the park, looking awkward. Bill obviously needs a hobby.

How I Came To Know It: Bill Withers is one of those artists you’ve probably heard but never really thought about who you were listening to. He sings “Lean on Me” so I knew that song as a kid. Later he was featured on a Tarantino soundtrack, (1997’s Jackie Brown, Reviewed Back at Disc 30). However, what got me to buy this album was seeing him in the documentary “Soul Power” about the 1974 concert in Zaire. Watching him play “Hope She’ll Be Happier” at that show blew me away. In fact, here it is:


You’re welcome.

How It Stacks Up:  I have three Bill Withers albums, these two and 1977’s “Menagerie”. “Just As I Am” and “Still Bill” are clearly superior, and both very close. If I had to choose I’ll put “Just As I Am” just slightly ahead of “Still Bill.”

Disc 627: Just As I Am

Rating:  4 stars

Looking at the picture of Bill Withers on the cover of “Just As I Am” it would be easy to mistake him for just a guy heading down to work a little construction. He just looks so…regular. Then you put this record on and his voice immediately grabs hold of your soul and takes you on a journey.

That journey is a soulful one through the streets of America. These are songs about ordinary people living ordinary lives. Despite the fact that this is squarely in the soul genre, Withers’ delivery, subject matter and down-home feel makes it feel almost like folk at times.

The music is laid back and easy, but Withers vocals are so rich and powerful that even simple topics take on deeper meaning. “Grandma’s Hands” is an homage to his grandmother, seen as a child often remembers his grandmother – through her weather-beaten and expressive hands. In the wrong…er…hands this song could be just a laundry list of grandmotherly things. Withers brings grandma to life: clapping in church, slapping a tambourine, admonishing the boys for running recklessly and interceding to protect her grandson from a beating. Tough and weathered, but gentle and expressive, you feel like he’s singing about your grandma, not his.

Harlem” paints a similar picture – this time of a whole neighbourhood rather than a single person. This is the Harlem of 1971 of course, not today – both rougher and more neighbourly at the same time. My favourite verse:

“Sunday morning here in Harlem
Now everybody's all dressed up
The hip folks just gettin' home from the party
And the good folks just got up.”

Nothing is so beautiful as Bill when he’s feeling down, and this album has no deeper blue than “Hope She’ll Be Happier.” If you listened to that Youtube clip I linked to earlier, you already know what I mean, but if you didn’t go do so now. There’s nothing more stark than hearing Wither’s tortured testimonial:

“Maybe the lateness of the hour
Makes me seem bluer than I am
But in my heart there is a shower,
I hope she'll be happier with him.”

What makes this song so perfect is there is no artifice in Withers’ delivery. So many songs like this have an element of passive aggressiveness. Instead, we have a man wholly destroyed by lost love, but at his core still honestly wishing the best for the woman he’s lost. It’s hard to hear, but worse to miss. While the studio version lacks a bit from the Zaire concert it still gets the job done more than admirably.

Even the album’s other lost love song, “Better Off Dead” fails to be as stark as “Hope She’ll Be Happier” despite ending with a suicide gunshot. On “Better Off Dead” at least we know the character – an unreformed drunk – deserves to lose his girl. “Hope She’ll Be Happier” offers no such emotional chart markers – it just lets you float in misery, not knowing how or why you came to be there. That’s how lost love feels.

There’s little not to recommend this record, which also features an up-tempo remake of the Beatles “Let It Be” (different but just as good as the original) and the slow and sultry “Moanin’ and Groanin’.” I didn’t love “I’m Her Daddy” but even that saccharine paternity anthem entry works with Withers honest delivery.

On one of the songs Withers has a little rap where he admits he wasn’t sure of himself making his debut record, but his mentors just told him to “do what you do, and do it good.” Mission accomplished, Bill.

Best tracks:   Harlem, Ain’t No Sunshine, Sweet Wanomi, Do It Good, Hope She’ll Be Happier, Moanin’ and Groanin’, Better Off Dead

Disc 628: Still Bill

Rating:  4 stars

“Still Bill” is as advertised. It is still Bill Withers, and all the greatness that implies. His rich and steady voice, so perfectly suited to soul music. And it still sings the songs of the people of the street and the routine things they endure to get through the day. Still, it is a slight departure from “Just As I Am” being noticeably more funky, and less folksy. The result is a slightly different vibe, but ultimately just as good.

The album features the classic “Lean On Me” and reminds you that despite that unfortunate remake in the eighties, the original of this song will never be matched. The jump ‘n’ joy in this song, despite the fact that fundamentally it is about troubled times, creates the perfect tension between our darkest times, and the strength we generate when we face them together.

On the other side of the emotional spectrum is “Use Me.” This song takes “Moanin’ and Groanin’” to a whole new level – a girl so bad for you that everyone wants you to dump her but that is so damned sexy you won’t. And the music of “Use Me” matches the subject matter. It is down and dirty music that hits you right where it should – in the pelvis.

Overall, the themes on “Still Bill” have this darker flavour. “Who Is He (And What Is He To You)?” leaves you wondering whether the singer has discovered infidelity or is just jealously imagining it:

“A man we passed just tried to stare me down
And when I looked at you
You looked at the ground

“I don't know who he is
But I think that you do
Dadgummit
Who is he, and what is he to you?”

Whether the guy is onto something or not, there is a menace in this song that lets you know something bad is going to happen before it is resolved. Also, a fine use of ‘dadgummit’. And here I thought it was only Bluegrass singers that don’t like to swear.

And as on the preceding album’s “Do It Good” “Still Bill” features music with some eminently sensible suggestions such as this from “Take It All In And Check It All Out”:

“You can fill up a room with idle conversation
You can stir up a whole darn nation with your mouth
But before you start to show your indignation about a situation
You ought to take it all in and check it all out.”

Good advice, Bill. As for this album, I would recommend you do the same. And with this album and “Just As I Am” available on one disc, it is advice that’s never been easier to take.


Best tracks:   Who Is He (And What Is He To You)?, Use Me, Lean on Me, Take It All In and Check It All Out, It’s All Over

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