CANDI STATON: CANDI STATON (1972)
1) Do It In The Name Of Love;
2) Darling You're All That I Had; 3) Blackmail; 4) In The Ghetto; 5) Wanted:
Lover; 6) The Best Thing You Ever Had; 7) Lovin' You Lovin' Me; 8) I'll Drop
Everything And Come Running; 9) You Don't Love Me No More; 10) The Thanks I Get
For Loving You.
Another solid-to-boot offering, a little longer
this time and without any cheap tricks like re-running two songs from the
previous album (now they re-run only one, ʽYou Don't Love Me No Moreʼ, but at least they had the good
sense to remix it) — which isn't to say that there's a lot of interesting observations
one could make about the record. Everything here is about as plain and
straightforward as its title and its cover photo. Her name is indeed Candi
Staton (at least, I trust that information), and this is her, with a serious
look in her eyes and a lot of Afro-American hair on that photo (I trust that
information, too). And then we have ten more examples of early Seventies' deep
Southern soul, bearing the usual Muscle Shoals seal of quality. What else is
there to say?
Well, there's a really good version of ʽIn The
Ghettoʼ, perhaps the definitive cover
version as performed by a black artist (no offense to Elvis, but the image of
him performing the song in posh Las Vegas venues has seriously undermined my
capacity of enjoying his version). With minimal string participation and
mournful rather than angelic backing harmonies, it manages to inject a bit of
grittiness into the tenderness, and there's a special poignancy in Candi's
singing of the line "and his mama cries". There's even a rumor that
Elvis himself sent her a congratulatory telegram, but the song is highly
recommendable to all regardless of whether this is true or not.
Other than that, the album shares the same
issue with its predecessor — it continues the plan to soften up and
commercialize Candi's sound, concentrating more on sensual balladry than on her
kick-ass, stand-for-your-rights side: the latter is only represented by
ʽBlackmailʼ, which is more sorrowful and melancholic than fiery, and a couple
songs about cheating and lying on the second side. The best of these is
probably ʽThe Best Thing You Ever Hadʼ (no pun intended), just because it is
funkier and heavier than most of its surroundings, but not in any sort of
unique manner or anything. The other grooves are all just about equally
pleasant and equally interchangeable. Every once in a while a hook stands out
sharper than the rest — for instance, the massive push on the chorus line of
ʽDo It In The Name Of Loveʼ — but it would still be a matter of nuance.
Curious bit of trivia: the only two songs for
which Candi herself shares songwriter's credits are two of the bitterest ones —
ʽYou Don't Love Me No Moreʼ and ʽThe Thanks I Get For Loving Youʼ. You could
probably suggest they reflect her own personal experience with Clarence Carter,
but the irony is that ʽYou Don't Love Me No Moreʼ features Clarence himself as co-writer, so there's some
kind of Fleetwood Mac-style shit for you there. (Then again, scratch that, because that's the
one taken from the first album, so it must have been written even before Candi
and Clarence became properly romantically engaged). Nevertheless, it is impossible
to tell which songs are more credible and convincing — the ones where she
swears that "I'll drop everything and come running" or the ones
where she gets no thanks for that — and this kind of consummate artistry makes
the whole thing both befuddling and intriguing at the same time. If only the
songs had a few more twists and turns to them — but even as they are, what's
wrong with a little bit of raw love-and-hate material, set to generic, but
well-performed R&B melodies? Count this as a no-thumbs-up recommendation.
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