Ry Cooder
Ry Cooder
Ry Cooder
Ry Cooder

Ry Cooder

€35,00
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Ry Cooder - Vocals, Guitar, Bass, Mandolin [click here to see more vinyl featuring Ry Cooder]

Van Dyke Parks - Piano

Bobby Bruce – Violin

Chris Ethridge Roy Estrada, Max Bennett – Bass

John Barbata, Richie Hayward – Drums

Milt Holland – Drums, percussions

Gloria Jones - backing vocals

 

1 LP, standard sleeve

Original analog Master tape : YES

Heavy Press : 180g

Record color : black

Speed : 33 RPM

Size : 12'’

Stereo

Record Press : Pallas GmbH in Germany

Label : Speakers Corner

Original Label : Reprise Records

Recorded in 1970 at various studios by Bob Kovacs, Doug Botnick, Rudy Hill and Jim Lowe

Produced by Lenny Waronker and Van Dyke Parks

Originally released in 1970

Reissued in 2021

 

Tracks:

Side A:

  1. Alimony
  2. France Chance
  3. One Meat Ball
  4. Do Re Mi
  5. My Old Kentucky Home
  6. How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live?

Side B:

  1. Available Space
  2. Pig Meat
  3. Police Dog Blues
  4. Goin' To Brownsville
  5. Dark Is The Night

 

Reviews :

“When the name Ry Cooder comes up, it may seem familiar to casual listeners. But in music circles, this roots-based guitarist is revered by fellow artists. As a sideman, he has recorded with The Rolling Stones, Randy Newman, Linda Ronstadt, Van Morrison and Little Feat. His slide guitar imprint on rock history is significant. Additionally, Cooder has scored many films, including Paris, Texas, The Long Riders, Streets Of Fire, Johnny Handsome, Performance, Primary Colors and Trespass. He dubbed many of the guitar parts in the movie, Crossroads. Over the last five decades, Ry Cooder has released several recordings, showcasing his unique eclecticism and virtuosity.

Speakers Corner Records has released a 180-gram re-mastered vinyl of Ry Cooder’s self-titled 1970 debut. With the assistance of several contemporaries, RY Cooder represents an auspicious debut as a solo artist. He is presenting a modern connection and appreciation to blues. Side 1 opens with the humorous tune, “Alimony” (co-written by Robert Higgenbothem of “Hi-Heel Sneakers” fame). With electric slide and a lower-voice register, Cooder pleads his case before the judge. Touches of gospel backup singing (Gloria Jones) and barrelhouse piano (Van Dyke Parks) liven this up. “France Chance” (originally written and recorded under the title “Love Me Baby Blues” by Joe Calliciott ) is also sprightly with a syncopated tempo. Digging into another Americana genre tin pan alley, “One Meat Ball” has a pop-jazz resonance with an exotic melody line, again enunciating regrets for lack of money (“…get no bread with one meatball…”) with coyness. On “Do-Re_Mi”, Cooder shifts into social commentary from Woody Guthrie. It was an alarm bell to “dust bowl” migrants heading to California to escape poverty. A warning to not come here…”if you ain’t got the do-re-mi” is chilling 30 years later. The arrangement is modern with violins and feels like late 60’s early 70’s groups like The Band. Drawing on a then present-day musical source, “Old Kentucky Home” (from Randy Newman’s 12 Songs LP) is slowed down to back porch rhythm, but Cooder’s vocals effectively tell a heartfelt, funny story He is a natural conduit for Newman’s deadpan-infused irony. One of the highlights of this album is a cover of a 1929 protest song (“How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live”) written by Blind Alfred Reed. Cooder maintains the authenticity of the song, but with a folk-rock sensibility. His guitar licks are concise and visceral.

Side 2 has a laid-back vibe. Cooder’s lone composition, “Available Space” is a stirring instrumental. A great slide guitar brings some funkiness to this country-blues format. If you’re going to select material from great American composers, then Hudie Ledbetter (a.k.a. Leadbelly) seems like an obvious choice. “Pigmeat” is performed with old-school laconic articulation. Hudbetter’s wry observations on “country versus city” always seem topical.  The brass accents emulate Louisiana musical styling. There are also a number from lesser-known blues artist Arthur “Blind” Blake. “Police Dog Blues” is acoustic Delta-inspired social reflection with classic lyrical imagery of “gamblin’”, “travelin’ man” and “police dogs”. But “Sleepy” John Estes is renowned and has influenced rockers like John Lennon, Bob Dylan and Robert Plant. “Goin’ To Brownsville” has become a standard. Cooder executes some of his finest work here with mandolin and electric slide in multi-tracking production. The finale is an instrumental, “Dark Is The Night” by the legendary Blind Willie Johnson. This blues man has been credited with popularizing slide guitar. Cooder’s pared-down arrangement (on slide) is atmospheric and translates the innate forlorn character of blues.

Speakers Corner Records has done an excellent job in re-mastering Ry Cooder to 180-gram vinyl. The overall mix is balanced with good stereo separation. Both acoustic and slide guitars sound natural with little distortion.” Robbie Gerson, Audiophile Audition, September 2021

 

« Already a seasoned music business veteran at the age of 22, Ry Cooder stepped out from behind the shadows of the likes of Jackie DeShannon, Taj Mahal, the Rolling Stones, and Captain Beefheart, signing his own deal with Warner Brothers records in 1969. Released the following year, Cooder's eponymous debut creates an intriguing fusion of blues, folk, rock & roll, and pop, filtered through his own intricate, syncopated guitar; Van Dyke Parks and Lenny Waronker's idiosyncratic production; and Parks and Kirby Johnson's string arrangements. And while he's still finding his feet as a singer, Cooder puts this unique blend across with a combination of terrific songs, virtuosic playing, and quirky, yet imaginative, arrangements. For material, Cooder, the son of folklorist parents, unearths ten gems -- spanning six decades dating back to the 1920s -- by legends such as Woody Guthrie, Blind Blake, Sleepy John Estes, and Leadbelly, as well as a current Randy Newman composition. Still, as great as his outside choices are, it's the exuberant charm of his own instrumental "Available Space" that nearly steals the show. Its joyful interplay between Cooder's slide, Van Dyke Parks' music hall piano, and the street-corner drumming creates a piece that is both loose and sophisticated. If "Available Space" is the record's most playful moment, its closer, "Dark Is the Night," is the converse, with Cooder's stark, acoustic slide extracting every ounce of torment from Blind Willie Johnson's mournful masterpiece. Some of the eccentric arrangements may prove to be a bit much for both purists and pop audiences alike, but still, Cooder's need to stretch, tempered with a reverence for the past, helps to create a completely original work that should reward adventurous listeners. » AllMusic Review by Brett Hartenbach.

 

Ratings :

AllMusic : 4 / 5 ,  Discogs : 4.04 / 5 ; Audiophile Audition : 4.5 / 5

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