BETTY DAVIS: THEY SAY I'M DIFFERENT (1974)
1) Shoo-B-Doop And Cop Him; 2)
He Was A Big Freak; 3) Your Mama Wants Ya Back; 4) Don't Call Her No Tramp; 5)
Git In There; 6) They Say I'm Different; 7) 70's Blues; 8) Special People.
Out of the three completed original LPs
engineered by Betty during her short career, this is the most «quiet» one, if
the term is at all applicable to someone so bent on mixing glamor with a Zulu
warrior image. The «quietness» mainly means that, this time around, Betty was
not able to assemble such a stellar cast to play for her —there are at least
twenty different people credited in the liner notes, but most are relatively
unknown, and, unlike the 1973 band, they do not seem to understand that well what particular sort of «bitch-from-hell»
they are supposed to be backing. Consequently, the grooves are still well-cut
and the riffs are still memorable, but they generally lack the crackle, sizzle,
and sparkle they had on Betty Davis.
Maybe the best way to understand what the hell
I am talking about is to listen, in succession, to the first five seconds of
each of the opening tracks. The bluesy riff of ʽIf I'm In Luckʼ snarls and
threatens from the very first note — the funky riff of ʽShoo-B-Doop And Cop
Himʼ is softer, subtler, and sleazier, and Betty complements it with a softer,
more «sly» and «seductive» delivery than her "if I'm in luck I might just
get picked up!" where you'd really be smart if you thought twice before
picking up that hot little thing. In
the case of ʽShoo-B-Doopʼ, though, she seems to be showing us a less aggressive
side — going ash far ash introdushing a shweet little lishp to her
articulation: "...and when the clock shtrikesh twelve..."
Sssshekssshy!
Overall, there is a little less emphasis on
heavy rock and a little more on hot funk throughout — I wouldn't mind if the
band were a perfectly tight littlwe funky outfit, but it seems to be crafting
arrangements rather than snatching them out of the clouds; no wonder, perhaps —
given how many different musicians there are, it is not likely that many of
them had enough time to gel together. Still, just like before, most tracks get
along well because they have some sort of nifty compositional idea — a
bassline, a twin guitar dialog, a funny clavinet phrase, something to pin it
all to with certainty. That way, even something like ʽDon't Call Her No Trampʼ,
which essentially consists of little other than Betty barking out the song
title, becomes contagious: that clavinet is really «nasty» in a ʽSuperstitionʼ-like
kind of manner.
The title track here is a black-pride anthem to
pre-war and Chicago blues heroes, appropriately set to a series of «swamp-blues»
licks — Betty explicitly establishing her link with the spirits of the past:
"My great-grandma didn't like the foxtrot / Instead she'd spit her snuff
and boogie to Elmore James... that's why they say I'm strange / that's why they
say I'm funky". Lots of sincere feeling, I guess, but somehow it still
comes across as posturing, maybe
because the average pedigree of a Robert Johnson or a Leadbelly does not get superimposed
so smoothly over the Greenwich Village pedigree of the young Betty Mabry.
(Then again, she did spend her youth
on her grandma's farm in North Carolina, so at least what she sings about not
liking the foxtrot is most probably true). Anyway, it doesn't sound bad, but it
is hardly as convincing as when the lady is singing about wiggling her fanny — seems
more like an attempt to explain herself in a predictable fashion (you think this is nasty? go listen to some of my
predecessors!).
Like last time around, this record also ends
with a bit of «crude tenderness» — ʽSpecial Peopleʼ has Betty cooing and
purring to the sounds of soft jazzy electric piano (with a punchy rhythm
section playing along, it's not a «sissy» ballad or anything), showing off the uncomfortable
imperfections of her voice and almost reveling in the amateur flair of it
all. Too amateur, perhaps, but then
there should be a discount for female Zulu warriors contributing to the
blacksploitation scene, I suppose. One notch down from the self-titled debut,
yet still a thumbs
up — the grooves hold and the kettle is still boiling.
Check "They Say I'm Different" (CD) on Amazon
Check "They Say I'm Different" (MP3) on Amazon
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