A
few years ago, I saw the incomparable Gladys Knight in concert at a
Casino in Florida. Of the five times I had the privilege to see the
Empress of Soul live, this was the weakest showing, mostly due to a
somewhat disinterested audience that did not even clamor loudly enough
for an encore! However, the veteran soul diva said something on stage
that resonates within me in relations to the musical offerings Gladys
granted her fans this year so far:
“You
don't get it when you want it, you get it when you need it.”
We
the fans had been waiting for a new album for a long time. It's been
7 years since her jazz outing, Before Me. Before that, she released a
Christmas album and a gospel album with her Saints Unified Voices
choir, which did not even feature her on lead vocals on all tracks.
So the last actual R&B/Soul album, At Last, was a dozen years
ago!
Pretty
much every Pip-less album by Ms Knight has been plagued by delays
since Just For You in 1994. So it came to no surprise that her latest
full album of material was postponed a few times without explanation.
Singles from the then “soon to be released” album came out in
2010 and 2011. Some time before that, fans were asked to send in
suggestions for songs to be included on an album consisting entirely
of cover versions, but it appears that idea got scrapped soon after.
As
you can imagine, being the huge fan that I am, I really really wanted
to groove to some new Gladys music, to fall in love with another
touching ballad, to badly sing along to a funky tune when nobody else
can hear me.
Alas,
you don't get it when you want it. When the album Another Journey
was (somewhat) released, I felt a little disappointed, a bit confused
at some of the choices made. (I included the "somewhat" as it seems impossible to get a physical copy of the CD outside the US. The distribution is that bad!)
It
is by no means a horrible album. A lot of the songs have promise, but
are ultimately flawed. “The Dream” has some great moments, but
the children's choir in the back sounds oddly subdued and the list of
dreamers at the end, from Martin Luther King and the much more
controversial Mother Theresa to media tycoon Oprah Winfrey and
President Obama is cringeworthy in that odd juxtaposition.
The
stand-out track is not new by any means: The cover of Lee Ann
Womack's classic “I Hope You Dance” had previously been featured
in the 2008 movie "Tyler Perry's The Family That Preys.” Along
with another Tyler Perry OST song, Settle and two versions of “I
who have nothing”, 4 out of the 9 tracks on the album are already well
know to the many completists among her fans.
The
most infuriating thing about the low-budget production on most of the
tracks is the occasional use of auto tune on Gladys' vocals. Somebody must have
misunderstood their assignment: The reason we hear that horrible
effect on so many records (as well as on shows like “Glee”) is
not that it is popular, it's that lesser vocalists need it to iron
out the kinks in their attempts to sing. Who in their right mind
would ever think that auto tune and Gladys could be a winning
combination?
So.
I was not in a happy place with my Gladys Fanboyism. I was worried
that albums like this one would be the musical legacy of her golden
years in the industry. I
began to feel that brilliant music by Gladys Knight had become a
self-contained collection field with no new additions to come.
In
other words, I needed something from her. Didn't just want it, needed
it.
And
boy, did I get it.
The
epic “You And I Ain't Nothin' No More” is everything a Gladys
Knight song should be. Taken from the soundtrack of the hit movie
“Lee Daniels' The Butler” and written and produced by Lenny
Kravitz, there already is quite a bit of Oscar buzz about the track.
It
is passionate, it has a brutally honest lyric about a damaged
relationship between a parent and a child and it allows Gladys to
show off her still incredible range and versatile vocal texture.
There
is nothing superficial or “pop” about the lyrics:
I want your loveBut I'll just wait in vainCause you and I ain't nothin' no more.You gave me lifeBut I don't share your soul -You lived your life alone.
It
is pure soul, an inner scream of honest sadness and humanity wrapped
in a lush arrangement and carried by an angelic voice that keeps us
from falling into the abyss we can glimpse between the lines of the
song's poetry.This, this is the kind of song Gladys Knight should sing because she is one of the few singers out there who can succeed with its immense demands.
I
am pretty optimistic as far as the song's chances to get nominated
for an Academy Award go. Previous nominees like “Listen” from
Dreamgirls and “The Girl Who Used to Be Me” from Shirley
Valentine showed that the academy likes an honest soul ballad. We
just need to distract Randy Newman with something shiny so that he
won't compose another Disney song between now and the Oscars!
My
fervent hope is that “Another Journey” was just a brief detour –
nay, a wrong turn. And that “You and I Have Nothin' No More” will
open the door to an entirely new glorious road in the career of
Gladys Maria Knight. Let us not stop here, let's do an entire album
with Lenny Kravitz or other musicians of his caliber who are fans of
Gladys.
It
worked for Burt Bacharach, who had become a bit of a joke and
misunderstood as a muzak composer when he collaborated with Elvis
Costello on the soul-stirring miniature musical drama “God Give Me
Strength” on the soundtrack to the movie “Grace of My Heart.”
The song got a Grammy nomination and led to a full album, which
included another nominated song. Bacharach's standing in the industry
was restored and he went on to record a critically acclaimed album
with Ronald Isley.
These
things happen. And Gladys Knight deserves to have it happen to her.
Let the Empress strike back!