Etta James was a singer who I always enjoyed on the periphery…in other words, I never made a concerted effort to really get that deep into her catalog but I understand, on a very basic level, that this was a Very Important Artist and not just because she sang one of the very best ballads ever sung in the history of people singing ballads. 1
So for this appreciation, I’m not going to try to pull off some “Etta James’s most important songs” post because I simply can’t claim to know this. I can, however, offer up some of her songs that I discovered over the years that I’ve enjoyed. Hope you will too.
Etta James: Leave Your Hat On
From Etta James (Cadet, 1973)
This was the first EJ recording I ever bought, mostly because 1) I thought the cover looked cool and 2) it sounded funky.2 Even then, I knew this was a bit of a departure for James in terms of her most classic Chess sides from a decade earlier but she sounded pretty good (I mean, it’s Etta James) and the L.A.-based band she rocked out with held it down pretty well too. This LP used to be a super-easy find (presumably since “At Last” fans couldn’t hang with it); definitely worth copping on the cheap.
Etta James: I’d Rather Go Blind + I Got You Babe
From Tell Mama: The Complete Muscle Shoals Sessions (Cadet, 1968)
“I’d Rather Go Blind” was one of two songs included on the infamous Soul Sides Black Label collection but it wasn’t to many years later that I realized she had recorded this song with the Muscle Shoals band. Funny enough, I was watching the pilot episode to the new HBO series, Luck and this song came out of nowhere during a scene. Seemed apropos.
James’s cover of “I Got You Babe” might as well make you forget that it’s a Sonny and Cher tune; the band is murdering it on the rhythm track and though James sounds mixed a bit low, she still sizzles.
Etta James: Stormy Weather
From At Last! (Chess, 1960)
My interest in the At Last! album wasn’t from the title song, it was actually from hearing her rendition of “Sunday Kind of Love” on…um…a Dockers ad. 3 And in finally listening to her most classic longplay, I discovered this absolute lovely version of “Stormy Weather.” I’m sure it’ll be in some khakis ad in the future.
Sugar Pie Desanto and Etta James: Down In the Basement Pt. 1
From 7″ (Cadet, 1966). Also on Go Go Power.
I heard this at Funky Sole when Miles threw it down and had no idea that Sugar Pie Desanto and James had ever collaborated. Love this squawking kind of R&B cooker.
- Seriously, I take it as a personal affront when lesser singers try to sing this. It’s beyond you. Don’t go there. ↩
- This being the time in my life where “sounding funky” was good enough to warrant a purchase. I’m not dogging on funk – I love funk – but “sounding funky” is also what lead me to buy a shitload of middling fusion jazz albums. Don’t laugh, you know you did it too. ↩
- Hey, I don’t care how milquetoast their image may be, you can’t front and tell me they have bad taste in music. ↩
was listening to a tribute on kzsc the dj saw etta james and the tower of power horns with the grateful dead in 82′
(hey this is santa cruz!) 🙂 said they did “hard to handle” and it was off the f*^&*&n chain
unrelated – same guy had a bootleg of the only time the dead and the beach boys played together (quirky as hell)
dead head fred
OW
I was listening to a tribute on kzsc the dj saw etta james and the tower of power horns with the grateful dead in 82′
(hey this is santa cruz!) 🙂 said they did “hard to handle” and it was off the f*^&*&n chain
unrelated – same guy had a bootleg of the only time the dead and the beach boys played together (quirky as hell)
dead head fred