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https://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Color-Love-Terry-Callier/dp/B001EIK7IC?crid=3SJYWCF7M70GG&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.SsnABFD-_UzrJPbVb37E0Q.dnzFDBSCBfL4D-mvHcKBKsCARscsJp8TQJY-6UeFLfU&dib_tag=se&keywords=602517829749&qid=1709685711&sprefix=602517829749%2Caps%2C67&sr=8-3&linkCode=ll1&tag=mabasreofcdbl-21&linkId=e53edcf027f4f0e164f9120735a0ccd5&language=en_GB&ref_=as_li_ss_tl
"...All Those Notes
Won't Take The Pain Away..."
At about 1:58 into the
astonishing "Dancing Girl" (the opening nine-minute track of
"What Color Is Love") it gets very quiet and the acoustic guitar
holds the speakers alone – then Don Myrick's tasteful sax work floats in
followed by keyboard flourishes and some wickedly arranged strings by Charles Stepney.
The effect is absolutely magical…
And after you've put your jaw
back into place - you're left standing there with a genuine incomprehension…how
has something this lovely and genuinely soulful been forgotten? Why isn't this
huge?
"What Color Is
Love" was released on LP in March 1973 in the USA on Cadet CA 50019 and is
the second of three albums TERRY CALLIER made for the Chess offshoot label
Cadet in the Seventies – the first was "Occasional Rain" in 1972 (see
separate review) and the third was "I Just Can't Help Myself" in late
1973 (see review for Japanese CD import).
Both "What Color Is
Love" and "Occasional Rain" are part of Universal’s “ORIGINALS”
CD reissue series – Jazz, Soul, Fusion and Latin LPs reissued and remastered
onto CD from a multitude of labels under the Universal umbrella. All use
generic artwork (the originals name and band on the left of the sleeve as
pictured above) and are gatefold card digipaks issued at mid-price. Although
the card digipaks are aesthetically pleasing as mini-repro LP sleeves,
unfortunately most come without booklets - this album’s recording credits on
the inner flap for instance are barely legible. Which is a bummer because if
ever an album deserved fresh liner notes, history, photos, a new interview -
but alas…
Released on CD in March 2008
- "What Color Is Love" by TERRY CALLIER on Verve Originals
B0011921-02 (Barcode 602517829749) is a straightforward transfer of the album
onto CD and plays as follows (40:44 minutes):
1. Dancing Girl
2. What Color Is Love
3. You Goin' Miss Your
Candyman
4. Just As Long As We’re In
Love
5. Ho Tsing Mee (A Song Of
The Sun)
6. I'd Rather Be With You
7. You Don't Care
The good news is that the
Remaster is beautiful - the tapes transferred by a name I’ve seen on hundreds
of quality reissues - KEVIN REEVES. So mellow, so lovely… a great job done.
As well as the wonderful breath of
"Dancing Girl" (lyrics above) - highlights include the huge build up
on Side One’s closer “You Goin’ To Miss Your Candyman” (co-written with Phyllis
Braxton), the “I-must-hit-the-road but I wanna…” soft-soul of "I'd Rather
Be With You" (co-written with Larry Wade and Jerry Butler) and the so 5th
Dimension girly vocals of Kitty Haywood, Shirley Wahls and Vivian Harrell on
"You Don't Care" – a song so up with hippy-love-and-harmony that it
may have some of you going to work in a sunny disposition on the drizzliest of
Monday mornings…
PHIL UPCHURCH features on
Guitar throughout, while another soul-hero associated with the album is CHARLES
STEPNEY who arranged, conducted and produced the project to such sweet effect
(also played keyboards). He was involved in The Rotary Connection with Minnie
Riperton, produced four albums with The Dells and even twiddled the knobs on
the iconic and now much-vaulted psych-blues-fusion album "Electric
Mud" by Muddy Waters. I'd personally scour down anything he had a hand in
- a genius...
Like Marvin Gaye's
"What's Going On", Donny Hathaway's "Extension Of A Man",
Stevie Wonder's "Innervisions" and Callier's predecessor to this
"Occasional Rain" - this is a proper soul album - a gem all the way
through and still beautiful and inspiring to this day - some 30/40 years after
the event. Why isn’t the LP artwork of this masterpiece on someone's t-shirt
somewhere as the ultimate street-cool – who knows? But you owe it to yourself
to check it out.
In his later years Terry Callier had morphed (like Richie Havens) into a
sort of elder statesman of Soul - still spreading his gospel of love and
understanding (check out "Timepeace" from 1998 - unbelievably good
and relevant to the now and not just past glories). I've warbled on a bit I
know but Callier’s run of three albums on Cadet in the Seventies deserve it...