Last week was long, busy and, well, pretty darned glorious actually. Deets, as the kids say, to follow, but right now my brain is still mush from an endless, airless train journey on the hottest day of the year thus far, so let's ease into a new week with George Faith's sublime 1977 interpretation of William Bell's 'I Forgot to be Your Lover', here retitled simply, 'To Be a Lover'. The tune, released in the UK on Island's Black Swan imprint, was produced by Lee 'Scratch' Perry who makes an unexpected vocal appearance in the final 30 seconds of the mix. 'To Be a Lover' was a popular choice of cover in reggae circles during the 1970s, not least with Scratch himself who also produced versions of the song by Chenley Duffas in 1971 and George Earl in 1974. This one's the definitive reading though.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Greatest Hits
-
(Photo taken by Andi of Outline magazine) The doors had only been open for 30 minutes on Tuesday evening and many people were still fil...
-
On my regular journeys up and along the A12, A14, A140 and M11 in the 1980's, travelling to concerts in London and the East of Englan...
-
Over the past few weeks, a succession of time and brain-space constraints did their utmost to put the kibosh on my attempts to pull toget...
-
A couple of weeks ago, I dragged my tired old bones off to catch the great Richard Dawson in concert. Long suffering readers of this blog...
-
To the anonymous strangers on the surrounding tables in the cafe we probably looked like two old friends having a long overdue catch-up o...

No comments:
Post a Comment