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Friday, February 11, 2011

Friday Evening Prayer Meeting

*
Maybe the love I'm looking for
Is just a wayward dream
Oh yeah...



Tonight I feel like going back to another Twinight Chicago soul recording from about 1970, which I have in my library on a CD reissue set. These compilations of little-known vintage soul recordings by The Numero Group, which I wrote about a coupla weeks ago, represent something important to me: that first-rate talent grows almost everywhere, and us ordinary citizens would get our fill of swell entertainment without Hollywood, Madison Avenue, Time-Warner, Sony, Disney, and so on.

Listen to the horn attack after the little four-bar guitar intro. That's some top-drawer shit! And the string arrangement is not merely there for "sweetener," but to help sound out the poignant atmosphere created by the plaintive vocalist, Annette Poindexter (the girlfriend of Syl Johnson, the record's producer).

The band is The Pieces of Peace, a congregation of somewhere between five and eight musicians (not clear from the skimpy documentation I've read), which was hired as the house band by the Twinight label during summer 1969. I was entertained to learn, from the Numero liner notes, that this is pretty much the complete band you hear on Young-Holt Unlimited's 1968 hit "Soulful Strut," before PoP signed with Twinight. According to the notes, "neither Isaac Young nor Redd Holt played on that session." (!)

The arrangement was powerful and beautiful, the lyrics innocent and bittersweet. I can think of only one reason, other than possibly a failure of payola, why this track didn't climb high on the soul charts, and that reason is Ms. Poindexter's performance. I don't mean that in a assily critical sense, though, because I personally enjoy it and try to dig in a bit deeper each time I listen. To the casual pop-listener's ear, Poindexter may sound like she's landing north, south and east of every other pitch, and those are the ears that promoters and radio DJs are always surrogating for. So nobody at a Top 40 or Soul powerhouse broadcaster in the mid-60s would likely give her quirky performance, ornamented with gospel sensibilities and half a dozen different kinds of blue notes, the time of day. Sides like this and others issued by Twinight in its heyday were given the "time of night," however, to brighten the hours "east of midnight" for third-shift factory laborers, cabbies, and young African American nightflies in general. In the radio business, this domain used to be known as the "lunar rotation." It was essentially a promotional "limbo" for local musicians, but probably no more hit-or-miss in quality than whatever rocketed up the national pop charts fueled with rolls of hundred-dollar bills.

Wayward Dream, Annette Poindexter and The Pieces of Peace (1970, original 45 rpm release Twinight Records [catalog number not known]; reissued on "Eccentric Soul: Twinight's Lunar Rotation," Numero 013-B), via YouTube, embedded for noncommercial critical discussion and educational purposes.

3 comments:

  1. Good to hear things are going well. Was kind of wondering.

    I hear you on the nasty Winter(s). I loved Elk Grove back in the late 60's, but yeah....Winter. Connecticut wasn't much better, but here in NC it's going to be in the 60's all next week and in the 70's by Friday. Beats where my Dad lives up in Wisconsin where normal mornings reach 23 below with 18" of ice on the lake. Fuck that.

    Hang in. Takes a while for the booze and pills to wear off at our age. You'll be yourself before you know it.

    Thanks for the local soul music. Nice stuff.

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  2. shades of Tower of Power (the horns). Reminds me of drives home after factory night shifts. Another local group (from Harvey), long established there, with a foot in big biz production and that local radio was The Dells.

    So was that a twinight double header, Jack Brickhouse asks??

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  3. 59er: thanks for the good wishes. Today it was 36 F and the environment felt strangely hospitable to human life. But what's this about booze and pills wearing off? I ain't about to let that happen!

    BO: there's long been a Dells single on my list for Fish Fry night, so I'm digging it out just for you, old timer.

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