Etta James - The Right Time (1992)

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Etta James - The Right Time (1992)

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1 	I Sing The Blues 	
2 	Love And Happiness 	
3 	Evening Of Love 	
4 	Wet Match 	
5 	You're Taking Up Another Man's Place 	
6 	Give It Up (Duet With Steve Winwood) 	
7 	Let It Rock 	
8 	Ninety Nine And A Half (Won't Do) 	
9 	You've Got Me 	
10 	Nighttime Is The Right Time 	
11 	Down Home Blues

Alto Saxophone, Arranged By [Horns] – Hank Crawford
Baritone Saxophone – Jim Horn
Bass – David Hood (tracks: 6, 10), Willie Weeks (tracks: 1 to 5, 7 to 9, 11)
Drums – Roger Hawkins (tracks: 6, 10), Steve Ferrone (tracks: 1 to 5, 7 to 9, 11)
Electric Piano [Wurlitzer] – Clayton Ivey (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 6 to 8)
Guitar – Jay Johnson (tracks: 7, 10, 11), Jimmy Johnson (tracks: 6, 10), Lucky Peterson (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 11),
 Steve Cropper (tracks: 1 to 5, 7 to 9, 11), Will McFarlane (tracks: 6, 10)
Organ – Lucky Peterson
Percussion – Tom Roady (tracks: 1, 2)
Synthesizer – Frankie Crawford (tracks: 1 to 3, 5 to 11)
Tenor Saxophone – Harvey Thompson
Trumpet – Gary Armstrong, Mike Haynes
Vocals – Etta James
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Harmonica – Kirk "Jelly Roll" Johnson
Acoustic Guitar – Will McFarlane
Backing Vocals – Cindy Walker, George Soule, Marie Lewey
Vocals – Steve Winwood

 

There is no greater living blues singer than Etta James, and no producer more attuned to the right setting for a blues diva than Jerry Wexler. The recent collaboration between these two giants, The Right Time, is as spectacular an update of R&B as that statement suggests it would be. The album is overpowering in its stylistic force. Its material is drawn from an R&B treasure-trove dating back to early Atlantic sides and covering the history of Southern soul from Sixties Stax through Seventies Hi and Eighties Malaco. The result is a sound steeped in tradition but as fresh as a magnetic $100 bill.

Wexler selected a who’s who of session players for the project, resulting in a number of long-overdue reunions. The most significant reunion, though, is between the principals themselves. James and Wexler, who worked together once before, on the album Deep in the Night (1978), returned to the scene of some of their greatest musical moments: Muscle Shoals, Alabama. In the late Sixties, Wexler helped finance Muscle Shoals Sound Studios, where The Right Time was made. James was brought in to record at the studio by Marshall Chess shortly after Wexler stopped working there.

The Right Time features a horn section led by Hank Crawford and two basic rhythm sections — the Muscle Shoals house band (drummer Roger Hawkins, bassist David Hood and guitarist Jimmy Johnson) and one built around Stax legend Steve Cropper on guitar, with veterans Willie Weeks on bass and Steve Ferrone on drums. Both sections use arrangements supervised by Clayton Ivey, who augments his own keyboard work with organ and guitar backing from Lucky Peterson and synthesizer textures from Frankie Crawford.

Hank Crawford recaps his original performance as part of the Ray Charles band on “Nighttime Is the Right Time,” which James renders as if it were written for her. Steve Winwood’s duet with James on Allen Toussaint’s “Give It Up” reunites him with the Muscle Shoals rhythm section that backed him in the latter days of Traffic. Cropper, who wrote and played on the original “Ninety Nine and a Half,” by Wilson Pickett, pushes James to match the wicked Pickett thrill for thrill on her version.

James comes out blasting on the sultry “I Sing the Blues” and a cover of Al Green’s “Love and Happiness.” She stokes the fires of passion on “Wet Match” and kicks the party door in on “Down Home Blues.” Her gospel-influenced voice super-charges the seething ballads “Evening of Love,” “You’re Taking Up Another Man’s Place” and “You’ve Got Me.”

James caps off The Right Time by contributing a song, “Let It Rock,” that applies everything she knows about her craft to a contemporary setting. James laments a catalog of problems — from the conditions that led to the Los Angeles riots to “rock & roll that ain’t got no feel.” In the process she stamps herself as the indisputable queen of modern-day as well as traditional blues. ---John Swenson, rollingstone.com

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