BO DIDDLEY: HAVE GUITAR WILL TRAVEL (1960)
1) She's Alright; 2) Cops And
Robbers; 3) Run Diddley Daddy; 4) Mumblin' Guitar; 5) I Need You Baby (Mona);
6) Say Man, Back Again; 7) Nursery Rhyme; 8) I Love You So; 9) Spanish Guitar;
10) Dancing Girl; 11) Come On Baby.
This is where things start getting a little
stale. To flesh out Bo's third LP, they had to reach as deep down as 1956 — and
what they brought out was ʽCops And Robbersʼ, a wannabe-hilarious blues shuffle
with mostly talking vocals that tell a story about... well, look at the title.
Perhaps in 1956 it was still a novelty, but in between 1956 and 1960 we had
ourselves The Coasters, who, with the aid of Leiber & Stoller, took that
whole «comedy / R&B» fusion to a level against which Bo Diddley could not
hold up. Uninteresting musically and not very funny, the song is one of Bo's
ultimately failed experiments, and the fact that they had to resuscitate it in
order to complete the album is quite telling.
The other «oldie» is the much better known ʽI
Need You (Mona)ʼ, mostly due to having been covered on the Stones' first album
(as well as Britain's sexiest, but completely forgotten, band of the early
Sixties, The Liverbirds, who seem to have covered almost all of Bo's catalog
in their microscopically short heyday) — which is, of course, merely a
variation on the classic Diddley beat, and was covered mainly due to its
lyrics, since UK bands narrating the peculiarities of Bo's biography (had they
stuck to the original ʽBo Diddleyʼ) naturally felt a little odd.
Another relatively recent single, from 1959, is
even less exciting: a straightforward follow-up to ʽSay Manʼ (ʽSay Man, Back
Againʼ) with another bunch of crude jokes exchanged between Bo and Jerome, and
its B-side, ʽShe's Alrightʼ, a loud R&B rave-up along the lines of Ray
Charles or The Isley Brothers — except that neither Bo himself, nor his
backing band really had the vocal qualifications; the crudeness of the
execution may not be quite as embarrassing as his struggles with doo-wop (after
all, this is at least a rousing
number, and one wouldn't expect Bo Diddley to completely miss the boat on
anything «rousing»), but it is still a relative failure.
Stuff gets a bit better when Mr. Otha Ellas
Bates struts into the studio in a focused state of mind and starts recording a
chunk of new material tailor-made for the LP itself. ʽMumblin' Guitarʼ is an
instrumental built around one sole gimmick — make the guitar «mumble», as you
guessed — and the result is a dirty, sludgy piece of controlled chaos that
could seriously compete with Link Wray on a certain level. The other
instrumental is ʽSpanish Guitarʼ: here, the Bo Diddley beat is indeed combined
with an amusingly amateurish «Spanish guitar» part, although he still slips
into blues and rock'n'roll modes every now and then. Not a masterpiece, but at
least hearing Bo try out unfamiliar musical styles on his guitar is more
exciting than hearing him sing in
unfamiliar music styles; I'd rather listen to him «ineptly» incorporating
flamenco elements than lending his voice to doo-wop and soul interpretations.
Good stuff also includes ʽRun Diddley Daddyʼ, a fun
pop-rocker that is not a musical
sequel to ʽDiddley Daddyʼ, and ʽCome On Babyʼ, another fun pop-rocker that
makes the best possible use of about five piano notes and three bass notes, or
something like that. But there is also ʽDancing Girlʼ, with a much-too-easily
recognizable variation on the Diddley beat (actually, it sounds like the exact
mathematical average of ʽBo Diddleyʼ and ʽDiddley Daddyʼ), and a couple more
re-writes... overall, the sessions did help to save face a bit, but not a lot.
Two decent instrumentals, a bunch of scraps, re-writes, and variations does not
a good album make, and it is little wonder that this particular one is rather
hard to find on CD — and that the only song off it to regularly appear on
compilations is ʽMonaʼ — and that we probably have Mick Jagger to thank for that
— so thank you, Mick Jagger, but the album overall still gets a thumbs down.
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