Showing posts with label Willie Clayton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Willie Clayton. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Hi Records Presents Bobby McClure & Willie Clayton
So when you think Hi Records, the names Al Green, Ann Peebles and maybe Willie Mitchell are the best known. Those who dug a little deeper know Syl Johnson, Otis Clay and, of course, the great O.V. Wright. Ya gotta dig even deeper to come to these two guys, but the work is worth it. No hits here but there surely could have been, the music is plenty good enough.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Willie Clayton - God Has A Plan
How about a second service this afternoon? I've posted some earlier soul recordings from Willie and I just couldn't resist checking this out. I'm glad I did!Personnel: Willie Clayton (vocals); Walter Witherspoon, Dwight Gordon (guitar, keyboards, drums, background vocals); Arche Spinks, Dorthy Spinks, Bobby Racy, Antioch Full Gospel Baptist Church Choir, Racy Brothers, Victor Allen, Bishop Kenneth Robinson (background vocals).
Man, there is some SERIOUS sangin' goin' on here! Some funky stuff too!
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Willie Clayton - Let's Get Together

As long as he's been recording (from 1969 through the 2000s), one might think that Willie Clayton is an old geezer. No way -- he was just past the age of 40 when he hit his commercial stride with a couple of blues-soul albums for Ace that sold well to the Southern market (where the two interrelated idioms have never been deemed mutually exclusive).After his debut single for Duplex, "That's the Way Daddy Did," went nowhere, Clayton left Mississippi for Chicago in 1971. Like his older Windy City compatriots Otis Clay and Syl Johnson, the young singer ended up contracted to Hi Records in Memphis, where he worked with producer Willie Mitchell and the vaunted Hi rhythm section. Hi issued a series of fine Clayton efforts on its Pawn subsidiary, including "I Must Be Losin' You," "It's Time You Made Up Your Mind," and "Baby You're Ready," but none of them hit.

Finally, in 1984, Clayton enjoyed a taste of soul success when his "Tell Me" (produced by General Crook) and "What a Way to Put It" for Compleat Records nudged on to the R&B charts.
Let's Get Together, Clayton's 1993 album for Johnny Vincent's Ace logo, was a smooth soul-blues hybrid dominated by originals but titled after Al Green's immortal hit. Simply Beautiful, his Ace follow-up, found Clayton mixing dusties by Rev. Al, Aretha Franklin, and Arthur Crudup with his own stuff. It's About Love followed in 1999.
