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Hey Jude
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Hey Jude
Current price: $64.99
Barnes and Noble
Hey Jude
Current price: $64.99
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Wilson Pickett
and the Muscle Shoals session crew with whom he cut most of his best work thankfully had the good sense to not try to go
psychedelic
when the
pop
charts went all day-glo in the late 1960's, but that's not to say they didn't make an effort to change with the times. On
Hey Jude
,
Pickett
and producer
Rick Hall
decided to throw a couple of recent rock covers into the mix, and while
's version of
"Hey Jude"
suggests that he isn't entirely sure what it is he's singing about, he still belts it out with his typical level of commitment and builds up to a proper fury at the end; he sounds more comfortable with the neo-biker bombast of
"Born To Be Wild"
, a combination of artist and material that works far better than anyone would have a right to expect. But the most notable change in
's approach for this album was the addition of
Duane Allman
on guitar; his wirey, blues-accented leads don't overpower the album, but they add a noticeably harder texture to the sound, and that seems to suit
, one of the toughest
soul
shouters of his time, just fine. Most of the
is dominated by hard
Southern soul
numbers like
"A Man and a Half"
and
"Toe Hold"
, and
, one of the most dependable performers on the 1960's
scene, gives a typically con brio performance on all ten tracks, and the sharp report of the horn section and
Allman
's blistering guitar makes for music just as potent as the wail of the lead singer, which is not an accomplishment to be sneered at. ~ Mark Deming
and the Muscle Shoals session crew with whom he cut most of his best work thankfully had the good sense to not try to go
psychedelic
when the
pop
charts went all day-glo in the late 1960's, but that's not to say they didn't make an effort to change with the times. On
Hey Jude
,
Pickett
and producer
Rick Hall
decided to throw a couple of recent rock covers into the mix, and while
's version of
"Hey Jude"
suggests that he isn't entirely sure what it is he's singing about, he still belts it out with his typical level of commitment and builds up to a proper fury at the end; he sounds more comfortable with the neo-biker bombast of
"Born To Be Wild"
, a combination of artist and material that works far better than anyone would have a right to expect. But the most notable change in
's approach for this album was the addition of
Duane Allman
on guitar; his wirey, blues-accented leads don't overpower the album, but they add a noticeably harder texture to the sound, and that seems to suit
, one of the toughest
soul
shouters of his time, just fine. Most of the
is dominated by hard
Southern soul
numbers like
"A Man and a Half"
and
"Toe Hold"
, and
, one of the most dependable performers on the 1960's
scene, gives a typically con brio performance on all ten tracks, and the sharp report of the horn section and
Allman
's blistering guitar makes for music just as potent as the wail of the lead singer, which is not an accomplishment to be sneered at. ~ Mark Deming