REVIEW

Music Review: Sweet Angel - Another Man's Meat On My Plate

Written by Richard Marcus
Published February 28, 2008

Aside from all the obvious reasons for hating disco, one of the biggest crimes perpetrated by that supposed musical genre was the way it almost completely obliterated rhythm and blues (R&B). Originally R&B was just what it said it was — the blues with some healthy rhythm that made it real perfect for dancing. Soul and funk were its natural extensions, with funk ramping up the voltage and giving it a little bit of an edge, and soul playing up the soft blues angle.

But disco was just a commercialized and sanitized version made safe for kids from the suburbs and sucked the life right out of R&B. Just thinking that anybody would dare mention the great Sam Cooke in the same breath as the Bee Gees is enough to make me break out in a cold sweat and give me the all overs. Even the demise of disco didn't revive R&B, as what tends to be passed off as the genre today is stuff that's only fit for adult easy listening stations.

Finding anyone who claims to play R&B is hard enough anymore, let alone someone who plays something that bears even the remotest resemblance to the music played in the days before drum machines and beat boxes, and before Michael Bolton tore the heart out of it. So whenever it seems that there might even be the slightest of chances that someone is doing their damnedest to row against that particular river I'll not only check them out but give them almost every benefit of doubt known to humankind.

albumcover.jpgSweet Angel was born in the cradle of R&B, Memphis, Tennessee, and has been singing and playing music from her days in elementary school. She was such a talented reed player that she won seats in the top ten All West Tennessee Bands and all City Bands for clarinet and saxophone when she was still only in middle school. Of course lots of people show an aptitude for music at a young age and either it means they peaked early or they lack the motivation or drive to parlay it into a career.

Judging by her first recording, Another Man's Meat On My Plate, that's not the case with Sweet Angel. Not only does she apparently have musical talent to spare, she's got the strength of personality and character needed to make that talent come alive when she performs. There are plenty of people who can sing, and there are plenty of people who can play musical instruments, but there are very few people who have that extra quality that  compels every eye in the house to focus on them when they walk on stage and begin to play.

Listening to the way Sweet Angel delivers her material on disc, it's easy to see her on stage. You've heard of performers who make each person in their live audience feel as if songs are sung to them personally; that's rare enough, yet Sweet Angel somehow manages to accomplish that on disc. Perhaps it's her choice of material, or that she is without affectation and you just know that what you hear is what you get. Maybe it's her matter-of-fact delivery that makes her sound like she's someone you could just as easily sit and talk with as watch on stage.

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Copy02-11-Richard portrait-72-4x4.jpgRichard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at Leap In The Dark and Epic India Magazine.
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Music Review: Sweet Angel - Another Man's Meat On My Plate
Published: February 28, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Pop, Music: R&B, Review
Writer: Richard Marcus
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#1 — March 3, 2008 @ 16:44PM — Sam's Neph [URL]

Wow...Sam Cooke compared to the Bee Gees? Bad visual to say the least!

Erik Greene
Author, "Our Uncle Sam: The Sam Cooke Story From His Family's Perspective"

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