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Sunday, 16 February 2020

"Home" by DELANEY & BONNIE [BRAMLETT] - Second US LP from October 1969 on Stax Records STS-2026 and March 1970 UK LP on Stax Records SXATS 1029 (both in Stereo) – featuring Booker T. Jones, Steve Cropper, Donald "Duck" Dunn and Al Jackson, Jr. of Booker T & The MG's with Isaac Hayes, Wayne Jackson, William Bell, Leon Russell and more and Songs From David Porter, Eddie Floyd and Homer Banks (23 May 2006 US on Universal/Stax (13 July 2006 in the UK) Expanded Edition CD Reissue with Six Bonus Tracks and Rejiggered Playing Order – Stephen Hart Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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"...My Baby Specializes..."

Ohio's Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett's second album "Home" hit the shops on Stax Records in late October 1969 in the USA (delayed until March 1970 in the UK) and featured their much-loved brand of Rock-Soul - a bit of Stax meets Atlantic meets two great vocalists who pioneered the genre and could pen a tune or two into the bargain.

As you see from the musician list provided below, the album also featured an impressive roster of Stax talent and players – all of Booker T & The MGs with Isaac Hayes and William Bell too and guests like Leon Russell (the Production was handled by Donald "Duck" Dunn of The MG's with funky troubadour Don Nix as his partner in crime). A true crossover record, it's no wonder the 10-track LP is viewed with such affection even in 2020.

But its CD history (especially this rejiggered and slightly buggered-up CD reissue which is actually in MONO instead of STEREO) needs a bit of an encyclopedia to fully understand, so to the details my groovy 60ts pals...

UK released 13 July 2006 (23 May 2006 in the USA) - "Home" by DELANEY & BONNIE on Universal/Concord/Stax 0025218862622 (Barcode 025218862622) offers a Remaster of the 10-Track October 1969 US LP Plus Six Bonus Tracks (in a rejiggered formation) and plays out as follows (46:34 minutes):

1. A Long Road Ahead
2. My Baby Specializes
3. Things Get Better
4. We Can Love
5. All We Really Want To Do
6. It's Been A Long Time Coming
7. Just Plain Beautiful
8. Everybody Loves A Winner
9. Look What We Have Found
10. Piece Of My Heart
11. A Right Now Love
12. I've Just Been Feeling Bad
13. Dirty Old Man
14. Get Ourselves Together
15. Pour Your Love On Me
16. Hard To Say Goodbye

The CD is configured as above with 1, 2, 9, 12, 13 and 14 listed as BONUS TRACKS. As well as rejiggering the original playing order of the album, it also states the CD is remastered in STEREO when in fact it was mastered and released in MONO in error and as of February 2020 this mistake remains unfixed. The original 1969 (Mono) LP can be sequenced using the following CD tracks:

Side 1:
1. It's Been A Long Time Coming [Track 5]
2. A Right Now Love [Track 11]
3. We Can Love [Track 4]
4. My Baby Specializes [Track 2]
5. Everybody Loves A Winner [Track 83]
Side 2:
1. Things Get Better [Track 3]
2. Just Plain Beautiful [Track 7]
3. Hard To Say Goodbye
4. Pour Your Love On Me [Track 15]
5. Piece Of My Heart [Track 10]
Tracks 1 to 10 above are their second album "Home" - released late October 1969 in the USA on Stax Records STS 2026 in Stereo and March 1970 in the UK on Stax Records SXATS 1029 in Stereo. Produced by DONALD "Duck" DUNN and DON NIX - it didn't chart in either country.

Musicians:
DELANEY BRAMLETT – Lead Vocals and Guitar
BONNIE BRAMLETT – Lead Vocals
BOOKER T. JONES and ISAAC HAYES – Keyboards
STEVE CROPPER – Guitar
DONALD "Duck" DUNN and CARL RADLE – Bass
AL JACKSON, Jr. – Drums
WAYNE JACKSON and BEN CAULEY – Trumpets
JAY PRUITT, DICK STEFF and JOHN DAVIS - Trumpets
ANDREW LOVE, ED LOGAN, JOE ARNOLD and JIM TERRY – Saxophones
WILLIAM BELL and PHIL FORREST – Backing Vocals
LEON RUSSELL – Keyboards
JIMMY KARSTEIN – Percussion

