Showing posts with label Lou Rawls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lou Rawls. Show all posts

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Bobby Womack R.I.P. - "If You Think You're Lonely Now" - RadioDAZZ

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Bobby Womack passed away at the age of 70 several days ago. His life had been a struggle with all of the pains of depression, addiction, and the struggle of a soul artist trying to ply his trade in a world of too much money and drugs... of fair weather friends and lies... of unresolved conflicts. He had a deep, rich baritone voice, similar in quality to that of the late Lou Rawls, but with a profound 'rough-around-the-edges' quality untainted by excessive vocal coaching and mainstream compromise. He didn't sing and bend guitar notes to please anybody but himself. He sang true. He had been suffering with Alzheimer's at the time of his death.

His greatest hit single, "If You Think You're Lonely Now," came into my life when I was sitting next to some fellow in 2006 and I overhead the song through his headphones, which were cranked (as was he) to the maximum. I couldn't get the refrain out of my head. It reminded me a bit of the Stylistics' "You Are Everything," but much more raw and achingly soulful. The resonance of both his speaking and singing voice throughout the recorded performance were authoritative and genuine, as if he were imparting the wisdom of the world from personal experience.

The song is a beautiful one. The premise is all-too-familiar to those of us who have been victims of ingratitude and have finally decided to pack up and walk away (I have, several times in my life), and to those of us who tried to push someone we had become too familiar with just a bit too hard, until we came home one day to find them gone (I have, several times in my life, too). Maybe we each have, in his or her own way, straddled the thin line between love and hate too frequently in a gambit for control. Maybe we've been too demanding. Maybe we've turned our need to possess some one into a prison, and we've ignored all of the signs of fault lines in the foundation of our relationships until we turned away (all too confidently and presumptuously) and the object of our ever-increasing demands had escaped.

If you've ever been in love, and if you have lived some span of your life between regret and redemption, this song is a powerful reminder of how important it is to compliment the good and express gratitude, instead of complaining and constantly nagging about our petty dissatisfaction with those things which we haven't got.

Feel the music. Focus your mind on the lyrics and Bobby's patter (he's warning a world of  discontented ingrates not to complain so damned much). Crank up your volume and let an ocean of emotion cascade over you. If this is the first time that you're hearing this potent, heart-grabbing song, you will not be able to stop playing it over and over again in your head. And maybe you'll be a bit more contented with your Significant Other.

Either click on either the hyperlink or on the video player below to savor this fabulous recording of a prophetic song. Enjoy this miniature introspective vacation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbbZ_k1Z8gU


















RadioDAZZ Banner - Your Uncle DAZZ - RadioDAZZ.blogspot.com - Douglas E. Castle





Monday, October 10, 2011

Get Inspired In 5 Minutes!

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RADIODAZZ Music Breaks...
relax. rewind. re-energize.
CLICK 2 ESCAPE



You need inspiration. De-stress. Re-Energize. Feel the hairs stand up on the back of your neck. Lou Rawls (yes, That Guy) absolutely rocks this song in the most soulful, go-to-church arrangement and performance you've ever heard. You will want to stand up and clap your hands. If you're in the office, just move your shoulders, hips and feet -- if you can't resist moving, and being moved. "The Wind Beneath My Wings," will give you a vacation...and a new lease on life...in less than 5 minutes' time. And it won't cost you a cent. You'll want to click on this song and play it over and over and over...

You might not think that you are a Lou Rawls fan. You might not remember "You'll Never Find," or "Lady Love"... That's alright. Let him blast you into an adrenaline and endorphin rush of instant paradise. But first, a quick backgrounder.... [cue dreamy, whole-tone, harp arpeggios......]


You've heard Bette Midler sing it -- too many times. It was the theme song from the immortal chick flick "Beaches". Toward the end of her version, try as she might, she doesn't even approach the high notes - she falls so short that when I first heard her version (after having heard the Gary Morris version, which was well done, and even a bit religious), I scrunched my body down in my car seat and prayed for God to take me. When He didn't, I thought of calling the Music Police to arrest her for lame, overschmaltzed, broadway-style singing.

Then, I heard the Lou Rawls version.

He rocks it with a gospel punch. He puts heart and soul into the song. The refrain is funkacious. He doesn't miss a note (key of F major), and doesn't make it into a sanctimonious "celebrity" quasi-rock cover. He rocks it like Sunday in the church choir. You'll want to stand up in your pew and clap. I played the refrain over and over again. Lou -- you had me a the D minor...

Click on the link or on the video player for a real gospel version of a song of unforgettable friendship and one person's confession of profound indebtedness to another.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRCS1AiAzJo




There! You're a Lou Rawls Fan now.  Remember... RadioDAZZ prescribed it just for you. Play it loud. Play it often. Forward this to your family, friends and colleagues - even your old gym coach (if he's still alive). Everybody will thank you. Spread the love and share the music.

Douglas E Castle [http://aboutDouglasCastle.blogspot.com]
RadioDAZZ (alter ego) [http://RadioDAZZ.blogspot.com]






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