Don't Give Up On Solomon Burke

I've been feeling a little guilty about posting nothing but recycled entries from my own blog to BlogCritics, so here's some original content.

Don't Give Up On Me by Solomon Burke. Solomon Burke is one of the great overlooked legends of soul music-- he's widely respected by other musicians, but somehow hasn't ever really made it big. It's easy to understand the former, and hard to believe the latter-- he's got a great voice, and a resume that's pretty hard to beat:


[S]oul legend, ordained bishop, father of 21, licensed mortician and current Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member

(That's from the liner notes. I don't know which is more boggling, "father of 21" or "licensed mortician," though together they make a certain amount of sense, I suppose. You need some sort of steady employment if you've got that many kids...)

This album is, in some part, an effort to parlay the "respected by other musicians" thing into greater commercial success. The songs on this record were written for Burke by a number of well-known songwriters, including Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Tom Waits, Elvis Costello, Nick Lowe, and Brian Wilson. That's been enough to get him some critical attention, at least, and it did get me to buy the record, so maybe it'll work out. I hope so, because this is good stuff.

The really impressive thing about this is the way that Burke does songs by more famous authors in a way that leaves the source clear, but is also very much his own. I guess that's not surprising, given that he's old enough to come from an era when people didn't really write their own music, but it's interesting to see.

The liner notes extol Burke's interpretive prowess, but the striking thing about these songs is really the lack of modification from the sound favored by the original authors. The instrumentation is very basic (a gospel-ish combo of drums, bass, guitar, piano and organ, plus a couple of female backup singers), but as a singer, Burke does all the same things the original artists do, only with a better voice. Tom Waits's "Diamond in Your Mind" is clearly part of his cabaret-singer-from-an-alternate-universe thing, and with the addition of mysterious honks and clanks in the background, could easily fit on Rain Dogs or Swordfishtrombones. Van Morrison's "Fast Train" and "Only a Dream" lack the mysticism that characterizes a lot of his work, but they're very much in keeping with his recent return to fundamentals (indeed, they apparently ended up on his latest album, as well). Bob Dylan contributes the straightforwardly bluesy "Stepchild," which wouldn't be out of place on Love and Theft, while the pop bounce of "Soul Searchin'" is unmistakably Brian Wilson.

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  • Don't Give Up on Me Don't Give Up on Me

    Of all the great male '60s soul singers--a short list that includes Sam Cooke, Otis Redding, and James Brown--only Solomon Burke still actively records. More amazing, he's produced his best full-length ...

Article comments

  • 1 - Howard Owens

    Aug 24, 2002 at 8:26 pm

    I just listened to samples of this at Borders. Sounds like great stuff. It's on my wish list. I especially like the Costello, Lowe and Dylan songs.

  • 2 - Chubby Pecker

    Aug 25, 2002 at 4:01 pm

    I downloaded the album as part of my Emusic.com subscription, since they carry the Fat Possum catalogue.

    Since I didn't have the liner notes, the fun part was guessing who wrote each song just from listening to it. I managed to tag the Tom Waits, Elvis Costello and Van Morrison songs.

  • 3 - johnny j carmen

    Mar 12, 2003 at 4:42 pm

    to some one out there i have talent /singer through /famely instruments in our attic in phildelphia/penn my uncle had put me on his lap and let me drive /state police pulled us over thank you johnny carmen 2001 yahoo.com

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