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Soul Legend Al Green
Merges Classic And Modern Sounds On His New Album, Lay It Down
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| AL GREEN |
By Jason Blasco
The legendary Al
Green is bridging the gap between those who grew up on vinyl and those plugged
into iTunes on his latest album, Lay it Down (his third on Blue Note/EMI
Records), which is his most progressive, musically-adventurous album in years.
With Lay It
Down, Green definitely isn’t resting on his laurels from his
illustrious career that has spanned four decades, earned nine Grammy awards,
plus accumulated 14 Top 40 pop hit singles and even more R&B chart hits. Notably,
during the past year Green has been inducted into the Gospel Music Association
Hall of Fame, named one of Rolling Stone Magazine's Top 100 Artists (#65) of all
time, and won a BET Lifetime Achievement Award.
Following two
albums (I Can’t Stop in 2003 and Everything’s OK in 2005) where
he reunited with his classic soul producer/writer Willie Mitchell, Lay It
Down finds Green exploring new sounds and modern production by collaborating with
drummer Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson (of hip-hop/soul band The Roots) and
Grammy-winning writer/producer keyboardist James Poyser (Erykah Badu, Mariah
Carey).
One of the
catalysts that triggered Green’s artistic inspiration for the record came
from watching MTV’s Spring Break, when he realized those raised in
the 21st century were lacking in a department he specializes in…Soul. "I watched Spring
Break on TV with the kids out by the beach, kind of like a
beach-party setting, and the girls all in two-piece bikinis," Green
said. "It was about the rap and the shirt off, the physical drive of
it, which we know is not the most important drive. The physical drive is fine,
but still, there's a greater
drive than that. There's a more soulful, a more emotional inner
drive that makes things possible."
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| Al Green |
Ahmir Thompson of
The Roots couldn’t have picked a better time to put in his request to work with
Green. In the beginning, it started as a pipedream with Thompson and his
manager, who contacted the rejuvenated Green about the possibility of
collaboration.
The manner in
which the collaboration happened became a central theme for Green. “Once we
found out that The Roots wanted to work with me, it just came together,” Green
said. “That is the thing about this CD - everything just kind of came
together.”
After all the
logistics were worked out and the production team was formed, Thompson began
doing his homework. “You really have to do your research,” Thompson said. “I
studied the engineering of every album, and I wanted to make every song that
you hear on the album sounds sonically natural. To expect a musician from 30 years
ago to record the same way we record today just doesn’t feel right to me.”
During the
recording process, they wanted everything on the record to have a natural feel
in the sound quality. “We wanted to keep the sound organic,” said co-producer
James Poyser. “We didn’t use any synthesizers, we just used live
instruments. We just went into the room and began playing.”
The
record, which features collaboration from such artists as Anthony
Hamilton, Corinne Bailey Rae and John Legend, incorporates a lot of classic
R&B sound. Green took the theme of his record, Lay It Down,
literally and just simply went into the studio with a lot of
improvisations.
“You can tell
that on the record, we are just laughing and having fun,” said Thompson. "We
didn’t have anything written down when we went in there. We had
an idea and we just started writing these songs. It’s like everyone just
jumped in and started making music, and that is what is important.”
Green, who
recorded two songs with current soul star Anthony Hamilton, the title cut “Lay
It Down” and “You’ve Got What I Need,” didn’t feel the need for a lot of
structure in the recording process.
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| The CD cover of Al Green's new album Lay It Down, on Blue Note/EMI Records. |
“Working with
Green isn’t very structured,” explained Hamilton. “You can’t put him in a box
and program his lyrics to where he is not free-flowing with it or he doesn’t
feel good about it. It made for a great evening of singing and music slanging.”
Green, who has a
total of nine Top 40, best-selling albums to his credit but hasn’t had a Top 40
album since 1975, came back in a flurry, and the result was a recent Top 10
debut (#9) on the Billboard album chart.
“This is an album
that is unabashedly full of love songs,” said Green. “Baby, there’s love in it,
out of it, on the side of it, on the top of it, and on the bottom of it. There’s
love everywhere.”
Thompson
eloquently described Green’s vocal versatility on the record: “I was familiar
with all of his music. He is like a five-part harmony chorus inside of his own
body. There is the falsetto Al Green, the church-growling Al Green, the
ferocious soulful Al Green, there is a very church mouse Al Green, and there
is the comic side that people rarely see.”
Jason Blasco is a
journalist for the daily newspaper the Desert Dispatch
in Southern California. Blasco is also the artist relations manager for
keyboardist Kevin Stratton, and can be reached at
Jason_Blasco@link.freedom.com
or JBlasco7@yahoo.com.
Special Feature: Streaming Video and Audio
You can watch Al Green's recent live performance on The Late Show With David Letterman by clicking the link directly below:
You can listen to Al Green's new song "Just For Me" by clicking one of the links directly below:
You can listen to Al Green's new song "Stay With Me" by clicking one of the links directly below:
You can listen to Al Green's new song "Take Your Time" by clicking one of the links directly below:
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