Who here remembers Woolworth's record section? Perhaps I
should ask, who remembers F.W. Woolworth? since it already seems so long ago
that the retail behemoth folded. Their record section was a bit hit and miss –
rather like their Pick 'n' Mix confectionery section – but occasional trawls yielded
the odd treasure.
The Belfast branch was more comprehensive than most, but I
picked up Eli for about a pound in
1973 in the Bath store. We'd just moved back across the water and it was a
difficult period of transition, but I was able to take it with me to Sandon
Hall, near Stafford, where I landed a job as an assistant archivist working for
the deeply eccentric 6th Earl of Harrowby, may God rest his antiquated
soul. An octogenarian at the time, he wanted to give a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to a young person from war-torn Belfast to work in his trouble-free
stately home. I didn't go into too much detail about our fairly comfortable
tree-lined existence in the capital of Norn Iron.
At the end of most working days, I'd lie on my bed between
my Wharfedale Denton speakers, light up a Consulate menthol cigarette, as cool as a mountain stream, and listen
in depth to an album. Eli was often creeping around my room. 'Eli's a
comin/Whoa you better hide your heart/your lovin heart/Eli's a comin and the
cards say/broken heart...'
Just a little too young to be a full-blown hippy, I was
nevertheless deeply in love with Laura Nyro, as many flower children were. On
the cover of Eli, she is depicted as some
exotic, fragile pre-Raphaelite creature. With her alabaster face, her long
black hair and matching robes, she was almost a cross between Snow White and
Lily Munster or Morticia Addams. A wistful, pensive Lady of the Sorrows, she
and her soulful music struck many a chord deep within my delicate teenage
being.
Labelled a 'folk-soul' singer at the time – probably because
she was white and female and therefore had to be a folk singer – Laura Nyro
was, in my book, nothing less than the greatest white soul singer of our time. Often
overlooked or underestimated during her short, reclusive life, she nevertheless
influenced everyone, it seems, from Elton John and Ricky Lee Jones to Todd
Rundgren and, err, Alice Cooper. Finally and inevitably she was given her dues
when she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012. And not
before time!
I came to Eli five
years after its release in 1968. However, I'd already treated myself to Christmas and the Beads of Sweat in 1971
and New York Tendaberry the following
year. So convinced was I that the three albums were conceived as some kind of
trilogy, I wrote an extended essay about the notion for the American Arts
element of my English degree. My tutors, though, were singularly underwhelmed
by my big idea.
In any case, Eli
knocks spots off the other two. Tendaberry
is a rather harrowing soul-searching affair at times, while Christmas is a slightly uneven affair,
despite the presence of wonderful songs like 'When I was a freeport and you
were the main drag' (and what on earth was that all about?) and a version of
Gerry Goffin and Carole King's 'Up on the roof', which ironically – given that
King was probably her number 1 rival when it came to writing catchy soulful pop
songs for herself and for others – would prove to be her biggest-selling single.
In fact, Laura Nyro was also a wonderful interpreter of
other people's songs. Gonna Take a
Miracle, for example, recorded with Labelle and produced by the Phillysound
creators, Gamble & Huff, is a delicious album of what she called 'teenage
heartbeat songs': entirely non-original material that includes storming
versions of 'Jimmy Mack' and 'Nowhere to Run', which are right up there with
Martha Reeves & the Vandellas' Motown originals. And that's really sayin' something.
But Eli is
uniquely her own work and, like her First
Songs, laced with hits for others. The title track was recorded by Three
Dog Night and 'Sweet Blindness' and 'Stoned Soul Picnic' by the 5th
Dimension, who interpreted so many of her songs that they were almost the
equivalent of Dionne Warwick to Burt Bacharach. I burdened our shelving with a
CD from an Emmaus depot by the British jazz singer, Clare Teal, simply for
another version of 'Stoned Soul Picnic'. Nice as it is, it doesn't come close
to the sheer euphoria of Laura's original. 'Red yellow honey sassafras and
moonshine...' Every time I hear it, I still want to surry on down to that stoned soul picnic.
Certain things are particularly noticeable on re-visiting
the album. While she can write a catchy melody as well as just about anyone,
there are some quite daring shifts in both melody and time signature (in songs
like 'Poverty Train') that betray the jazz influences from her childhood. And
while the music surely qualifies as pure soul, with all the double-tracked
sections of call and response, it's perhaps closest to the gospel-soul of Mavis
Staples.
The music, too, is often downright funky. It was clearly
recorded with a crack team of musicians (Christmas
was made with the Muscle Shoals crew and I'm guessing that Eli probably involved top New York-based session musicians like
guitarist, Chuck Rainey, and drummer, Bernard 'Pretty' Purdie), but it's her
self-taught piano that's frequently the funkiest cylinder in the engine.
Some find Laura Nyro's
voice too screechy for comfort. It's true that I find it hard to listen to,
say, Lorraine Ellison's 'Stay with me, baby' or anything much by my daughter's
erstwhile favourites, Florence & The Machine, because of the hyper-charged emotion
of the vocals. But although Laura's highest register can occasionally be a
little unnerving, what I hear is a passionate but beautifully modulated and
genuinely soulful voice.
She shied away from
the public eye and didn't play many live concerts. They could be very intimate
affairs and she was reputedly booed off stage at the same overblown Monterrey
Festival that launched Otis Redding to a mass audience, so that would have
certainly reinforced her natural reticence to perform. After a long hiatus when
her popularity dimmed with the quality of her music, she fortunately shook off
her creative malaise to release a crop of fine albums towards the end of a too
brief career.
Nero or Nairo? I
used to argue for the former with any classmates who could be bothered to
debate such trivia at school. Nyro was an assumed name, anyway, and we'll
probably never know for sure now. She was passionate about animal rights, a
committed feminist and general champion of the underdog. For all the joy
inherent in her catchiest tunes, there was always a dark and sorrowful side to
her music, so it's perhaps not surprising that she met a tragic fate. She died
of ovarian cancer like her mother before her at the same age of 49.
My wife specialises
in generational work with her clients. A few sessions with her might have given
Laura Nyro a bit more time on this 'brown earth'. I suppose we at least have
the records. Eli & the 13th Confession probably rates as
her finest 40 minutes or so in a recording studio. Go listen or nip out and buy
the anthology. Immerse yourself in her oeuvre!