Ilmoitus on sulkeutunut

Kuvaus

Bobby Purify – Better To Have It (2005) CD Soul, Blues

Label:Proper Records (2) – PRPCD022

Format:CD, Album

Country:Europe

Released:Jul 2005

Genre:Funk / Soul

Style:Rhythm & BluesSoul

 

Tracklist

1Better To Have It2:53

2I'm Qualified3:02

3Things Happen3:52

4What's Old To You Written-By – Ben Moore (2) 3:01

5Forever Changed4:09

6My Life To Live Over3:57

7Nobody's Home3:34

8Somebody's Gotta Do It4:32

9Hate To See You Go3:31

10The Pond4:28

11Testimony Of A Fool3:19

12You Make Me Dig3:29

13Only In America4:01

 

Companies, etc.

Credits

Notes

6-panel digipack.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 8 0552 03022 9
  • Matrix / Runout: deluxe PRPCD022 01
  • Mastering SID Code: IFPI L135
  • Mould SID Code: IFPI 04AE

 

Better to Have It Review

by Michael Berick / AMG

 The early to mid-2000s witnessed the recording return of such soul giants as Solomon Burke and Al Green. While Bobby Purify doesn't rank up with these legends, his return is a welcome one too. Purify (aka Ben Moore) was not the first Bobby Purify -- as in James & Bobby Purify, the R&B duo who scored the '60s soul-pop smash "I'm Your Puppet." He only became "Bobby Purify" in the early '70s and sang on a latter-day British hit version of "Puppet." Moore/Purify went on to have a successful career in the gospel field, including a Grammy nomination for his 1982 He Believes in Me.

After going blind in 1998, he quit performing. Better to Have It stands as a triumphant return to music. He wisely teams up with "Puppet" co-writer Dan Penn, who serves the album's producer and co-writes 12 of the disc's 13 songs. Penn surrounds Purify with the cream of Muscle Shoals musicians (bassist David Hood, guitarist Jimmie Johnson, and Penn's longtime collaborator Spooner Oldham on keyboards) as well as Memphis Horns trumpeter Wayne Jackson and post-Booker T.-era MG keyboardist Carson Whitsett. Together they create a classic soul sound for Purify. While nothing here eclipses "Puppet," there definitely is much to enjoy. On songs like the glorious title track, the Motown-flavored "Things Happen," and the easygoing "You Make Me Dig," Purify and company serve up quintessential Southern soul with arrangements grooved to a laid-back blend of horns, keyboards, and guitar. Purify's robust, sixty-year-old-plus voice possesses both a smoothness and a grittiness, suggesting both the church and the street. It's a joy to listen when it all comes together, as in the marvelous R&B ballad "Testimony of a Fool." Occasionally, the album does go overboard. For example, the spoken intro to "I'm Qualified" feels a little old-fashioned and the disc closer, "Only in America," is well meaning but overly earnest. However, even the slightly silly story-song "The Pond" gets redeemed by Purify's commanding presence. Be it the '60s or the 2000s, Better to Have It stands as a quality example of Southern soul for any era.

 

James & Bobby Purify Biography

by Mark Deming / AMG

Shake a Tail Feather: The Best of James & Bobby Purify

Floridians James & Bobby Purify were a soulful vocal duo who scored a major chart hit in 1966 with "I'm Your Puppet," which rose to the Top Ten on both the pop and R&B charts. While they were often compared with Sam & Dave, James & Bobby Purify excelled with more emotionally complex material and measured tempos, often singing from the perspective of men struggling with the hard facts of love and life. The two traded off lead vocals when they weren't singing close harmonies, and their best material featured outstanding accompaniment from the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Their debut album, 1967's James & Bobby Purify, was the best LP of their career, while 2002's Shake a Tail Feather: The Best of James & Bobby Purify is an outstanding career overview.

Singer and guitarist Robert Dickey was a journeyman R&B musician who had been playing professionally since his teens when he joined the Dothan Sextet, a regionally popular soul group based in Pensacola. After Dickey had settled into his gig, the combo added a backing vocalist, James Purify, who was also Dickey's cousin, and when lead singer Sam McClain (aka Mighty Sam) left the group, Purify was promoted as McClain's replacement. Don Schroeder, a producer, promoter, and radio DJ in Pensacola, checked out the Dothan Sextet on the recommendation of McClain, and he was impressed with Dickey and Purify, striking a deal to manage them as solo performers. Schroeder sent them to Muscle Shoals, Alabama, to work with celebrated producer and songwriter Dan Penn, and while working on a session with Dickey, Penn suggested they try a song he'd written with frequent collaborator Spooner Oldham. While working out an arrangement for "I'm Your Puppet," Purify's backing vocals became a co-lead, with the two cousins showing an impressive give and take in the studio. Deciding they worked best as a duo, Dickey changed his stage name to Bobby Purify, and he and James Purify landed a deal with Bell Records, which issued "I'm Your Puppet" in September 1966. During the song's 14-week run on the singles charts, it peaked at number six Pop and number five R&B, and the new duo were overnight stars.

In 1967, they scored three more Top 40 Pop hits -- "Wish You Didn't Have to Go," "Shake a Tail Feather," and "Let Love Come Between Us" -- while "I Take What I Want" just missed the mark, peaking at 41. An album, James & Bobby Purify, also arrived in 1967, and their second LP, The Pure Sound of the Purifys, followed in 1968. By the time the second album was released, the group's run on the Pop charts was near its end, with their most successful single of that year, "I Can Remember," only making it to number 51, though they fared better on the R&B listings. The pair remained busy as a live act until 1971, when Dickey retired from music due to health concerns.

James Purify continued as a solo act, but in 1974, he teamed up with Ben Moore, a veteran soul singer who had been recommended to him by Dan Penn. Taking over the stage name Bobby PurifyMoore and James Purify hit the road as James & Bobby Purify, and landed a new record deal with Casablanca Records. The new iteration of the duo issued You & Me Together Forever in 1975, and while the song "Do Your Thing" hit number 30 on the R&B Singles chart, the album came and went with little notice. They moved to Mercury Records for the 1977 long-player Purify Brothers, which included a re-recorded version of "I'm Your Puppet" that charted in the United Kingdom. However, it was essentially ignored in the United States, and it would be the final release from James & Bobby Purify, though Ben Moore and James Purify would continue to work together as a live act.

Better to Have It

Moore cut solo material as Bobby Purify in the 1970s, and would go on to have a career in gospel music, both on his own and as a member of the Blind Boys of Alabama. He also cut a soul album produced by Dan PennBetter to Have It, that came out in 2005. Robert Dickey died on December 29, 2011, in Tallahassee at the age of 72. James Purify died on January 22, 2021 in Pensacola at the age of 76, due to complications from the COVID-19 virus

Näytä lisää Näytä vähemmän

Osta heti


7,90 €
tai
Ilmoitus on sulkeutunut 15.3.2024 19:05
Lisää muistilistalle Poista muistilistalta

Osta heti

Lisätiedot

Maksaminen ja toimitus

Hintaehdotukset

Myyjän muut ilmoitukset

Katso lisää

Kysymykset

Kysy myyjältä, viestit ovat julkisia.
Kirjaudu sisään tai luo uusi tunnus.