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"...Takes Every Kinda People..."
After stints with THE ALAN BOWN in the Sixties, DADA in 1970
and three albums with VINEGAR JOE (featuring Elkie Brooks) between 1972 and
1973 – ROBERT PALMER was finally ready to go Solo.
I've already reviewed his
1974 debut "Sneakin' Sally Through The Alley" and its sexy 1976
follow up "Pressure Drop". This 2CD reissue on Demon's Edsel label
celebrates the next stage – his 3rd and 4th solo albums from 1976 and 1978.
UK released 26 August 2013 - "Some People Can Do What They Want/Double Fun" by ROBERT PALMER on Edsel EDSK 7038 (Barcode 740155703837) is a 2CD Compilation that offers 2LPs Remastered onto 1CD - it breaks down as follows:
Disc 1 (38:41 minutes):
Tracks 1 to 10 are his 3rd Solo LP "Some People Can Do What
They Like" – UK released October 1976 on Island ILPS 9420
Disc 2 (35:01 minutes):
Tracks 1 to 9 are his 4th Solo LP "Double Fun" – UK released
March 1978 on Island ILPS 9476
The outer card wrap is generic to all these Edsel reissues
and certainly gives the whole thing a classy feel. Fans will also know that
outside of the "Gold" anthology on Universal – Palmer's Island catalogue has
been languishing without remasters for decades. Although it doesn't say who
remastered these album at Universal – the sound quality is great – a huge
improvement over the dull Eighties discs we'd had for years.
One reviewer is
ranting on about MP3 files but I don't hear anything of the sort - and if these
are sourced from Universal's remasters for "Gold" then they are vast
improvements on what we had before. The 28-page booklet is substantial –
pictures of the albums and rare singles, studio shots, colour publicity stuff,
lyrics to both albums, affectionate and knowledgeable liner notes by CHRIS
JONES – it's a bang-up job done.
Having relocated to the Bahamas and with his 2nd album "Pressure Drop" only just released to the shops in April of 1976 – Palmer was already
under pressure to produce another album immediately. Hence only two songs on "Some People…" are originals – the other 8 are hastily worked out covers. But
cobbled out of nothing – the album is brilliant - and perhaps one of the great
lost Funk-Rock nuggets of the mid Seventies.
It opens with a Bill Payne original (of Little Feat) "One
Last Look" and not surprisingly Palmer makes a return to the mighty Feat on
Lowell George's fab "Spanish Moon". Two absolute belters however come in the
shape of drummers – his pal Alan Powell (the backbeat behind Vinegar Joe)
co-writes the brilliantly funky "Gotta Get A Grip On You (Part II)" while
legendary Kansas sticks man James Gadson (Bill Withers, Marvin Gaye, The Jungle
Brothers and later with Beck and Paul McCartney) gives us the stunning "What
Can You Bring Me". An old Harry Belafonte Calypso hit "Man Smart, Woman
Smarter" was funked up and lifted as a single on Island WIP 6345 but it made
few inroads. The album ends on a high note though with his own fabulously
groovy "Some People Can Do What They Like" featuring Old Grey Whistle Test
Theme type harmonica wailing from Greg Carroll. The album scraped the Top 100
in the USA. Commercially things fared better next time around…
I recall first hearing the stunning groove of "Every Kinda
People" – a song penned by Andy Fraser of Free (lyrics above). I bought the
single immediately and played it to distraction (there is a Remix of "Every Kinda People" on
the 1999 Universal CD compilation that is not included here – would have made a
good bonus track). With a two year layoff Palmer contributed 7 originals to the
superbly crafted 10-track "Double Fun" album – the other two covers being "You
Really Got Me" by The Kinks and "Night People" - a new contribution from his
old New Orleans pal and genius songwriter Allen Toussaint.
The boppin' "Best Of Both Worlds" sees Reggae seeping into
his funky style – the same with "Love Can Run Faster" only featuring more
piano. Again Richie Hayward, Bill Payne and Paul Barrere of Little Feat are all
over the tracks on Drums, Keyboards and Guitars respectively. Things take a
string-plucked change with the lovely "You Overwhelm Me" – a great Palmer
melody. And it ends well with the "Bad
Case Of Loving You (Doctor Doctor)" funk-rock of "You're Going To Get What's
Coming" which is just great.
I’ve always thought Robert Palmer was a class act – not just
as singer – but also as a vessel for other people’s songs. On this reissue you
get a whole lot of both. Bluntly there's a hunk of quality Seventies Funk-Rock-Soul-Reggae
on offer here for not a lot of your hard earned.
Get this fabulous double-CD in your life and you’ll find
yourself sneakin’ those other titles into your shopping basket too. I miss him…