BO DIDDLEY: THE ORIGINATOR (1966)
1) Pills; 2) Jo-Ann; 3) Two
Flies; 4) Yakky Doodle; 5) What Do You Know About Love; 6) Do The Frog; 7) Back
To School; 8) You Ain't Bad; 9) Love You Baby; 10) Limbo; 11) Background To A
Music; 12) Puttentang (Nursery Rhyme); 13) Africa Speaks; 14) We're Gonna Get
Married.
This hodgey-podgey mess would be Bo's last
self-sustained album of the 1960s: other than two «supersessions» with Muddy
and Howlin' Wolf, he would be refraining from recording new material over the
«psychedelic years» — finally realizing, perhaps, that one of the last things
the world was truly interested in at the time was yet another helping of the
good old Bo Diddley beat. Thus, The
Originator, coming out in early 1966, became Bo's goodbye to his decimated
pack of fans — for the next four years, he would sink in the shadows, biding
his time and thinking about building himself a brand new image from scratch.
In the meantime, this album throws together a
bunch of widely varying, chronologically scattered stuff — ʽPillsʼ, for
instance, was a minor hit going back all the way to 1961; ʽJo Annʼ was a single
from the less commercially fruitful year of 1964; ʽLimboʼ is a re-recording of
ʽLimberʼ from In The Spotlight
(faster, cooler, and spiced up with a snazzy dose of «yakety sax»); and I have
no idea how much of the rest was specially recorded for these sessions, but the
very fact that «The Originator» had to stretch out so far back in time shows
that even the mighty Bo, with his seemingly unending supply of optimistic
energy, was feeling disoriented.
Of course, in some subtle way drawing attention to an old song called ʽPillsʼ in
1966 was a novel move — "she went through my head, through my head, while
I was layin' in the hospital bed" sounds highly relevant, and «edgy», for
the circumstances. Plus, it does feature one of Bo's catchiest melodies, even
if he almost certainly nicked it off some Cuban dance or something. The bad
news is, you still get this song on most of Bo's compilations, so its presence
alone does not justify finding out how well The Originator matches its title in toto.
What else is there? Well, actually, a few of
the tracks are funny blurbs with individualistic twists. ʽTwo Fliesʼ acts out a
dialog between... two flies (how did you
know?), set to a generic shuffle beat, but kinda funny (Bo has always been a
better actor than singer anyway). ʽBackground To A Musicʼ has Bo speaking in
the name of the «background» itself, demonstrating several of his well known
rhythmic techniques at a staged «job interview». Most unusual and eccentric of
all is ʽAfrica Speaksʼ, which is a natural round-the-fire tribal chant with,
indeed, authentic Africans involved in the chanting — a bit of realistic
«world beat» way, way before these things became natural in pop music, and
hence, doing a bit of justice to «The Originator».
On the other hand, there are still predictable
lows — rough, rote ballads (ʽWhat Do You Know About Loveʼ), perfunctory
rehashes of the Diddley beat (ʽYakky Doodleʼ almost reads like a Bo Diddley
cover of the Rolling Stones' cover of Bo Diddley's ʽI Need Youʼ), unsuccessful
attempts at inventing pseudo-new dance moves (ʽDo The Frogʼ), and a strange
pro-school sermon (ʽBack To Schoolʼ) dominated by an electric organ so poorly
tuned that the result is almost completely unlistenable (or maybe the engineer
accidentally wiped his ass with the tapes before starting work on the final
masters).
Overall, it's all in the same ballpark as Bo's
albums from the three previous years — a bit less monotonous than 500% More Man, perhaps, but certainly
unfit for a proper «goodbye record»: not that Bo ever planned turning it into a
goodbye record, of course — however, the
one most wise decision he could have done in 1966 was take a long, well-deserved
break, and turn into a careful «listener» for a while, instead of persisting in
the mostly discredited emploi of «the originator». That he did, and we are all
grateful.
NB: do not
confuse the LP The Originator with a
much later 2-CD compilation also called the same. It is definitely true that a
collection of Bo's bestest deserves being called The Originator far more than a third-hand-derivative LP which
originates insect dialogs and spoken confessions of musical patterns, but rules
are rules: the original Originator
originated first, and even if the origination of the unoriginal Originator originally originated prior
to the original Originator, this originates
no originality for the unoriginal Originator
as such. Is this an original statement or what?..
You've managed to make an original statement in a review people will read just to read your original review. I seriously doubt anyone will ever hear this record, though.
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