An introduction to the earliest sides of two guys who have shown up on compilations here.
"Hammond has 16 of the 26 tracks on this split-artist compilation, which also includes ten songs recorded by Z.Z. Hill for the same label (Kent) during the same era (the mid-to-late 1960s). Hammond's 16 cuts include both sides of all four of his 1966-69 Kent singles, as well as four from the same period that did not surface until a 1988 LP, and four more from the same time that were previously unissued until this CD. He was a minor but a worthy Southern soul-style vocalist who sounded much like a gentler Sam Cooke, writing all of his material on this disc. On his Kent sides (he had previously recorded for other labels), he adeptly crossed soul with shades of blues and gospel, although the arrangements were not as lugubrious and brassy as much soul actually produced in the South was. Occasionally he used pop-style production to good effect, as on the 1966 single "You Brought It All on Yourself," with its swinging, slightly jazz horn lines. Interestingly, his 1968 B-side "Do Right Woman" is not the famous Chips Moman/Dan Penn song, but a different song (albeit with some similarities to the more famous one), recorded at Moman's studio, no less. The eight songs that were not released in the 1960s are good by outtakes standard. "Togetherness" has something of the ballad feel of Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come," while "My Sweet Baby Is Coming Home," with only an electric guitar as backup, anticipates the sound of fellow Cooke acolyte Ted Hawkins. The ten songs that follow from Hill, incidentally, are average period soul that also have some stronger blues elements than many recordings from the genre, combining a few of Hill's 1966-69 singles with four previously unissued numbers. " AMG
Hunh, I liked the review until he dismissed Z.Z. that way, this is WAY above average period soul, Hill's sound in this era has a lot of Otis Redding in it. I think he sounds fantastic!
Showing posts with label Clay Hammond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clay Hammond. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 23, 2018
Monday, January 6, 2014
Clay Hammond - Streets Will Love You
Clay Hammond – Streets Will Love YouLabel: Evejim Records – EJ 1999
1989
A1 Streets Will Love You 3:26
A2 License To Steal 4:23
A3 Too Many Irons In The Fire 3:53
A4 I Know What Love Is 3:55
B1 They Don't Makeum No More 3:44
B2 Ask Me For What You Want 3:03
B3 Part Time Love 4:15
B4 Monkey 4:20
"Clayton Hammond Jr born 21 June 1936 in Groesbeck, Texas
Clay Hammond was an original founding member of the Gospel greats "The Mighty Clouds Of Joy" in the late 50s Clay was the older brother of Walter Hammond, who was a singer with the original Olympics. Initially achieving success as a songwriter, Clay's composition 'Part Time Love' was a number 1 R&B single for ' Little' Johnny Taylor. Hammond later recorded for several labels, including Galaxy and Duo Disc, before settling with Kent in 1967.
His releases included two superb southern soul ballads, 'You Messed Up My Mind' (1966) and 'I'll Make It Up To You' (1968). Clay's subsequent recordings were more irregular, although a successful Japanese tour did produce an album, These Arms Of Mine. In 1981 he joined the Rivingtons, who were still working the oldies circuit on the strength of their novelty hit 'Papa Oom Mow Mow'. Hammond later sang with one of the many different Drifters groups while continuing to record as a solo artist
.His most well-known efforts from that time are the four singles he did
for Kent between 1966-69. These mixed Southern soul, gospel, and blues
styles, yet also had a somewhat lighter and poppier production aura than
much Southern soul, perhaps because they were recorded in Los Angeles.
All eight songs from these 45s, as well as eight others that were
recorded but not released in the 1960s, appear on the Ace CD Southern ,
which also includes ten tracks recorded for Kent around the same time by
fellow soul vocalist Z.Z. Hill. "Clay's bittersweet, almost crying vocals bestow a syllable-bending nonchalance with a lyric, always belying an obvious Sam Cooke influence, though no one has ever mastered this style with quite the flair of Hammond, (Johnny Taylor, Bobby Womack and James Phelps arguably excepted!!)." from Southern Soul Brothers cd notes