The six-leaf three-way foldout inlay offers a potted history of the trailblazing crossover duo and their second LP by MICHAEL POINT with recording and reissue credits on the last leafs (written in 2002). Point claims their entry in the annals of Rock Music is woefully underappreciated and Michael would be right. Steeped in Soul Music and Stax Records whilst able to put up similar fare with tunes like their own "It's Been A Long Time Coming", they co-wrote "Pour Your Love On Me" and "A Right Now Love" with deep Soul hero HOMER BANKS and "Hard To Say Goodbye" with bassist CARL RADLE. A quick glance through the credits for the outtakes that were left off the album (included here as bonus tracks) and again you can see the co-writes with Radle on "A Long Road Ahead" and "Get Ourselves Together". And even though you can so hear why some of the extras were left off the LP (weakness) – its still a very nice vaults trawl for fans (their rejects don't sound so bad now).

The audio is provided by STEPHEN HART and as already mentioned, is mistakenly mastered into MONO despite the CD and rear labeling it as Stereo. But bizarrely enough it kicks like a mule. The listen feels like an extended singles list from 1968 and 1969 and is a vast improvement on a Stereo CD I had by Ace/Stax from the late 80ts that was both weedy and dull in comparison. As you can see from the total playing time of 46:34 minutes for 16 cuts, the bonuses can be dropped for a future reissue and both Mono and Stereo versions of the LP easily fitted onto 1CD – but alas we must wait and see...

Begun in 27 February 1968 sessions, recordings and overdubs continued into August, September and November 1968 right through until two final studio spurges on the 1st and 2nd of July 1969. The CD listen opens on a Bonus - "A Long Road Ahead" initially laid down in November 1968 with Leon Russell, Carl Radle and Jimmy Karstein playing, then returned to in July 1969 with Booker T on further Keyboards and Phil Forrest on Backing Vocals. It's a goodie and sets the Rock-Soul tone nicely. Next up is the first song from the original LP - "My Baby Specializes" - an Isaac Hayes/David Porter composition that William Bell and Judy Clay made a duet hit 45 in December 1968 on Stax STA-0017. With the bulk of Booker T & The MG's as the backing band, it was laid down at the 27 Feb 1968 session with none other than William Bell singing backing vocals (no doubt he spotted the potential hit even then for him and Judy).

From the same February 1968 recording date and written by Eddie Floyd, Steve Cropper and Al Jackson - "Things Get Better" fills your speakers with Stax Funk – a very Blues Brothers moment as those horns jerk and jab while Delaney and Bonnie declare that they have no doubts – duality makes things better baby. Cropper and Eddie Floyd penned "We Can Love" – a truly joyous baby-I've-been-lovin'-you Rock-Soul dancer. Written by Bobby Crutcher with Steve Cropper – Stax UK tried a 45 A-side with the brass-swinging duet-vocals of "Just Plain Beautiful". Released a few months before the album appeared in Blighty (March 1970) – the early January 1970 British single on Stax STAX 139 had the LP cut "Hard To Say Goodbye" as its B-side. But despite the strength of both cuts, it didn't take.

Homer Banks and Bonnie Bramlett penned the lovely "A Right Now Love" - a without your lovin' arms pleader where starving hearts need some lurve stat. The album ends of a storming brass/vocals cover of Erma Franklin's "Piece Of My Heart" that by the end feels like Bonnie is a channeling her inner Janis Joplin screams (lovely organ work from Booker T and we never do find out who is providing those girly backing vocals). Of the bonus cuts - "Look What We Have Found" feels like a discovery worth making even if Concord Music don't know who wrote it to forward those royalties to.

Prior to "Home" - the dynamic duo had issued "Accept No Substitute" on Elektra in July 1969 and after "Home" three more on Atco - "Delaney & Bonnie and Friends On Tour With Eric Clapton" (April 1970), "To Bonnie From Delaney" (October 1970), "Motel Shot" (April 1971). With a label change to Columbia Records, "D & B Together" came in March 1972 (see review) after which the partnership dissolved into divorce and further solo releases.

I can't help thinking that someone like Esoteric Recordings should do a 6LP/6CD Box Set of DELANEY & BONNIE and their 1969 to 1972 output - get all their stuff out there in one cool remastered place - hopefully sometime in the future. In the meantime, Mono or no, give this cheap but rather cool little CD reissue a spin...

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