Showing posts with label Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2019

At My Wit's End


Nick Lowe : Cruel To Be Kind

[Purchase]

In the Summer of 1979, Nick Lowe's "Cruel To Be Kind"  perked up the ears of radio listeners all over the world, peaking at #12 in the United States, the U.K. and in Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The version we heard is the one Lowe later made this entertaining video for, a reenactment of his August 1979 wedding to Carlene Carter , with Dave Edmunds playing the limo driver. 

It's not the only version on record.


Lowe originally wrote the song with Ian Gomm for the final Brinsley Schwarz album, It’s All Over Now, which was never officially released.

“Initially... the inspiration was a song I loved by Harold Melvin + the Blue Notes called, 'The Love I Lost', and the bass line was the same... we loved that Philly disco stuff from the 70's, The O'Jays, all that stuff, we loved that," recalled Lowe.

This version was eventually released as a B side to Lowe's "Little Hitler" single.


Lowe's solo version of the song calls back his original Philly soul inspiration.

"And I love doing it," he told GQ. " I really love it. It cheers people up. How I do it now sounds quite different. In fact, it was on the radio the other day and I was quite amazed how differently I do it now. If they’re good songs, they really will stand the test of time.".



Wednesday, March 18, 2015

40 Year Itch : Downhearted and Confused





    For 11 straight weeks,  nearly three months,  in 1975 , this McFadden and Whitehead penned smash by Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes was the #1 song on the dance club charts. With MFSB generating that disco sound that would take over radio, Teddy Pendergrass takes on President Ford: 

Saw the President of the United States 
The man said he was gonna give it up 
He's giving us high hopes 
But he still turned around and left all us poor folks behind 

   In the book First Legends of Disco, Blue Note Anthony Brooks says "Some days start off good and turn out to be bad. And you gotta accept it and move on. 'Bad Luck ' just said, simply, 'every day ain't great.' But you gotta get through it. Bad luck is just for a short time. You can have it and you can get over it. And I think people related to that idea. They loved that song. The New Yorkers really loved it because they had problems [ with their economy and city] back then."





In the Village Voice Pazz and Jop critics poll,  the album To be True  ranked #17, the highest of all R and B albums in the poll.